traceback
— Print or retrieve a stack traceback¶Source code: Lib/traceback.py
This module provides a standard interface to extract, format and print stack traces of Python programs. It exactly mimics the behavior of the Python interpreter when it prints a stack trace. This is useful when you want to print stack traces under program control, such as in a “wrapper” around the interpreter.
The module uses traceback objects — this is the object type that is stored in
the sys.last_traceback
variable and returned as the third item from
sys.exc_info()
.
The module defines the following functions:
traceback.
print_tb
(tb, limit=None, file=None)¶Print up to limit stack trace entries from traceback object tb (starting
from the caller’s frame) if limit is positive. Otherwise, print the last
abs(limit)
entries. If limit is omitted or None
, all entries are
printed. If file is omitted or None
, the output goes to
sys.stderr
; otherwise it should be an open file or file-like object to
receive the output.
Changed in version 3.5: Added negative limit support.
traceback.
print_exception
(etype, value, tb, limit=None, file=None, chain=True)¶Print exception information and stack trace entries from traceback object
tb to file. This differs from print_tb()
in the following
ways:
None
, it prints a header Traceback (most recent
call last):
SyntaxError
and value has the appropriate format, it
prints the line where the syntax error occurred with a caret indicating the
approximate position of the error.The optional limit argument has the same meaning as for print_tb()
.
If chain is true (the default), then chained exceptions (the
__cause__
or __context__
attributes of the exception) will be
printed as well, like the interpreter itself does when printing an unhandled
exception.
traceback.
print_exc
(limit=None, file=None, chain=True)¶This is a shorthand for print_exception(*sys.exc_info(), limit, file,
chain)
.
traceback.
print_last
(limit=None, file=None, chain=True)¶This is a shorthand for print_exception(sys.last_type, sys.last_value,
sys.last_traceback, limit, file, chain)
. In general it will work only
after an exception has reached an interactive prompt (see
sys.last_type
).
traceback.
print_stack
(f=None, limit=None, file=None)¶Print up to limit stack trace entries (starting from the invocation
point) if limit is positive. Otherwise, print the last abs(limit)
entries. If limit is omitted or None
, all entries are printed.
The optional f argument can be used to specify an alternate stack frame
to start. The optional file argument has the same meaning as for
print_tb()
.
Changed in version 3.5: Added negative limit support.
traceback.
extract_tb
(tb, limit=None)¶Return a list of “pre-processed” stack trace entries extracted from the
traceback object tb. It is useful for alternate formatting of
stack traces. The optional limit argument has the same meaning as for
print_tb()
. A “pre-processed” stack trace entry is a 4-tuple
(filename, line number, function name, text) representing the
information that is usually printed for a stack trace. The text is a
string with leading and trailing whitespace stripped; if the source is
not available it is None
.
traceback.
extract_stack
(f=None, limit=None)¶Extract the raw traceback from the current stack frame. The return value has
the same format as for extract_tb()
. The optional f and limit
arguments have the same meaning as for print_stack()
.
traceback.
format_list
(extracted_list)¶Given a list of tuples as returned by extract_tb()
or
extract_stack()
, return a list of strings ready for printing. Each
string in the resulting list corresponds to the item with the same index in
the argument list. Each string ends in a newline; the strings may contain
internal newlines as well, for those items whose source text line is not
None
.
traceback.
format_exception_only
(etype, value)¶Format the exception part of a traceback. The arguments are the exception
type and value such as given by sys.last_type
and sys.last_value
.
The return value is a list of strings, each ending in a newline. Normally,
the list contains a single string; however, for SyntaxError
exceptions, it contains several lines that (when printed) display detailed
information about where the syntax error occurred. The message indicating
which exception occurred is the always last string in the list.
traceback.
format_exception
(etype, value, tb, limit=None, chain=True)¶Format a stack trace and the exception information. The arguments have the
same meaning as the corresponding arguments to print_exception()
. The
return value is a list of strings, each ending in a newline and some
containing internal newlines. When these lines are concatenated and printed,
exactly the same text is printed as does print_exception()
.
traceback.
format_exc
(limit=None, chain=True)¶This is like print_exc(limit)
but returns a string instead of printing to
a file.
traceback.
format_tb
(tb, limit=None)¶A shorthand for format_list(extract_tb(tb, limit))
.
traceback.
format_stack
(f=None, limit=None)¶A shorthand for format_list(extract_stack(f, limit))
.
traceback.
clear_frames
(tb)¶Clears the local variables of all the stack frames in a traceback tb
by calling the clear()
method of each frame object.
