Django’s logging module extends Python’s builtin logging
.
Logging is configured as part of the general Django django.setup()
function, so it’s always available unless explicitly disabled.
By default, Django uses Python’s logging.config.dictConfig format.
The full set of default logging conditions are:
When DEBUG
is True
:
The django
logger sends messages in the django
hierarchy (except
django.server
) at the INFO
level or higher to the console.
When DEBUG
is False
:
The django
logger sends messages in the django
hierarchy (except
django.server
) with ERROR
or CRITICAL
level to
AdminEmailHandler
.
Independently of the value of DEBUG
:
The django.server logger sends messages at the INFO
level
or higher to the console.
All loggers except django.server propagate logging to their
parents, up to the root django
logger. The console
and mail_admins
handlers are attached to the root logger to provide the behavior described
above.
Python’s own defaults send records of level WARNING
and higher
to the console.
Django’s default logging configuration inherits Python’s defaults. It’s
available as django.utils.log.DEFAULT_LOGGING
and defined in
django/utils/log.py:
{
"version": 1,
"disable_existing_loggers": False,
"filters": {
"require_debug_false": {
"()": "django.utils.log.RequireDebugFalse",
},
"require_debug_true": {
"()": "django.utils.log.RequireDebugTrue",
},
},
"formatters": {
"django.server": {
"()": "django.utils.log.ServerFormatter",
"format": "[{server_time}] {message}",
"style": "{",
}
},
"handlers": {
"console": {
"level": "INFO",
"filters": ["require_debug_true"],
"class": "logging.StreamHandler",
},
"django.server": {
"level": "INFO",
"class": "logging.StreamHandler",
"formatter": "django.server",
},
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"filters": ["require_debug_false"],
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
},
},
"loggers": {
"django": {
"handlers": ["console", "mail_admins"],
"level": "INFO",
},
"django.server": {
"handlers": ["django.server"],
"level": "INFO",
"propagate": False,
},
},
}
See Configuring logging on how to complement or replace this default logging configuration.
Django provides a number of utilities to handle the particular requirements of logging in a web server environment.
Django provides several built-in loggers.
django
¶The parent logger for messages in the django
named logger hierarchy. Django does not post messages using this name.
Instead, it uses one of the loggers below.
django.request
¶Log messages related to the handling of requests. 5XX responses are
raised as ERROR
messages; 4XX responses are raised as WARNING
messages. Requests that are logged to the django.security
logger aren’t
logged to django.request
.
Messages to this logger have the following extra context:
status_code
: The HTTP response code associated with the request.
request
: The request object that generated the logging message.
django.server
¶Log messages related to the handling of requests received by the server invoked
by the runserver
command. HTTP 5XX responses are logged as ERROR
messages, 4XX responses are logged as WARNING
messages, and everything else
is logged as INFO
.
Messages to this logger have the following extra context:
status_code
: The HTTP response code associated with the request.
request
: The request object (a socket.socket
) that generated the logging message.
django.template
¶Log messages related to the rendering of templates.
Missing context variables are logged as DEBUG
messages.
django.db.backends
¶Messages relating to the interaction of code with the database. For example,
every application-level SQL statement executed by a request is logged at the
DEBUG
level to this logger.
Messages to this logger have the following extra context:
duration
: The time taken to execute the SQL statement.
sql
: The SQL statement that was executed.
params
: The parameters that were used in the SQL call.
alias
: The alias of the database used in the SQL call.
For performance reasons, SQL logging is only enabled when
settings.DEBUG
is set to True
, regardless of the logging
level or handlers that are installed.
This logging does not include framework-level initialization (e.g.
SET TIMEZONE
). Turn on query logging in your database if you wish to view
all database queries.
Support for logging transaction management queries (BEGIN
, COMMIT
,
and ROLLBACK
) was added.
django.security.*
¶The security loggers will receive messages on any occurrence of
SuspiciousOperation
and other security-related
errors. There is a sub-logger for each subtype of security error, including all
SuspiciousOperation
s. The level of the log event depends on where the
exception is handled. Most occurrences are logged as a warning, while
any SuspiciousOperation
that reaches the WSGI handler will be logged as an
error. For example, when an HTTP Host
header is included in a request from
a client that does not match ALLOWED_HOSTS
, Django will return a 400
response, and an error message will be logged to the
django.security.DisallowedHost
logger.
