Hi Damian, thanks for your feedback! I'm replying a few things inline. On 05/09/15 17:02, Damian Johnson wrote: > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > 155 def _register_event(self, event): > 156 output = { 'message': '', 'type': ''} > 157 if event.type not in self._logged_events: > 158 return > 159 #self._event_log.add(event) > 160 #self._log_file.write(event.display_message) > 161 > 162 # notifies the display that it has new content > 163 if self._filter.match(event.display_message): > 164 self._has_new_event = True > 165 output['message'] = event.display_message > 166 output['type'] = event.type.lower() > 167 ws = ws_controller() > 168 if ws is not None: > 169 ws.send_data(WebSocketType.LOG, output) > > You can drop the line with self._has_new_event. It's an unused > attribute, and doesn't appear outside of this line. I'm still keeping a few nyx lines around because I'm trying to do the following: * When erebus starts, it will send log entries from server to client dashboard. Which logs to send will depend on how erebus was invoked (e.g. run_erebus -L A for logging all event types). * The user would be able to change logging event types from the client dashboard (on a checkbox), but this selection has to be reflected on the server too, otherwise the client dashboard might be filtering certain type of events just on the frontend but the server will still be sending other type of events. * My goal is to make the client dashboard to send a notification to the server informing which new event types to log, and the server will update its behavior. The client dashboard will then continue to receive log event types without doing any changes by itself, because the server would be the one who updated its log event filter. Something similar happens with log dedup, and {log,bw} prepopulation. I'm very close to make this work, by defining a kind of "protocol" in which the client dashboard can send notifications to the server. If this works, it could be the starting point to further add functionalities as "editing the relay nickname" (and such) from the client dashboard. > 171 def log_handler(): > 172 """ > 173 Singleton for getting our log hander. > 174 > 175 :returns: :class:`~erebus.server.handlers.log.LogHandler` > 176 """ > 177 > 178 return LOG_HANDLER > 179 > 180 def init_log_handler(logged_events): > 181 """ > 182 """ > 183 global LOG_HANDLER > 184 LOG_HANDLER = LogHandler(logged_events) > 185 return LOG_HANDLER > > Seems from a quick look that these might be unused. The controller.py > and starter.py call init_log_handler, but not spotting anything that > ever uses LOG_HANDLER. I first call init_log_handler on starter.py. Then, when the Tor control connection is made, I call log_handler again (on controller.py:_start_tor_controller). > > Btw, lets use Sphinx pydocs. The documentation style you're using > here is adopted from Nyx before I started using Sphinx, and I'm > replacing that documentation style as I rewrite it. > Will do. - Cristobal
Attachment:
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
_______________________________________________ tor-dev mailing list tor-dev@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.torproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/tor-dev