A perfect candidate is non-fatal shell history messages.
Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
---
scripts/qmp/qmp-shell | 10 ++++++++--
1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
diff --git a/scripts/qmp/qmp-shell b/scripts/qmp/qmp-shell
index ec028d662e..0199a13a34 100755
--- a/scripts/qmp/qmp-shell
+++ b/scripts/qmp/qmp-shell
@@ -67,6 +67,7 @@
import argparse
import ast
import json
+import logging
import os
import re
import readline
@@ -85,6 +86,9 @@ from qemu import qmp
from qemu.qmp import QMPMessage
+LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
+
+
class QMPCompleter:
# NB: Python 3.9+ will probably allow us to subclass list[str] directly,
# but pylint as of today does not know that List[str] is simply 'list'.
@@ -167,13 +171,15 @@ class QMPShell(qmp.QEMUMonitorProtocol):
except FileNotFoundError:
pass
except IOError as err:
- print(f"Failed to read history '{self._histfile}': {err!s}")
+ msg = f"Failed to read history '{self._histfile}': {err!s}"
+ LOG.warning(msg)
def _save_history(self) -> None:
try:
readline.write_history_file(self._histfile)
except IOError as err:
- print(f"Failed to save history file '{self._histfile}': {err!s}")
+ msg = f"Failed to save history file '{self._histfile}': {err!s}"
+ LOG.warning(msg)
@classmethod
def __parse_value(cls, val: str) -> object:
--
2.31.1