Introduction
The Apache Commons Logging (JCL) provides a Log interface that
is intended to be both light-weight and an independent abstraction of other logging toolkits.
It provides the middleware/tooling developer with a simple
logging abstraction, that allows the user (application developer) to plug in
a specific logging implementation.
JCL provides thin-wrapper Log implementations for other logging APIs and backends, including
Log4j API,
SLF4J and java.util.logging .
Warning: implementations for older logging backends such as
Log4j 1.2,
Avalon LogKit, and
Lumberjack are also provided, although they are disabled by default.
Familiarity with high-level details of the relevant Logging implementations is presumed.
Quick Start
JCL tries to be as unobtrusive as possible.
In most cases, including the (full) commons-logging.jar in the classpath
should result in JCL configuring itself in a reasonable manner.
There's a good chance that it'll guess (discover) your preferred logging system, and you won't
need to do any configuration of JCL at all.
Note, however, that if you have a particular preference, then providing a simple
commons-logging.properties file which specifies the concrete logging library to be
used is recommended, since (in this case) JCL will log only to that system
and will report any configuration problems that prevent that system being used.
When no particular logging library is specified, then JCL will silently ignore any logging library
that it finds but cannot initialize and continue to look for other alternatives. This is a deliberate
design decision; no application should fail to run because a "guessed" logging library cannot be
used. To ensure an exception is reported when a particular logging library cannot be used, use one
of the available JCL configuration mechanisms to force that library to be selected (ie disable
JCL's discovery process).
Configuration
There are two base abstractions used by JCL: Log
(the basic logger) and LogFactory (which knows how to create Log
instances). Specifying a particular Log implementation is very useful (whether that is
one provided by Commons Logging or a user-defined one). Specifying a
LogFactory implementation explicitly is a subject for
advanced users only, so will not be addressed here.
JCL provides three standard log factories:
- if Log4j API
is present on the classpath and it is not redirected to SLF4J, then
Log4jApiLogFactory
is used. This factory redirects all output to Log4j API.
- otherwise if SLF4J is present on the classpath,
then
Slf4jLogFactory is used. This factory redirects all output to SLF4J.
- otherwise the legacy
LogFactoryImpl is used.
The legacy LogFactory implementation uses the following discovery process
to determine what type of Log implementation it should use
(the process terminates when the first positive match - in order - is found):
-
Look for a configuration attribute of this factory named
org.apache.commons.logging.Log (for backwards compatibility with
pre-1.0 versions of this API, an attribute
org.apache.commons.logging.log is also consulted).
Configuration attributes can be set explicitly by Java code, but they are more
commonly set by placing a file named commons-logging.properties in the classpath.
When such a file exists, every entry in the properties file becomes an "attribute"
of the LogFactory. When there is more than one such file in the classpath, releases
of commons-logging prior to 1.1 simply use the first one found. From release 1.1,
each file may define a priority key, and the file with
the highest priority is used (no priority definition implies priority of zero).
When multiple files have the same priority, the first one found is used.
Defining this property in a commons-logging.properties file is the recommended
way of explicitly selecting a Log implementation.
-
Look for a system property named
org.apache.commons.logging.Log (for backwards
compatibility with pre-1.0 versions of this API, a system property
org.apache.commons.logging.log is also consulted).
-
If the
java.logging module is available, use
the corresponding wrapper class
(Jdk14Logger).
-
Fall back to the default simple logging wrapper
(SimpleLog).
Consult the JCL javadocs for details of the various Log
implementations that ship with the component. (The discovery process is also covered in more
detail there.)
Configuring The Underlying Logging System
The JCL SPI
can be configured to use different logging toolkits (see above).
JCL provides only a bridge for writing log messages. It does not (and will not) support any
sort of configuration API for the underlying logging system.
Configuration of the behavior of the JCL ultimately depends upon the
logging toolkit being used. Please consult the documentation for the chosen logging system.
JCL is NOT responsible for initialization, configuration, or shutdown of the underlying logging library.
In many cases logging libraries will automatically initialize/configure themselves when first used, and
need no explicit shutdown process. In these situations an application can simply use JCL and not depend
directly on the API of the underlying logging system in any way. However if the logging library being used
requires special initialization, configuration, or shutdown, then some logging-library-specific code will
be required in the application. JCL simply forwards logging method calls to the correct underlying
implementation. When writing library code this issue is of course not relevant as the calling application
is responsible for handling such issues.
Developing With JCL
Obtaining a Log Object
To use the JCL SPI from a Java class,
include the following import statements:
import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
Note that some components using JCL may
either extend Log,
or provide a component-specific LogFactory implementation.
Review the component documentation for guidelines
on how commons-logging should be used in such components.
For each class definition, declare and initialize a
log attribute as follows:
Note that for application code, declaring the log member as "static" is more
efficient as one Log object is created per class, and is recommended.
However this is not safe to do for a class which may be deployed via a "shared"
classloader in a servlet or j2ee container or similar environment. If the class
may end up invoked with different thread-context-classloader values set, then the
member must not be declared static. The use of "static" should therefore
be avoided in code within any "library" type project.
