If I understand the module correctly, you only need that if you need it to be an actual file on the file system. Reading the contents of the file with python should be possible with with traversable.open() as file:
I'm trying to track down how this happened in the code. If there's an existing flag in poetry then maybe it's a non-issue but I'm curious about how it counted CPUs
Might be relevant to folks with similar issues: Our first-level defence is setting environment variables for a load of known offenders to the correct CPU count. Our base list of env variables comes from our batch system plus MAMBA_EXTRACT_THREADS.
I (who has never logged anything in his life) assumed it's about adoption? Say you have dependencyA logging with structlog and dependencyB logging with loguru, but you can still configure everything easily because they both respect the configuration of logging
In my hobby project that I've sadly parked again, I've got it set to just throw everything into postgres. I remember using Splunk over text files years ago and I hated its syntax. As long as I don't get billions of user interactions, postgres should hold for me
I should clarify, by logging I meant logging, the module. There could be other ways to collect the data in the way you want with a custom helper/extension?
@roganjosh Well, it just keeps creeping in. No matter which nice and shiny high-level library I've tried, in the end I have to fiddle with logging to have a proper backend to actually push stuff to where I need it.
Like for structlog, they don't support multiple destinations and god forbid at different levels per source.
I had to delve into logging fairly deeply in a project this past summer. I learned about the extra argument that you can pass in as part of your log.info(), etc. function calls. Also got to discuss with Martijn Peters the strange privacy of Formatter's _fmt attribute, which warns you off of changing the format for an existing Formatter (which attaches to a Handler, which attaches to a Logger).
I had to tweak format strings after-the-fact, sort of a logging monkeypatch, to inject dd.trace_id and dd.span_id placeholders for Datadog logging.
Change of topic, but apparently there was recently an exploit in libwebp, allowing for arbitrary code execution through pretty much any app that displays webp images? How have I not heard of this before?
What's the best plugin to make pytest run async tests nowadays? I'm currently using alt-pytest-asyncio, but it's cancelling my tests after 10 seconds even if the debugger is active
I almost asked if there was a Stack Overflow question that explains what exactly pass as a class body does...but then I figured out that the piece I was missing is that constructors (okay, fine, initializers) are inherited in Python. That's very surprising, coming from Java/Kotlin.