| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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traces of our crufty old Syslog. Most of this work was purely mechanical,
except for:
1) Initializing the loggers. For this, there's a new module
Mailman/loginit.py (yes all modules from now on will use PEP 8
names). We can't call this 'logging.py' because that will
interfere with importing the stdlib module of the same name (can
you say Python 2.5 and absolute imports?).
If you want to write log messages both to the log file and to
stderr, pass True to loginit.initialize(). This will turn on
propagation of log messages to the parent 'mailman' logger, which
is set up to print to stderr. This is how bin/qrunner works when
not running as a subprocess of mailmanctl.
2) The driver script. I had to untwist the StampedLogger stuff and
implement differently printing exceptions and such to log/error
because standard logging objects don't have a write() method. So
we write to a cStringIO and then pass that to the logger.
3) SMTPDirect.py because of the configurability of the log messages.
This required changing SafeDict into a dict subclass (which is
better than using UserDicts anyway -- yay Python 2.3!). It's
probably still possible to flummox things up if you change the
name of the loggers in the SMTP_LOG_* variables in mm_cfg.py.
However, the worst you can do is cause output to go to stderr and
not go to a log file.
Note too that all entry points into the Mailman system must call
Mailman.loginit.initialize() or the log output will go to stderr
(which may occasionally be what you want). Currently all CGIs and
qrunners should be working properly.
I wish I could have tested all code paths that touch the logger, but
that's infeasible. I have tested this, but it's possible that there
were some mistakes in the translation.
- Mailman.Bouncers.BounceAPI.Stop is a singleton, but not a class
instance any more.
- True/False code cleanup, PEP 8 import restructuring, whitespace
normalization, and copyright year updates, as appropriate.
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write(): Just call new function write_ex(), passing arguments through.
write_ex(): Use explicit arguments to pass in the args tuple and kws
dictionary. This is because Python requires **kws in extended calls
to be concrete dictionary objects, not generic mapping objects.
SMTPDirect wants to pass in an instance of (subclassed) UserDict, so
it calls write_ex() directly.
Also, stash the msg argument in local variable origmsg, which is used
if we get an exception during string interpolation.
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nicer and more robust. String interpolation is now done here instead
of at callee site, so exceptions like TypeError and ValueError can be
caught and dealt with better.
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be instantiated.
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Syslog.py: New global logging class which replaces the
MailList.LogMsg() interface. This module also creates a global
instance which is callable and should be used for convenience.
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