Python logging handler that sends messages to InfluxDB via UDP using the line protocol. There is decidedly no support for the HTTP input.
The code was heavily inspired by and based on graypy.
import logging
import influxpy
my_logger = logging.getLogger("test_logger")
my_logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
handler = influxpy.UDPHandler("localhost", 8089, "influxpy_logs",
global_tags={"app": "example"})
my_logger.addHandler(handler)
my_logger.debug("Hello InfluxDB.")
Tracebacks are added as full messages::
try:
puff_the_magic_dragon()
except NameError:
my_logger.debug("No dragons here.", exc_info=1)
The UDP Input for InfluxDB has to be enabled in order to make use of this library.
# influxdb.conf:
...
[[udp]]
enabled = true
bind-address = ":8089"
database = "udp"
Also take note of the InfluxDB UDP documentation.
influxpy.UDPHandler
:
- host - The host of the InfluxDB server.
- port - The UDP port of the InfluxDB server.
- measurement - The name of the measurement/table in InfluxDB.
- debugging_fields - Send debugging fields if set to True. Defaults is to not include debugging fields.
- extra_fields - send extra fields on the log record to InfluxDB if true (the default).
- fqdn - Use
socket.getfqdn()
instead ofsocket.gethostname()
to set the source host. - localname - Use the specified hostname as source host.
- global_tags - optional dict of tags to add to every message.
The following tags will be added to every message:
host, level, level_name, logger
The host
is set to socket.gethostname()
, but can be changed
by setting fqdn
, or overriding it completly by providing localname
.
level
is the syslog level mapped to this message. level_name
is
the respective Python logging level name (INFO
, ERROR
, etc.).
The logger
tag is simply the name of the Python logger.
It is possible to pass global_tags
and thereby configure a set of
static tags that are added to every message. For example, the following
will put datacenter=us-west
and app=snakeoil
as global tags.
handler = influxpy.UDPHandler("127.0.0.1", 8089, "",
global_tags={
"datacenter": "us-west",
"app": "snakeoil"})
message, full_message
The full_message
field is added only to messages for which an exception
traceback is available. That is, when using logger.exception()
or setting exec_info=1
explicitly.
When debugging_fields
is set to True, the following fields are added
additionally:
file, function, line, pid, process_name, thread_name
When extra_fields
is set to True, any extra fields on the LogRecord
instance are sent to InfluxDB. Adding extra fields can be achieved by
passing the extra
keyword argument to a logger call, or using
logging.LoggerAdapter
. See the Python logging documentation for
more information.
my_logger.debug("Login successful.", extra={"username": "John"})
my_logger.info("It is warm.", extra={"temperature": 26.3})
my_logger.warn("Disk Report.", extra={"disk_utilization": 73.4,
"disk_free_space_mb": 63129})
This allows to conveniently add timeseries information that can be visualized using Grafana.
It should be easy to integrate influxpy
with Django's logging settings.
- graypy / Sever Banesiu