1:mod:`warnings` --- Warning control 2=================================== 3 4.. module:: warnings 5 :synopsis: Issue warning messages and control their disposition. 6 7**Source code:** :source:`Lib/warnings.py` 8 9.. index:: single: warnings 10 11-------------- 12 13Warning messages are typically issued in situations where it is useful to alert 14the user of some condition in a program, where that condition (normally) doesn't 15warrant raising an exception and terminating the program. For example, one 16might want to issue a warning when a program uses an obsolete module. 17 18Python programmers issue warnings by calling the :func:`warn` function defined 19in this module. (C programmers use :c:func:`PyErr_WarnEx`; see 20:ref:`exceptionhandling` for details). 21 22Warning messages are normally written to :data:`sys.stderr`, but their disposition 23can be changed flexibly, from ignoring all warnings to turning them into 24exceptions. The disposition of warnings can vary based on the :ref:`warning category 25<warning-categories>`, the text of the warning message, and the source location where it 26is issued. Repetitions of a particular warning for the same source location are 27typically suppressed. 28 29There are two stages in warning control: first, each time a warning is issued, a 30determination is made whether a message should be issued or not; next, if a 31message is to be issued, it is formatted and printed using a user-settable hook. 32 33The determination whether to issue a warning message is controlled by the 34:ref:`warning filter <warning-filter>`, which is a sequence of matching rules and actions. Rules can be 35added to the filter by calling :func:`filterwarnings` and reset to its default 36state by calling :func:`resetwarnings`. 37 38The printing of warning messages is done by calling :func:`showwarning`, which 39may be overridden; the default implementation of this function formats the 40message by calling :func:`formatwarning`, which is also available for use by 41custom implementations. 42 43.. seealso:: 44 :func:`logging.captureWarnings` allows you to handle all warnings with 45 the standard logging infrastructure. 46 47 48.. _warning-categories: 49 50Warning Categories 51------------------ 52 53There are a number of built-in exceptions that represent warning categories. 54This categorization is useful to be able to filter out groups of warnings. 55 56While these are technically 57:ref:`built-in exceptions <warning-categories-as-exceptions>`, they are 58documented here, because conceptually they belong to the warnings mechanism. 59 60User code can define additional warning categories by subclassing one of the 61standard warning categories. A warning category must always be a subclass of 62the :exc:`Warning` class. 63 64The following warnings category classes are currently defined: 65 66.. tabularcolumns:: |l|p{0.6\linewidth}| 67 68+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 69| Class | Description | 70+==================================+===============================================+ 71| :exc:`Warning` | This is the base class of all warning | 72| | category classes. It is a subclass of | 73| | :exc:`Exception`. | 74+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 75| :exc:`UserWarning` | The default category for :func:`warn`. | 76+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 77| :exc:`DeprecationWarning` | Base category for warnings about deprecated | 78| | features when those warnings are intended for | 79| | other Python developers (ignored by default, | 80| | unless triggered by code in ``__main__``). | 81+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 82| :exc:`SyntaxWarning` | Base category for warnings about dubious | 83| | syntactic features. | 84+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 85| :exc:`RuntimeWarning` | Base category for warnings about dubious | 86| | runtime features. | 87+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 88| :exc:`FutureWarning` | Base category for warnings about deprecated | 89| | features when those warnings are intended for | 90| | end users of applications that are written in | 91| | Python. | 92+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 93| :exc:`PendingDeprecationWarning` | Base category for warnings about features | 94| | that will be deprecated in the future | 95| | (ignored by default). | 96+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 97| :exc:`ImportWarning` | Base category for warnings triggered during | 98| | the process of importing a module (ignored by | 99| | default). | 100+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 101| :exc:`UnicodeWarning` | Base category for warnings related to | 102| | Unicode. | 103+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 104| :exc:`BytesWarning` | Base category for warnings related to | 105| | :class:`bytes` and :class:`bytearray`. | 106+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 107| :exc:`ResourceWarning` | Base category for warnings related to | 108| | resource usage (ignored by default). | 109+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 110 111.. versionchanged:: 3.7 112 Previously :exc:`DeprecationWarning` and :exc:`FutureWarning` were 113 distinguished based on whether a feature was being removed entirely or 114 changing its behaviour. They are now distinguished based on their 115 intended audience and the way they're handled by the default warnings 116 filters. 117 118 119.. _warning-filter: 120 121The Warnings Filter 122------------------- 123 124The warnings filter controls whether warnings are ignored, displayed, or turned 125into errors (raising an exception). 