LSSTApplications  17.0+11,17.0+34,17.0+56,17.0+57,17.0+59,17.0+7,17.0-1-g377950a+33,17.0.1-1-g114240f+2,17.0.1-1-g4d4fbc4+28,17.0.1-1-g55520dc+49,17.0.1-1-g5f4ed7e+52,17.0.1-1-g6dd7d69+17,17.0.1-1-g8de6c91+11,17.0.1-1-gb9095d2+7,17.0.1-1-ge9fec5e+5,17.0.1-1-gf4e0155+55,17.0.1-1-gfc65f5f+50,17.0.1-1-gfc6fb1f+20,17.0.1-10-g87f9f3f+1,17.0.1-11-ge9de802+16,17.0.1-16-ga14f7d5c+4,17.0.1-17-gc79d625+1,17.0.1-17-gdae4c4a+8,17.0.1-2-g26618f5+29,17.0.1-2-g54f2ebc+9,17.0.1-2-gf403422+1,17.0.1-20-g2ca2f74+6,17.0.1-23-gf3eadeb7+1,17.0.1-3-g7e86b59+39,17.0.1-3-gb5ca14a,17.0.1-3-gd08d533+40,17.0.1-30-g596af8797,17.0.1-4-g59d126d+4,17.0.1-4-gc69c472+5,17.0.1-6-g5afd9b9+4,17.0.1-7-g35889ee+1,17.0.1-7-gc7c8782+18,17.0.1-9-gc4bbfb2+3,w.2019.22
LSSTDataManagementBasePackage
Using lsstDebug to control debugging output

The class lsstDebug can be used to turn on debugging output in a non-intrusive way.

For example, the variable lsstDebug.Info("lsst.meas.astrom.astrom").debug is used to control debugging output from the lsst.meas.astrom.astrom module.

It is always safe to interrogate lsstDebug; for example lsstDebug.Info("Robert.Hugh.Lupton").isBadPerson will return False.

The convention is that the name ("lsst.meas.astrom.astrom") is the __name__ of the module, so the source code will typically look something like:

import lsstDebug
print lsstDebug.Info(__name__).display

which will print False unless lsstDebug.Info(__name__).display has somehow been set to True.

Why is this interesting? Because you can replace lsstDebug.Info with your own version, e.g. if you put

import lsstDebug
def DebugInfo(name):
di = lsstDebug.getInfo(name) # N.b. lsstDebug.Info(name) would call us recursively
if name == "foo":
di.display = True
return di
lsstDebug.Info = DebugInfo

into a file debug.py and

import lsstDebug
print "display is", lsstDebug.Info(__name__).display

into foo.py, then

$ python -c "import foo"
display is False

but

$ python -c "import debug; import foo"
display is True

The command line task interface supports a flag –debug to import debug.py from your PYTHONPATH