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Is there a way in Python to get a list of all defined loggers?

I mean, does something exist such as logging.getAllLoggers() which would return a list of Logger objects?

I searched the python.logging documentation but couldn't find such a method.

Thank you in advance.

Will Keeling
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mistiru
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3 Answers3

180

Loggers are held in a hierarchy by a logging.Manager instance. You can interrogate the manager on the root logger for the loggers it knows about.

import logging

loggers = [logging.getLogger(name) for name in logging.root.manager.loggerDict]

Calling getLogger(name) ensures that any placeholder loggers held by loggerDict are fully initialized when they are added to the list.

Will Keeling
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    In fact, getting the dict of Logger per name is better than simply a list of Logger alone, so `logging.root.manager.loggerDict` was exactly what I was searching for, thank you! – mistiru Nov 12 '18 at 14:23
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    A small note here is that root logger is not returned by this snippet. – Dimitar Ivanov Jul 02 '19 at 11:03
  • Anyone has an explanation about why PyCharm's linting warns about this snippet: `Unresolved attribute reference 'manager' for class 'RootLogger'`? I know it can be easily disabled, but still... – Matt-Mac-Muffin Aug 26 '21 at 15:14
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If you want to include RootLogger in the list as well, do something similar to:

import logging
loggers = [logging.getLogger()]  # get the root logger
loggers = loggers + [logging.getLogger(name) for name in logging.root.manager.loggerDict]

tested on Python 3.7.4

Jonathan L
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0

If you are trying to examine the hierarchy of logging objects, I'd recommend using logging_tree.printout():

import logging_tree

logging_tree.printout()

Or, if you want to have the logging tree accessible to your code:

logging_tree.tree()

See https://pypi.org/project/logging_tree/ for more info.

stephentgrammer
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  • I would have preferred to do it without depending on a third party library, but thank you for the link :) – mistiru Apr 07 '22 at 14:34