New in version 3.4.
traceback.
walk_stack
(f)¶Walk a stack following f.f_back
from the given frame, yielding the frame
and line number for each frame. If f is None
, the current stack is
used. This helper is used with StackSummary.extract()
.
New in version 3.5.
traceback.
walk_tb
(tb)¶Walk a traceback following tb_next
yielding the frame and line number
for each frame. This helper is used with StackSummary.extract()
.
New in version 3.5.
The module also defines the following classes:
TracebackException
Objects¶New in version 3.5.
TracebackException
objects are created from actual exceptions to
capture data for later printing in a lightweight fashion.
traceback.
TracebackException
(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback, *, limit=None, lookup_lines=True, capture_locals=False)¶Capture an exception for later rendering. limit, lookup_lines and
capture_locals are as for the StackSummary
class.
Note that when locals are captured, they are also shown in the traceback.
__cause__
¶A TracebackException
of the original __cause__
.
__context__
¶A TracebackException
of the original __context__
.
__suppress_context__
¶The __suppress_context__
value from the original exception.
stack
¶A StackSummary
representing the traceback.
exc_type
¶The class of the original traceback.
filename
¶For syntax errors - the file name where the error occurred.
lineno
¶For syntax errors - the line number where the error occurred.
text
¶For syntax errors - the text where the error occurred.
offset
¶For syntax errors - the offset into the text where the error occurred.
msg
¶For syntax errors - the compiler error message.
from_exception
(exc, *, limit=None, lookup_lines=True, capture_locals=False)¶Capture an exception for later rendering. limit, lookup_lines and
capture_locals are as for the StackSummary
class.
Note that when locals are captured, they are also shown in the traceback.
format
(*, chain=True)¶Format the exception.
If chain is not True
, __cause__
and __context__
will not
be formatted.
The return value is a generator of strings, each ending in a newline and
some containing internal newlines. print_exception()
is a wrapper around this method which just prints the lines to a file.
The message indicating which exception occurred is always the last string in the output.
format_exception_only
()¶Format the exception part of the traceback.
The return value is a generator of strings, each ending in a newline.
Normally, the generator emits a single string; however, for
SyntaxError
exceptions, it emits several lines that (when
printed) display detailed information about where the syntax
error occurred.
The message indicating which exception occurred is always the last string in the output.
StackSummary
Objects¶New in version 3.5.
StackSummary
objects represent a call stack ready for formatting.
traceback.
StackSummary
¶extract
(frame_gen, *, limit=None, lookup_lines=True, capture_locals=False)¶Construct a StackSummary
object from a frame generator (such as
is returned by walk_stack()
or
walk_tb()
).
If limit is supplied, only this many frames are taken from frame_gen.
If lookup_lines is False
, the returned FrameSummary
objects will not have read their lines in yet, making the cost of
creating the StackSummary
cheaper (which may be valuable if it
may not actually get formatted). If capture_locals is True
the
local variables in each FrameSummary
are captured as object
representations.
from_list
(a_list)¶Construct a StackSummary
object from a supplied old-style list
of tuples. Each tuple should be a 4-tuple with filename, lineno, name,
line as the elements.
format
()¶Returns a list of strings ready for printing. Each string in the resulting list corresponds to a single frame from the stack. Each string ends in a newline; the strings may contain internal newlines as well, for those items with source text lines.
For long sequences of the same frame and line, the first few repetitions are shown, followed by a summary line stating the exact number of further repetitions.
Changed in version 3.6: Long sequences of repeated frames are now abbreviated.
FrameSummary
Objects¶New in version 3.5.
FrameSummary
objects represent a single frame in a traceback.
traceback.
FrameSummary
(filename, lineno, name, lookup_line=True, locals=None, line=None)¶Represent a single frame in the traceback or stack that is being formatted
or printed. It may optionally have a stringified version of the frames
locals included in it. If lookup_line is False
, the source code is not
looked up until the FrameSummary
has the line
attribute accessed (which also happens when casting it to a tuple).
line
may be directly provided, and will prevent line
lookups happening at all. locals is an optional local variable
dictionary, and if supplied the variable representations are stored in the
summary for later display.
