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This page is relevant to a situation where one uses scripts written in Python but run from the ordinary operating system shell to control an experiment (but it could be applied to controlling any system). It shows how to very simply log following simple information:
All of this is logged to a simple database which allows very easy and efficient searching. Those are of course the main points of using a database.
Why?
Because:
For efficient interaction with the database we will use two mechanism:
Command line shell (documentation). We will use this for:
The interactive shell is run by executing the sqlite
program
Python binding (documentation)
The overall design is trivial: we create one main table which logs all
of the commands (obslog
) and a separate table for each of the
available commands in which we log the parameters for that command
that we are interested in. In this example I consider one only sample
command, which we call advanceCal
.
This is a simple sample main table that I would propose for this:
CREATE TABLE obslog (date TEXT CONSTRAINT datedef DEFAULT CURRENT_DATE,
time TEXT CONSTRAINT timedef DEFAULT CURRENT_TIME,
command TEXT,
version TEXT,
arguments TEXT,
uid TEXT,
stdoutput TEXT);
The columns have following meaning:
That is enough basic information. But a problem arises in that the “arguments” field is simply a string, which means that it can not be used easily for selection. Further more, it does not record any default parameters for commands, etc. This can be rectified by adding a separate table for each command that stores their parameters in a more intelligent way.
For example lets assume we have a command named advanceCal
. We can
create a table for it as follows:
CREATE TABLE advanceCal (duration REAL,
wavel REAL,
cmdref INTEGER,
FOREIGN KEY(cmdref) REFERENCES obslog(rowid));
This table has the following columns:
Because of the flexibility of Python, it is in fact very easy to log from it into the database. In this section I describe some of the shortcuts which make this easy and non-intrusive to what you are trying to do. The full listing for the module is given below in the final section.
sys.argv[0]
sys.stdout
with a StringIO
object. All of this
output can then be stored in the database.getattr
Python functionAs already noted, the full module content is given below in file
scriptbase.py
.
What needs to be done to enable logging such as this in a putative Python command? Only the following simple changes:
The logging module should be imported import scriptbase
The logging object should be created at the beginning of the script:
sl=scriptbase.slog("$Id:$",
capstdout=True)
Once the parameters are parsed they should be stored in the database:
sl.pars(options)
Once the script completes and data are written that should be logged:
sl.complete("uid://myuid")
You have a database of what scripts were run! With a real database, it is trivial to construct arbitrary queries to for find commands run for a specific reason, at a specific time and with a specified output.
For example:
To find when advanceCal commands were run and what the output uid was:
sqlite> SELECT date, time, uid FROM obslog WHERE command == "./advanceCal.py" ;
2010-04-30|16:38:00|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|16:38:02|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|16:38:05|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|16:38:16|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|16:38:17|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|16:38:18|uid://myuid
To find all commands run on 30th April:
sqlite> select date, time, command from obslog where date == "2010-04-30" ;
2010-04-30|16:38:00|./advanceCal.py
2010-04-30|16:38:02|./advanceCal.py
2010-04-30|16:38:05|./advanceCal.py
2010-04-30|16:38:16|./advanceCal.py
2010-04-30|16:38:17|./advanceCal.py
2010-04-30|16:38:18|./advanceCal.py
To find all advanceCal commands with duration between 110 and 150 seconds:
sqlite> select date, duration, uid from advanceCal, obslog where duration > 110 and duration < 150 and obslog.rowid==advanceCal.cmdref;
2010-04-30|120.0|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|130.0|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|130.0|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|130.0|uid://myuid
2010-04-30|130.0|uid://myuid
# Bojan Nikolic <b.nikolic@mrao.cam.ac.uk>
#
"""
Examples of how to use sqlite to record scripts that are run and their
parameters
"""
import os
import StringIO
import sys
import sqlite3
def writeScriptStart(conn,
ver=""):
"""
Write the name of the current script and arguments to the obslog
table
:param ver: Revision identifier of a script, e.g., CVS Id
"""
c=conn.cursor()
c.execute("""
INSERT INTO obslog ("command", "version", "arguments", "uid")
VALUES (?, ?, ?, "Incomplete")""",
(sys.argv[0],
" ".join(sys.argv[1:]),
ver))
return c.lastrowid
def updateScriptUID(conn,
rowid,
uid):
"""
Insert the id of the data written by the script
"""
c=conn.cursor()
c.execute("""
UPDATE obslog SET uid = ? where ROWID == ?
""",
(uid,
rowid))
def updateScriptStdOut(conn,
rowid,
out):
"""
Insert the printout from the script to the obslog table
"""
c=conn.cursor()
c.execute("""
UPDATE obslog SET stdoutput = ? where ROWID == ?
""",
(out,
rowid))
def tableCols(conn,
tabname):
"""
Return the names of all columns in a table
"""
c=conn.cursor()
c.execute("""
SELECT * from %s ;
""" % tabname)
return [x[0] for x in c.description]
def insertPars(conn,
tabname,
cmdref,
pars):
"""
Insert parameters from an optparse object into a command table
:param tabname: Table to store the parameters in
:param cmdref: Rowid in the obslog of the command that was run
:param pars: optparse object with the script parameters
"""
tc=tableCols(conn,
tabname)
tv=[getattr(pars, x) for x in tc if x != "cmdref"]
v="("
for i in range(len(tv)):
v+= str(tv[i])
v+=","
v+=str(cmdref)
v+=")"
c=conn.cursor()
c.execute("""
INSERT INTO %s
VALUES %s """ % (tabname, v))
class slog:
"""
Script log class -- logging of what script was run and when, to an
sqlite database
"""
def __init__(self,
ver="",
capstdout=False):
"""
"""
self.conn=sqlite3.connect("/home/bnikolic/temp/test.db")
self.rowid=writeScriptStart(self.conn,
ver=ver)
self.conn.commit()
if capstdout:
self.capture=StringIO.StringIO()
sys.stdout=self.capture
else:
self.capture=False
def pars(self,
pars):
"""
Add the parameters of this script to the database
"""
sname=os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]))[0]
insertPars(self.conn,
sname,
self.rowid,
pars)
def complete(self,
uid):
"""
"""
updateScriptUID(self.conn,
self.rowid,
uid)
if self.capture:
self.capture.seek(0)
updateScriptStdOut(self.conn,
self.rowid,
self.capture.read())
self.conn.commit()
#! /usr/bin/python
# Bojan Nikolic <b.nikolic@mrao.cam.ac.uk>
#
"""
A fake control script
"""
import optparse
import scriptbase
sl=scriptbase.slog("$Id:$",
capstdout=True)
parser=optparse.OptionParser()
parser.add_option("-d",
"--duration",
dest="duration",
default = 30.0,
type = float,
help="Duration")
parser.add_option("-w",
"--wavel",
dest="wavel",
default = 1.3,
type=float,
help="Wavelength")
(options, args) = parser.parse_args()
sl.pars(options)
print "Do the real work now!"
sl.complete("uid://myuid")