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Data Ingestion with Python Cookbook

You're reading from  Data Ingestion with Python Cookbook

Product type Book
Published in May 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837632602
Pages 414 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Gláucia Esppenchutz Gláucia Esppenchutz
Profile icon Gláucia Esppenchutz
Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters close

Preface 1. Part 1: Fundamentals of Data Ingestion
2. Chapter 1: Introduction to Data Ingestion 3. Chapter 2: Principals of Data Access – Accessing Your Data 4. Chapter 3: Data Discovery – Understanding Our Data before Ingesting It 5. Chapter 4: Reading CSV and JSON Files and Solving Problems 6. Chapter 5: Ingesting Data from Structured and Unstructured Databases 7. Chapter 6: Using PySpark with Defined and Non-Defined Schemas 8. Chapter 7: Ingesting Analytical Data 9. Part 2: Structuring the Ingestion Pipeline
10. Chapter 8: Designing Monitored Data Workflows 11. Chapter 9: Putting Everything Together with Airflow 12. Chapter 10: Logging and Monitoring Your Data Ingest in Airflow 13. Chapter 11: Automating Your Data Ingestion Pipelines 14. Chapter 12: Using Data Observability for Debugging, Error Handling, and Preventing Downtime 15. Index 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating standardized logs

Now that we know the best practices for inserting logs and using log levels, we can add more relevant information to our logs to help us monitor our code. Information such as date and time or the module or function executed helps us determine where an issue occurred or where improvements are required.

Creating standardized formatting for application logs or (in our case) data pipeline logs makes the debugging process more manageable, and there are a variety of ways to do this. One way of doing it is to create .ini or .conf files that hold the configuration on how the logs will be formatted and applied to our wider Python code, for instance.

In this recipe, we will learn how to create a configuration file that will dictate how the logs will be formatted across the code and shown in the execution output.

Getting ready

Let’s use the same code as the previous Using log-level types recipe, but with more improvements!

You can use the following...

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