126 127Conceptually, the warnings filter maintains an ordered list of filter 128specifications; any specific warning is matched against each filter 129specification in the list in turn until a match is found; the filter determines 130the disposition of the match. Each entry is a tuple of the form (*action*, 131*message*, *category*, *module*, *lineno*), where: 132 133* *action* is one of the following strings: 134 135 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 136 | Value | Disposition | 137 +===============+==============================================+ 138 | ``"default"`` | print the first occurrence of matching | 139 | | warnings for each location (module + | 140 | | line number) where the warning is issued | 141 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 142 | ``"error"`` | turn matching warnings into exceptions | 143 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 144 | ``"ignore"`` | never print matching warnings | 145 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 146 | ``"always"`` | always print matching warnings | 147 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 148 | ``"module"`` | print the first occurrence of matching | 149 | | warnings for each module where the warning | 150 | | is issued (regardless of line number) | 151 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 152 | ``"once"`` | print only the first occurrence of matching | 153 | | warnings, regardless of location | 154 +---------------+----------------------------------------------+ 155 156* *message* is a string containing a regular expression that the start of 157 the warning message must match. The expression is compiled to always be 158 case-insensitive. 159 160* *category* is a class (a subclass of :exc:`Warning`) of which the warning 161 category must be a subclass in order to match. 162 163* *module* is a string containing a regular expression that the module name must 164 match. The expression is compiled to be case-sensitive. 165 166* *lineno* is an integer that the line number where the warning occurred must 167 match, or ``0`` to match all line numbers. 168 169Since the :exc:`Warning` class is derived from the built-in :exc:`Exception` 170class, to turn a warning into an error we simply raise ``category(message)``. 171 172If a warning is reported and doesn't match any registered filter then the 173"default" action is applied (hence its name). 174 175 176.. _describing-warning-filters: 177 178Describing Warning Filters 179~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 180 181The warnings filter is initialized by :option:`-W` options passed to the Python 182interpreter command line and the :envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS` environment variable. 183The interpreter saves the arguments for all supplied entries without 184interpretation in :data:`sys.warnoptions`; the :mod:`warnings` module parses these 185when it is first imported (invalid options are ignored, after printing a 186message to :data:`sys.stderr`). 187 188Individual warnings filters are specified as a sequence of fields separated by 189colons:: 190 191 action:message:category:module:line 192 193The meaning of each of these fields is as described in :ref:`warning-filter`. 194When listing multiple filters on a single line (as for 195:envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS`), the individual filters are separated by commas and 196the filters listed later take precedence over those listed before them (as 197they're applied left-to-right, and the most recently applied filters take 198precedence over earlier ones). 199 200Commonly used warning filters apply to either all warnings, warnings in a 201particular category, or warnings raised by particular modules or packages. 202Some examples:: 203 204 default # Show all warnings (even those ignored by default) 205 ignore # Ignore all warnings 206 error # Convert all warnings to errors 207 error::ResourceWarning # Treat ResourceWarning messages as errors 208 default::DeprecationWarning # Show DeprecationWarning messages 209 ignore,default:::mymodule # Only report warnings triggered by "mymodule" 210 error:::mymodule[.*] # Convert warnings to errors in "mymodule" 211 # and any subpackages of "mymodule" 212 213 214.. _default-warning-filter: 215 216Default Warning Filter 217~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 218 219By default, Python installs several warning filters, which can be overridden by 220the :option:`-W` command-line option, the :envvar:`PYTHONWARNINGS` environment 221variable and calls to :func:`filterwarnings`. 222 223In regular release builds, the default warning filter has the following entries 224(in order of precedence):: 225 226 default::DeprecationWarning:__main__ 227 ignore::DeprecationWarning 228 ignore::PendingDeprecationWarning 229 ignore::ImportWarning 230 ignore::ResourceWarning 231 232In a :ref:`debug build <debug-build>`, the list of default warning filters is empty. 233 234.. versionchanged:: 3.2 235 :exc:`DeprecationWarning` is now ignored by default in addition to 236 :exc:`PendingDeprecationWarning`. 237 238.. versionchanged:: 3.7 239 :exc:`DeprecationWarning` is once again shown by default when triggered 240 directly by code in ``__main__``. 241 242.. versionchanged:: 3.7 243 :exc:`BytesWarning` no longer appears in the default filter list and is 244 instead configured via :data:`sys.warnoptions` when :option:`-b` is specified 245 twice. 