Introduction
The Watchdog Extension includes the WatchdogManager
, enabling applications to easily monitor, and react to, changes in filesystem paths based on the filesystem events monitoring library Watchdog .
On application startup, the Watchdog Observer is automatically started and then upon application close, the observer thread is properly stopped and joined with the parent process before exit.
API References:
Requirements
Cement 3.0.8+:
pip install cement[watchdog]
Applications using Cement <3.0.8 should continue to include watchdog
in their dependencies.
Platform Support
Configuration
Application Configuration Settings
This extension does not support any application level configuration settings.
Application Meta Options
This extension honors the following application meta options:
Hooks
This extension defines the following hooks:
watchdog_pre_start
Run first when App.watchdog.start()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
watchdog_post_start
Run last when App.watchdog.start()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
watchdog_pre_stop
Run first when App.watchdog.stop()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
watchdog_post_stop
Run last when App.watchdog.stop()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
watchdog_pre_join
Run first when App.watchdog.join()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
watchdog_post_join
Run last when App.watchdog.join()
is called. The application object is passed as an argument. Nothing is expected in return.
Usage
The following example uses the default WatchdogEventHandler
that by default only logs all events to debug
:
Example: Using Watchdog Extension
Copy from time import sleep
from cement import App , CaughtSignal
from cement . ext . ext_watchdog import WatchdogEventHandler
class MyApp ( App ):
class Meta :
label = 'myapp'
extensions = [ 'watchdog' ]
watchdog_paths = [
( './tmp/' , WatchdogEventHandler) ,
]
with MyApp () as app :
app . run ()
try :
while True :
sleep ( 1 )
except CaughtSignal as e :
print (e)
In the above example, nothing is printed to console. However you will see something like the following via debug logging:
Copy $ python myapp.py --debug 2>&1 | grep -i watchdog
cement.core.extension : loading the 'cement.ext.ext_watchdog' framework extension
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_pre_start'
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_post_start'
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_pre_stop'
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_post_stop'
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_pre_join'
cement.core.hook : defining hook 'watchdog_post_join'
cement.core.hook : registering hook 'watchdog_extend_app' from cement.ext.ext_watchdog into hooks['post_setup']
cement.core.hook : registering hook 'watchdog_add_paths' from cement.ext.ext_watchdog into hooks['post_setup']
cement.core.hook : registering hook 'watchdog_start' from cement.ext.ext_watchdog into hooks['pre_run']
cement.core.hook : registering hook 'watchdog_cleanup' from cement.ext.ext_watchdog into hooks['pre_close']
cement.core.hook : running hook 'post_setup' (<function watchdog_extend_app at 0x103c991e0>) from cement.ext.ext_watchdog
cement.core.foundation : extending appication with '.watchdog' (<cement.ext.ext_watchdog.WatchdogManager object at 0x103f83ef0>)
cement.core.hook : running hook 'post_setup' (<function watchdog_add_paths at 0x103ddd6a8>) from cement.ext.ext_watchdog
cement.ext.ext_watchdog : adding path /path/to/tmp with event handler <class 'cement.ext.ext_watchdog.WatchdogEventHandler'>
cement.core.hook : running hook 'pre_run' (<function watchdog_start at 0x103ddd598>) from cement.ext.ext_watchdog
cement.ext.ext_watchdog : starting watchdog observer
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/test2'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/test4'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/test3'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/dir1/test'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/test'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <DirDeletedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/dir1'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <DirModifiedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <DirModifiedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <DirCreatedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/dir1'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <FileCreatedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/dir1/test.file'>
myapp : Watchdog Event: <DirModifiedEvent: src_path='/path/to/tmp/dir1'>
cement.core.hook : running hook 'pre_close' (<function watchdog_cleanup at 0x10e930620>) from cement.ext.ext_watchdog
cement.ext.ext_watchdog : stopping watchdog observer
cement.ext.ext_watchdog : joining watchdog observer
cement.core.foundation : closing the myapp application
To expand on the above example, we can add our own event handlers:
Example: Adding Watchdog Event Handlers cli
Copy from time import sleep
from cement import App , CaughtSignal
from cement . ext . ext_watchdog import WatchdogEventHandler
class MyEventHandler ( WatchdogEventHandler ):
def on_any_event ( self , event ):
# do something with the ``event`` object
print ( "The modified path was: %s " % event.src_path)
class MyApp ( App ):
class Meta :
label = 'myapp'
extensions = [ 'watchdog' ]
watchdog_paths = [
( './tmp/' , MyEventHandler) ,
]
with MyApp () as app :
app . run ()
try :
while True :
sleep ( 1 )
except CaughtSignal as e :
print (e)
Copy $ python myapp.py
The modified path was: /path/to/tmp/test.file
Note that the WatchdogEventHandler
could be replaced with any other event handler classe (i.e. those available from watchdog
directly). However to play nicely with Cement, we sub-class them first in order to pass in our application object.
Example: Creating a Watchdog Event Handler
Copy from watchdog . events import FileSystemEventHandler
class MyEventHandler ( FileSystemEventHandler ):
def __init__ ( self , app , * args , ** kw ):
super (MyEventHandler, self). __init__ ( * args, ** kw)
self . app = app
For full usage of Watchdog event handlers, refer to the Watchdog API Documentation .