The automation framework for Python
Project description
robocorp-tasks
robocorp-tasks
is a Python framework designed to simplify the development
of Python automations.
Note: The current version (2.0.0) is now in beta. Semantic versioning is used in the project.
Why
While Python is widely used in the automation world, many solutions end up being ad-hoc, making it difficult to navigate different projects and keep up with the features required for analysing the results of such automations afterwards.
How
robocorp-tasks
provides a runner for running tasks that offers logging
out of the box for Python code (showing method calls, arguments, assigns, etc)
by leveraging robocorp-log
, and managing the lifecycle for running such tasks.
Installation
To install robocorp-tasks
, use the following command:
pip install robocorp-tasks
Usage
Replace the code in your __main__
with a method that has the name of your task
(which should not have parameters) and decorate it with the @task
decorator, like this:
i.e.:
from robocorp.tasks import task
@task
def my_task():
...
- Call your task using the command line below, customizing the directory and task name as needed:
python -m robocorp.tasks run <path/to/file.py or directory> -t <task_name>
Note: if you have only one defined task in your target, the -t <task_name>
option is not needed.
Note: the task name is the name of the method decorated with @task
.
Note: if a directory is given, only files named *task*.py
will be used for collection.
Note: in the current version only one task can be run per invocation. If more than one task is found an error will be given and no tasks will be run.
- View the log results in
output/log.html
.
Auto logging customization
Following the initial steps outlined above should be sufficient to get comprehensive logging for all user code executed. However, note that it won't log calls from libraries by default, as it may be difficult to separate the libraries that are important for a project from those that are just noise.
To add custom logging for libraries like rpaframework
, Selenium
and others, create a
pyproject.toml
file and place it in the root of your project.
Then, customize the [tool.robocorp.log]
section to add log_filter_rules
.
log_filter_rules
is a list of dictionaries where entries may be added to specify
how to handle logging for a particular module.
There are three different logging configurations that may be applied:
exclude
: skips logging a module.full_log
(default for user code): logs a module with full information, such as method calls, arguments, yields, local assigns, and more.log_on_project_call
(default for library code -- since 2.0): logs only method calls, arguments, return values and exceptions, but only when a library method is called from user code. This configuration is meant to be used for library logging.
Note that the default for the library code may be configured through default_library_filter_kind
.
Example of pyproject.toml
where the rpaframework
and selenium
libraries are configured to be logged and all other libraries are
excluded by default:
[tool.robocorp.log]
log_filter_rules = [
{name = "RPA", kind = "log_on_project_call"},
{name = "selenium", kind = "log_on_project_call"},
{name = "SeleniumLibrary", kind = "log_on_project_call"},
]
default_library_filter_kind = "exclude"
Note that when specifying a module name to match in log_filter_rules
,
the name may either match exactly or the module name must start with the
name followed by a dot.
This means that, for example, RPA
would match RPA.Browser
,
but not RPAmodule
nor another.RPA
.
Also, as of robocorp-tasks 2.0
, it's also possible to use fnmatch
style names.
i.e.:
[tool.robocorp.log]
log_filter_rules = [
{name = "proj.*", kind = "full_log"},
{name = "proj[AB]", kind = "full_log"},
]
Note that the order of the rules is important as rules which appear first are matched before the ones that appear afterwards.
Log output customization
By default, the log output will be saved to an output
directory, where each file
can be up to 1MB
and up to 5
files are kept before old ones are deleted.
When the run finishes, a log.html
file will be created in the output directory
containing the log viewer with the log contents embedded.
However, you can customize the log output by changing the output directory,
maximum number of log files to keep, and maximum size of each output file.
You can do this through the command line by passing the appropriate arguments
when running python -m robocorp.tasks run
.
For example, to change the output directory to my_output
, run:
python -m robocorp.tasks run path/to/tasks.py -o my_output
You can also set the maximum number of output files to keep by passing
--max-log-files
followed by a number. For example, to keep up to 10
log files, run:
python -m robocorp.tasks run path/to/tasks.py --max-log-files 10
Finally, you can set the maximum size of each output file by passing
--max-log-file-size
followed by a size in megabytes (e.g.: 2MB
or 1000kb
).
For example, to set the maximum size of each output file to 500kb
, run:
python -m robocorp.tasks run path/to/tasks.py --max-log-file-size 500kb
License: Apache 2.0
Copyright: Robocorp Technologies, Inc.
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