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mirror of https://github.com/jbranchaud/til synced 2026-01-19 23:18:01 +00:00

Add Check The Current Named Log Level as a Rails TIL

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jbranchaud
2026-01-19 13:52:27 -06:00
parent bdd3adf577
commit dd6350aa41
2 changed files with 48 additions and 1 deletions

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ working across different projects via [VisualMode](https://www.visualmode.dev/).
For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://visualmode.kit.com/newsletter).
_1731 TILs and counting..._
_1732 TILs and counting..._
See some of the other learning resources I work on:
@@ -1073,6 +1073,7 @@ If you've learned something here, support my efforts writing daily TILs by
- [Check If ActiveRecord Update Fails](rails/check-if-activerecord-update-fails.md)
- [Check If Any Records Have A Null Value](rails/check-if-any-records-have-a-null-value.md)
- [Check Specific Attributes On ActiveRecord Array](rails/check-specific-attributes-on-activerecord-array.md)
- [Check The Current Named Log Level](rails/check-the-current-named-log-level.md)
- [Clean Up Memory Hungry Rails Console Processes](rails/clean-up-memory-hungry-rails-console-processes.md)
- [Code Statistics For An Application](rails/code-statistics-for-an-application.md)
- [Columns With Default Values Are Nil On Create](rails/columns-with-default-values-are-nil-on-create.md)

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# Check The Current Named Log Level
I'm connected to a `rails console` session for an active Rails app. I want to
check the current log level.
```ruby
> Rails.logger.level
=> 1
```
The `1` doesn't mean much to me at a glance. I can translate that to the
severity level using the `Logger::SEV_LABLE` constant.
```ruby
[44] pry(main)> Logger::SEV_LABEL[Rails.logger.level]
=> "INFO"
```
Ah yes, `INFO`, that makes sense as the default.
I can see all the severity levels by inspecting the constant itself.
```ruby
[45] pry(main)> Logger::SEV_LABEL
=> ["DEBUG", "INFO", "WARN", "ERROR", "FATAL", "ANY"]
```
As I convenience, I can set the label using the index, the string, or even a
symbol.
```ruby
> Rails.logger.level
=> 1
> Rails.logger.level = "WARN"
=> "WARN"
> Rails.logger.level
=> 2
> Rails.logger.level = :debug
=> :debug
> Rails.logger.level
=> 0
```
See the [Debugging Rails Applications
guide](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/debugging_rails_applications.html#log-levels)
for more details.