PyLint message: logging-format-interpolation
In my experience a more compelling reason than optimization (for most use cases) for the lazy interpolation is that it plays nicely with log aggregators like Sentry.
Consider a 'user logged in' log message. If you interpolate the user into the format string, you have as many distinct log messages as there are users. If you use lazy interpolation like this, the log aggregator can more reasonably interpret this as the same log message with a bunch of different instances.
Maybe this time differences can help you.
Following description is not the answer for your question, but it can help people.
If you want to use fstrings (Literal String Interpolation) for logging, then you can disable it from .pylintrc
file with disable=logging-fstring-interpolation
, see: related issue and comment.
Also you can disable logging-format-interpolation
.
For pylint 2.4:
There are 3 options for logging style in the .pylintrc
file: old
, new
, fstr
fstr
option added in 2.4 and removed in 2.5
Description from .pylintrc
file (v2.4):
[LOGGING]
# Format style used to check logging format string. `old` means using %
# formatting, `new` is for `{}` formatting,and `fstr` is for f-strings.
logging-format-style=old
for old (logging-format-style=old
):
foo = "bar"
self.logger.info("foo: %s", foo)
for new (logging-format-style=new
):
foo = "bar"
self.logger.info("foo: {}", foo)
# OR
self.logger.info("foo: {foo}", foo=foo)
Note: you can not use .format()
even if you select new
option.
pylint still gives the same warning for this code:
self.logger.info("foo: {}".format(foo)) # W1202
# OR
self.logger.info("foo: {foo}".format(foo=foo)) # W1202
for fstr (logging-format-style=fstr
):
foo = "bar"
self.logger.info(f"foo: {foo}")
Personally, I prefer fstr option because of PEP-0498.
It is not true for logger statement because it relies on former "%" format like string to provide lazy interpolation of this string using extra arguments given to the logger call. For instance instead of doing:
logger.error('oops caused by %s' % exc)
you should do
logger.error('oops caused by %s', exc)
so the string will only be interpolated if the message is actually emitted.
You can't benefit of this functionality when using .format()
.
Per the Optimization section of the logging
docs:
Formatting of message arguments is deferred until it cannot be avoided. However, computing the arguments passed to the logging method can also be expensive, and you may want to avoid doing it if the logger will just throw away your event.