This simple example implements a basic read-eval-print loop, similar to (but
less useful than) the standard Python interactive interpreter loop. For a more
complete implementation of the interpreter loop, refer to the code
module.
import sys, traceback
def run_user_code(envdir):
source = input(">>> ")
try:
exec(source, envdir)
except Exception:
print("Exception in user code:")
print("-"*60)
traceback.print_exc(file=sys.stdout)
print("-"*60)
envdir = {}
while True:
run_user_code(envdir)
The following example demonstrates the different ways to print and format the exception and traceback:
import sys, traceback
def lumberjack():
bright_side_of_death()
def bright_side_of_death():
return tuple()[0]
try:
lumberjack()
except IndexError:
exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback = sys.exc_info()
print("*** print_tb:")
traceback.print_tb(exc_traceback, limit=1, file=sys.stdout)
print("*** print_exception:")
traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback,
limit=2, file=sys.stdout)
print("*** print_exc:")
traceback.print_exc(limit=2, file=sys.stdout)
print("*** format_exc, first and last line:")
formatted_lines = traceback.format_exc().splitlines()
print(formatted_lines[0])
print(formatted_lines[-1])
print("*** format_exception:")
print(repr(traceback.format_exception(exc_type, exc_value,
exc_traceback)))
print("*** extract_tb:")
print(repr(traceback.extract_tb(exc_traceback)))
print("*** format_tb:")
print(repr(traceback.format_tb(exc_traceback)))
print("*** tb_lineno:", exc_traceback.tb_lineno)
The output for the example would look similar to this:
*** print_tb:
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
*** print_exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack
bright_side_of_death()
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** print_exc:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>
lumberjack()
File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack
bright_side_of_death()
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** format_exc, first and last line:
Traceback (most recent call last):
IndexError: tuple index out of range
*** format_exception:
['Traceback (most recent call last):\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>\n lumberjack()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack\n bright_side_of_death()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 7, in bright_side_of_death\n return tuple()[0]\n',
'IndexError: tuple index out of range\n']
*** extract_tb:
[<FrameSummary file <doctest...>, line 10 in <module>>,
<FrameSummary file <doctest...>, line 4 in lumberjack>,
<FrameSummary file <doctest...>, line 7 in bright_side_of_death>]
*** format_tb:
[' File "<doctest...>", line 10, in <module>\n lumberjack()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 4, in lumberjack\n bright_side_of_death()\n',
' File "<doctest...>", line 7, in bright_side_of_death\n return tuple()[0]\n']
*** tb_lineno: 10
The following example shows the different ways to print and format the stack:
>>> import traceback
>>> def another_function():
... lumberstack()
...
>>> def lumberstack():
... traceback.print_stack()
... print(repr(traceback.extract_stack()))
... print(repr(traceback.format_stack()))
...
>>> another_function()
File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module>
another_function()
File "<doctest>", line 3, in another_function
lumberstack()
File "<doctest>", line 6, in lumberstack
traceback.print_stack()
[('<doctest>', 10, '<module>', 'another_function()'),
('<doctest>', 3, 'another_function', 'lumberstack()'),
('<doctest>', 7, 'lumberstack', 'print(repr(traceback.extract_stack()))')]
[' File "<doctest>", line 10, in <module>\n another_function()\n',
' File "<doctest>", line 3, in another_function\n lumberstack()\n',
' File "<doctest>", line 8, in lumberstack\n print(repr(traceback.format_stack()))\n']
This last example demonstrates the final few formatting functions:
>>> import traceback
>>> traceback.format_list([('spam.py', 3, '<module>', 'spam.eggs()'),
... ('eggs.py', 42, 'eggs', 'return "bacon"')])
[' File "spam.py", line 3, in <module>\n spam.eggs()\n',
' File "eggs.py", line 42, in eggs\n return "bacon"\n']
>>> an_error = IndexError('tuple index out of range')
>>> traceback.format_exception_only(type(an_error), an_error)
['IndexError: tuple index out of range\n']