Location of Django logs and errors

Logs are set in your settings.py file. A new, default project, looks like this:

# A sample logging configuration. The only tangible logging
# performed by this configuration is to send an email to
# the site admins on every HTTP 500 error when DEBUG=False.
# See http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/logging for
# more details on how to customize your logging configuration.
LOGGING = {
    'version': 1,
    'disable_existing_loggers': False,
    'filters': {
        'require_debug_false': {
            '()': 'django.utils.log.RequireDebugFalse'
        }
    },
    'handlers': {
        'mail_admins': {
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'filters': ['require_debug_false'],
            'class': 'django.utils.log.AdminEmailHandler'
        }
    },
    'loggers': {
        'django.request': {
            'handlers': ['mail_admins'],
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'propagate': True,
        },
    }
}

By default, these don’t create log files. If you want those, you need to add a filename parameter to your handlers

    'applogfile': {
        'level':'DEBUG',
        'class':'logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler',
        'filename': os.path.join(DJANGO_ROOT, 'APPNAME.log'),
        'maxBytes': 1024*1024*15, # 15MB
        'backupCount': 10,
    },

This will set up a rotating log that can get 15 MB in size and keep 10 historical versions.

In the loggers section from above, you need to add applogfile to the handlers for your application

'loggers': {
        'django.request': {
            'handlers': ['mail_admins'],
            'level': 'ERROR',
            'propagate': True,
        },
        'APPNAME': {
            'handlers': ['applogfile',],
            'level': 'DEBUG',
        },
    }

This example will put your logs in your Django root in a file named APPNAME.log

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