246 247 248.. _warning-disable: 249 250Overriding the default filter 251~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 252 253Developers of applications written in Python may wish to hide *all* Python level 254warnings from their users by default, and only display them when running tests 255or otherwise working on the application. The :data:`sys.warnoptions` attribute 256used to pass filter configurations to the interpreter can be used as a marker to 257indicate whether or not warnings should be disabled:: 258 259 import sys 260 261 if not sys.warnoptions: 262 import warnings 263 warnings.simplefilter("ignore") 264 265Developers of test runners for Python code are advised to instead ensure that 266*all* warnings are displayed by default for the code under test, using code 267like:: 268 269 import sys 270 271 if not sys.warnoptions: 272 import os, warnings 273 warnings.simplefilter("default") # Change the filter in this process 274 os.environ["PYTHONWARNINGS"] = "default" # Also affect subprocesses 275 276Finally, developers of interactive shells that run user code in a namespace 277other than ``__main__`` are advised to ensure that :exc:`DeprecationWarning` 278messages are made visible by default, using code like the following (where 279``user_ns`` is the module used to execute code entered interactively):: 280 281 import warnings 282 warnings.filterwarnings("default", category=DeprecationWarning, 283 module=user_ns.get("__name__")) 284 285 286.. _warning-suppress: 287 288Temporarily Suppressing Warnings 289-------------------------------- 290 291If you are using code that you know will raise a warning, such as a deprecated 292function, but do not want to see the warning (even when warnings have been 293explicitly configured via the command line), then it is possible to suppress 294the warning using the :class:`catch_warnings` context manager:: 295 296 import warnings 297 298 def fxn(): 299 warnings.warn("deprecated", DeprecationWarning) 300 301 with warnings.catch_warnings(): 302 warnings.simplefilter("ignore") 303 fxn() 304 305While within the context manager all warnings will simply be ignored. This 306allows you to use known-deprecated code without having to see the warning while 307not suppressing the warning for other code that might not be aware of its use 308of deprecated code. Note: this can only be guaranteed in a single-threaded 309application. If two or more threads use the :class:`catch_warnings` context 310manager at the same time, the behavior is undefined. 311 312 313 314.. _warning-testing: 315 316Testing Warnings 317---------------- 318 319To test warnings raised by code, use the :class:`catch_warnings` context 320manager. With it you can temporarily mutate the warnings filter to facilitate 321your testing. For instance, do the following to capture all raised warnings to 322check:: 323 324 import warnings 325 326 def fxn(): 327 warnings.warn("deprecated", DeprecationWarning) 328 329 with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w: 330 # Cause all warnings to always be triggered. 331 warnings.simplefilter("always") 332 # Trigger a warning. 333 fxn() 334 # Verify some things 335 assert len(w) == 1 336 assert issubclass(w[-1].category, DeprecationWarning) 337 assert "deprecated" in str(w[-1].message) 338 339One can also cause all warnings to be exceptions by using ``error`` instead of 340``always``. One thing to be aware of is that if a warning has already been 341raised because of a ``once``/``default`` rule, then no matter what filters are 342set the warning will not be seen again unless the warnings registry related to 343the warning has been cleared. 344 345Once the context manager exits, the warnings filter is restored to its state 346when the context was entered. This prevents tests from changing the warnings 347filter in unexpected ways between tests and leading to indeterminate test 348results. The :func:`showwarning` function in the module is also restored to 349its original value. Note: this can only be guaranteed in a single-threaded 350application. If two or more threads use the :class:`catch_warnings` context 351manager at the same time, the behavior is undefined. 352 353When testing multiple operations that raise the same kind of warning, it 354is important to test them in a manner that confirms each operation is raising 355a new warning (e.g. set warnings to be raised as exceptions and check the 356operations raise exceptions, check that the length of the warning list 357continues to increase after each operation, or else delete the previous 358entries from the warnings list before each new operation). 359 360 361.. _warning-ignored: 362 363Updating Code For New Versions of Dependencies 364---------------------------------------------- 365 366Warning categories that are primarily of interest to Python developers (rather 367than end users of applications written in Python) are ignored by default. 368 369Notably, this "ignored by default" list includes :exc:`DeprecationWarning` 370(for every module except ``__main__``), which means developers should make sure 371to test their code with typically ignored warnings made visible in order to 372receive timely notifications of future breaking API changes (whether in the 373standard library or third party packages). 374 375In the ideal case, the code will have a suitable test suite, and the test runner 376will take care of implicitly enabling all warnings when running tests 377(the test runner provided by the :mod:`unittest` module does this). 378 379In less ideal cases, applications can be checked for use of deprecated 380interfaces by passing :option:`-Wd <-W>` to the Python interpreter (this is 381shorthand for :option:`!-W default`) or setting ``PYTHONWARNINGS=default`` in 382the environment. This enables default handling for all warnings, including those 383that are ignored by default. To change what action is taken for encountered 384warnings you can change what argument is passed to :option:`-W` (e.g. 385:option:`!-W error`). See the :option:`-W` flag for more details on what is 386possible. 387 388 389.. _warning-functions: 390 391Available Functions 392------------------- 393 394 395.. function:: warn(message, category=None, stacklevel=1, source=None) 396 397 Issue a warning, or maybe ignore it or raise an exception. The *category* 398 argument, if given, must be a :ref:`warning category class <warning-categories>`; it 399 defaults to :exc:`UserWarning`. Alternatively, *message* can be a :exc:`Warning` instance, 400 in which case *category* will be ignored and ``message.