Simple wrapper API around multiple logging APIs.
This package provides an API for logging in server-based applications that can be used around a variety of different logging implementations, including prebuilt support for the following:
java.util.logging.Logger
instance.Logger
.For those impatient to just get on with it, the following example illustrates the typical declaration and use of a logger that is named (by convention) after the calling class:
import org.apache.commons.logging.Log; import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory; public class Foo { static Log log = LogFactory.getLog(this.class); public void foo() { ... try { if (log.isDebugEnabled()) { log.debug("About to do something to object " + name); } name.bar(); } catch (IllegalStateException e) { log.error("Something bad happened to " + name, e); } ... }
Unless you configure things differently, all log output will be written to System.err. Therefore, you really will want to review the remainder of this page in order to understand how to configure logging for your application.
LogFactory
ImplementationFrom an application perspective, the first requirement is to retrieve an
object reference to the LogFactory
instance that will be used
to create Log
instances for this
application. This is normally accomplished by calling the static
getFactory()
method. This method implements the following
discovery algorithm to select the name of the LogFactory
implementation class this application wants to use:
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
.META-INF/services/org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
whose first line is assumed to contain the desired class name.commons-logging.properties
visible in the application class path, with a property named
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
defining the
desired implementation class name.If a commons-logging.properties
file is found, all of the
properties defined there are also used to set configuration attributes on
the instantiated LogFactory
instance.
Once an implementation class name is selected, the corresponding class is
loaded from the current Thread context class loader (if there is one), or
from the class loader that loaded the LogFactory
class itself
otherwise. This allows a copy of commons-logging.jar
to be
shared in a multiple class loader environment (such as a servlet container),
but still allow each web application to provide its own LogFactory
implementation, if it so desires. An instance of this class will then be
created, and cached per class loader.
LogFactory
ImplementationThe Logging Package APIs include a default LogFactory
implementation class (
org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl) that is selected if no
other implementation class name can be discovered. Its primary purpose is
to create (as necessary) and return Log instances
in response to calls to the getInstance()
method. The default
implementation uses the following rules:
Log
instance of the same name will be created.
Subsequent getInstance()
calls to the same
LogFactory
instance, with the same name or Class
parameter, will return the same Log
instance.Log
instance must be created, the default
LogFactory
implementation uses the following discovery
process is used:
org.apache.commons.logging.Log
(for backwards
compatibility to pre-1.0 versions of this API, an attribute
org.apache.commons.logging.log is also consulted)..
org.apache.commons.logging.Log
(for backwards
compatibility to pre-1.0 versions of this API, a system property
org.apache.commons.logging.log
is also consulted).LogFactory
class otherwise.Log
implementation class, passing the specified name as the single
argument to its constructor.See the SimpleLog JavaDocs for detailed configuration information for this default implementation.
The basic principle is that the user is totally responsible for the configuration of the underlying logging system. Commons-logging should not change the existing configuration.
Each individual Log implementation may support its own configuration properties. These will be documented in the class descriptions for the corresponding implementation class.
Finally, some Log
implementations (such as the one for Log4J)
require an external configuration file for the entire logging environment.
This file should be prepared in a manner that is specific to the actual logging
technology being used.
Use of the Logging Package APIs, from the perspective of an application component, consists of the following steps:
debug()
, info()
,
warn()
, error
, and fatal()
).For convenience, LogFactory
also offers a static method
getLog()
that combines the typical two-step pattern:
Log log = LogFactory.getFactory().getInstance("Foo");
into a single method call:
Log log = LogFactory.getLog("Foo");
For example, you might use the following technique to initialize and use a Log instance in an application component:
import org.apache.commons.logging.Log; import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory; public class MyComponent { protected static Log log = LogFactory.getLog("my.component"); // Called once at startup time public void start() { ... log.info("MyComponent started"); ... } // Called once at shutdown time public void stop() { ... log.info("MyComponent stopped"); ... } // Called repeatedly to process a particular argument value // which you want logged if debugging is enabled public void process(String value) { ... // Do the string concatenation only if logging is enabled if (log.isDebugEnabled()) log.debug("MyComponent processing " + value); ... } }