These log events will reach the django
logger by default, which mails error
events to admins when DEBUG=False
. Requests resulting in a 400 response due
to a SuspiciousOperation
will not be logged to the django.request
logger, but only to the django.security
logger.
To silence a particular type of SuspiciousOperation
, you can override that
specific logger following this example:
LOGGING = {
# ...
"handlers": {
"null": {
"class": "logging.NullHandler",
},
},
"loggers": {
"django.security.DisallowedHost": {
"handlers": ["null"],
"propagate": False,
},
},
# ...
}
Other django.security
loggers not based on SuspiciousOperation
are:
django.security.csrf
: For CSRF failures.
django.db.backends.schema
¶Logs the SQL queries that are executed during schema changes to the database by
the migrations framework. Note that it won’t log the
queries executed by RunPython
.
Messages to this logger have params
and sql
in their extra context (but
unlike django.db.backends
, not duration). The values have the same meaning
as explained in django.db.backends.
Django provides one log handler in addition to those provided by the
Python logging module
.
This handler sends an email to the site ADMINS
for each log
message it receives.
If the log record contains a request
attribute, the full details
of the request will be included in the email. The email subject will
include the phrase “internal IP” if the client’s IP address is in the
INTERNAL_IPS
setting; if not, it will include “EXTERNAL IP”.
If the log record contains stack trace information, that stack trace will be included in the email.
The include_html
argument of AdminEmailHandler
is used to
control whether the traceback email includes an HTML attachment
containing the full content of the debug web page that would have been
produced if DEBUG
were True
. To set this value in your
configuration, include it in the handler definition for
django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler
, like this:
"handlers": {
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
"include_html": True,
},
}
Be aware of the security implications of logging when using the AdminEmailHandler
.
By setting the email_backend
argument of AdminEmailHandler
, the
email backend that is being used by the
handler can be overridden, like this:
"handlers": {
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
"email_backend": "django.core.mail.backends.filebased.EmailBackend",
},
}
By default, an instance of the email backend specified in
EMAIL_BACKEND
will be used.
The reporter_class
argument of AdminEmailHandler
allows providing
an django.views.debug.ExceptionReporter
subclass to customize the
traceback text sent in the email body. You provide a string import path to
the class you wish to use, like this:
"handlers": {
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
"include_html": True,
"reporter_class": "somepackage.error_reporter.CustomErrorReporter",
},
}
Sends emails to admin users. To customize this behavior, you can
subclass the AdminEmailHandler
class and
override this method.
Django provides some log filters in addition to those provided by the Python logging module.
This filter accepts a callback function (which should accept a single argument, the record to be logged), and calls it for each record that passes through the filter. Handling of that record will not proceed if the callback returns False.
For instance, to filter out UnreadablePostError
(raised when a user cancels an upload) from the admin emails, you would
create a filter function:
from django.http import UnreadablePostError
def skip_unreadable_post(record):
if record.exc_info:
exc_type, exc_value = record.exc_info[:2]
if isinstance(exc_value, UnreadablePostError):
return False
return True
and then add it to your logging config:
LOGGING = {
# ...
"filters": {
"skip_unreadable_posts": {
"()": "django.utils.log.CallbackFilter",
"callback": skip_unreadable_post,
},
},
"handlers": {
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"filters": ["skip_unreadable_posts"],
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
},
},
# ...
}
This filter will only pass on records when settings.DEBUG is False.
This filter is used as follows in the default LOGGING
configuration to ensure that the AdminEmailHandler
only sends
error emails to admins when DEBUG
is False
:
LOGGING = {
# ...
"filters": {
"require_debug_false": {
"()": "django.utils.log.RequireDebugFalse",
},
},
"handlers": {
"mail_admins": {
"level": "ERROR",
"filters": ["require_debug_false"],
"class": "django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler",
},
},
# ...
}
This filter is similar to RequireDebugFalse
, except that records are
passed only when DEBUG
is True
.
Dec 25, 2023