print python stack trace without exception being raised
Something is happening with one of my class's instance variables. I want to make the variable a property, and whenever it is accessed I want to print out the stack trace of all the code leading up to that point, so I can see where it's being messed with. How do I print out the stack trace when no exception has been raised? I know if there is an exception I can do something like traceback.format_tb(sys.exc_info()[2])
.
Also what might be useful is to print only the last 3-4 levels, since the first few are probably not going to be that interesting.
traceback.print_stack()
:
>>> def f():
... def g():
... traceback.print_stack()
... g()
...
>>> f()
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "<stdin>", line 4, in f
File "<stdin>", line 3, in g
Edit: You can also use extract_stack, take a slice (e.g. stack[5:]
for exclude the first 5 levels) and use format_list to get a print-ready stacktrace ('\n'.join(traceback.format_list(...))
)
Instead of printing to stdout, if you need a string to pass to a logger you can use:
''.join(traceback.format_stack())
Note, that traceback.format_stack() returns the stacktrace as a formatted list of strings, so you can slice it anyway you want. To get the last few elements of the stacktrace you could do:
''.join(traceback.format_stack()[-N:])
Where N is the number of levels you are interested in.