__class__`` will be used. 401 In this case, the message text will be ``str(message)``. This function raises an 402 exception if the particular warning issued is changed into an error by the 403 :ref:`warnings filter <warning-filter>`. The *stacklevel* argument can be used by wrapper 404 functions written in Python, like this:: 405 406 def deprecation(message): 407 warnings.warn(message, DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) 408 409 This makes the warning refer to :func:`deprecation`'s caller, rather than to the 410 source of :func:`deprecation` itself (since the latter would defeat the purpose 411 of the warning message). 412 413 *source*, if supplied, is the destroyed object which emitted a 414 :exc:`ResourceWarning`. 415 416 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 417 Added *source* parameter. 418 419 420.. function:: warn_explicit(message, category, filename, lineno, module=None, registry=None, module_globals=None, source=None) 421 422 This is a low-level interface to the functionality of :func:`warn`, passing in 423 explicitly the message, category, filename and line number, and optionally the 424 module name and the registry (which should be the ``__warningregistry__`` 425 dictionary of the module). The module name defaults to the filename with 426 ``.py`` stripped; if no registry is passed, the warning is never suppressed. 427 *message* must be a string and *category* a subclass of :exc:`Warning` or 428 *message* may be a :exc:`Warning` instance, in which case *category* will be 429 ignored. 430 431 *module_globals*, if supplied, should be the global namespace in use by the code 432 for which the warning is issued. (This argument is used to support displaying 433 source for modules found in zipfiles or other non-filesystem import 434 sources). 435 436 *source*, if supplied, is the destroyed object which emitted a 437 :exc:`ResourceWarning`. 438 439 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 440 Add the *source* parameter. 441 442 443.. function:: showwarning(message, category, filename, lineno, file=None, line=None) 444 445 Write a warning to a file. The default implementation calls 446 ``formatwarning(message, category, filename, lineno, line)`` and writes the 447 resulting string to *file*, which defaults to :data:`sys.stderr`. You may replace 448 this function with any callable by assigning to ``warnings.showwarning``. 449 *line* is a line of source code to be included in the warning 450 message; if *line* is not supplied, :func:`showwarning` will 451 try to read the line specified by *filename* and *lineno*. 452 453 454.. function:: formatwarning(message, category, filename, lineno, line=None) 455 456 Format a warning the standard way. This returns a string which may contain 457 embedded newlines and ends in a newline. *line* is a line of source code to 458 be included in the warning message; if *line* is not supplied, 459 :func:`formatwarning` will try to read the line specified by *filename* and 460 *lineno*. 461 462 463.. function:: filterwarnings(action, message='', category=Warning, module='', lineno=0, append=False) 464 465 Insert an entry into the list of :ref:`warnings filter specifications 466 <warning-filter>`. The entry is inserted at the front by default; if 467 *append* is true, it is inserted at the end. This checks the types of the 468 arguments, compiles the *message* and *module* regular expressions, and 469 inserts them as a tuple in the list of warnings filters. Entries closer to 470 the front of the list override entries later in the list, if both match a 471 particular warning. Omitted arguments default to a value that matches 472 everything. 473 474 475.. function:: simplefilter(action, category=Warning, lineno=0, append=False) 476 477 Insert a simple entry into the list of :ref:`warnings filter specifications 478 <warning-filter>`. The meaning of the function parameters is as for 479 :func:`filterwarnings`, but regular expressions are not needed as the filter 480 inserted always matches any message in any module as long as the category and 481 line number match. 482 483 484.. function:: resetwarnings() 485 486 Reset the warnings filter. This discards the effect of all previous calls to 487 :func:`filterwarnings`, including that of the :option:`-W` command line options 488 and calls to :func:`simplefilter`. 489 490 491Available Context Managers 492-------------------------- 493 494.. class:: catch_warnings(*, record=False, module=None) 495 496 A context manager that copies and, upon exit, restores the warnings filter 497 and the :func:`showwarning` function. 498 If the *record* argument is :const:`False` (the default) the context manager 499 returns :class:`None` on entry. If *record* is :const:`True`, a list is 500 returned that is progressively populated with objects as seen by a custom 501 :func:`showwarning` function (which also suppresses output to ``sys.stdout``). 502 Each object in the list has attributes with the same names as the arguments to 503 :func:`showwarning`. 504 505 The *module* argument takes a module that will be used instead of the 506 module returned when you import :mod:`warnings` whose filter will be 507 protected. This argument exists primarily for testing the :mod:`warnings` 508 module itself. 509 510 .. note:: 511 512 The :class:`catch_warnings` manager works by replacing and 513 then later restoring the module's 514 :func:`showwarning` function and internal list of filter 515 specifications. This means the context manager is modifying 516 global state and therefore is not thread-safe. 517