Logging a Message
Messages are logged to a logger, such as log
by invoking a method corresponding to priority.
The org.apache.commons.logging.Log interface defines the
following methods for use
in writing log/trace messages to the log:
log.fatal(Object message);
log.fatal(Object message, Throwable t);
log.error(Object message);
log.error(Object message, Throwable t);
log.warn(Object message);
log.warn(Object message, Throwable t);
log.info(Object message);
log.info(Object message, Throwable t);
log.debug(Object message);
log.debug(Object message, Throwable t);
log.trace(Object message);
log.trace(Object message, Throwable t);
Semantics for these methods are such that it is expected
that the severity, from highest to lowest, of messages is ordered as above.
In addition to the logging methods, the following are provided for code guards:
Serialization Issues
Prior to release 1.0.4, none of the standard Log implementations were
Serializable. If you are using such a release and have a Serializable class
with a member that is of type Log, then it is necessary to declare
that member to be transient and to ensure that the value is restored on
deserialization. The recommended approach is to define a custom
readObject method on the class which reinitializes that member.
In release 1.0.4, all standard Log implementations are Serializable. This
means that class members of type Log do not need to be declared transient;
on deserialization the Log object will "rebind" to the same category for the
same logging library. Note that the same underlying logging library will be
used on deserialization as was used in the original object, even if the
application the object was deserialized into is using a different logging
library. There is one exception; LogKitLogger (adapter for the Avalon LogKit
library) is not Serializable for technical reasons.
Custom Log implementations not distributed with commons-logging may
or may not be Serializable. If you wish your code to be compatible with
any arbitrary log adapter, then you should follow the advice given above
for pre-1.0.4 releases.
Jars Included in the Standard Distribution
commons-logging.jar
The commons-logging.jar file includes the JCL API, the default
LogFactory implementation and thin-wrapper Log
implementations for
Log4J,
Avalon LogKit,
the Avalon Framework's logging infrastructure,
java.util.logging, as well as an implementation of java.util.logging APIs (JSR-47) for
pre-1.4 systems.
In most cases, including commons-logging.jar and your preferred
logging implementation in the classpath should be all that is required to
use JCL.
commons-logging-api.jar
The commons-logging-api.jar file includes the JCL API and the
default LogFactory implementation as well as the built-in
Log implementations SimpleLog and NoOpLog. However it does not
include the wrapper Log implementations that require additional
libraries such as Log4j , Avalon and
Lumberjack .
This jar is intended for use by projects that recompile the commons-logging
source using alternate java environments, and cannot compile against all of
the optional libraries that the Apache release of commons-logging supports.
Because of the reduced dependencies of this jarfile, such projects should be
able to create an equivalent of this library with fewer difficulties.
This jar is also useful for build environments that automatically track
dependencies, and thus have difficulty with the concept that the main
commons-logging.jar has "optional" dependencies on various logging
implementations that can safely go unsatisfied at runtime.
commons-logging-adapters.jar
The commons-logging-adapters.jar file includes only adapters
to third-party logging implementations, and none of the core commons-logging
framework. As such, it cannot be used alone; either commons-logging.jar or
commons-logging-api.jar must also be present in the classpath.
This library will not often be used; it is only intended for situations where
a container has deployed commons-logging-api.jar in a shared classpath but a
webapp wants to bind logging to one of the external logging implementations
that the api jar does not include. In this situation, deploying the
commons-logging.jar file within the webapp can cause problems as this leads to
duplicates of the core commons-logging classes (Log, LogFactory, etc) in
the classpath which in turn can cause unpleasant ClassCastException exceptions
to occur. Deploying only the adapters avoids this problem.
JCL Best Practices
Best practices for JCL are presented in two categories:
General and Enterprise.
The general principles are fairly clear.Enterprise practices are a bit more involved
and it is not always as clear as to why they are important.
Enterprise best-practice principles apply to middleware components
and tooling that is expected to execute in an "Enterprise" level
environment.
These issues relate to Logging as Internationalization,
and fault detection.
Enterprise requires more effort and planning, but are strongly encouraged (if not required)
in production level systems. Different corporate enterprises/environments have different
requirements, so being flexible always helps.
Best Practices (General)
Code Guards
Code guards are typically used to guard code that
only needs to execute in support of logging,
that otherwise introduces undesirable runtime overhead
in the general case (logging disabled).
Examples are multiple parameters, or expressions (e.g. string + " more") for parameters.
Use the guard methods of the form log.is<Priority>() to verify
that logging should be performed, before incurring the overhead of the logging method call.
Yes, the logging methods will perform the same check, but only after resolving parameters.
Message Priorities/Levels
It is important to ensure that log message are
appropriate in content and severity.
The following guidelines are suggested:
-
fatal - Severe errors that cause premature termination.
Expect these to be immediately visible on a status console.
See also
Internationalization.
-
error - Other runtime errors or unexpected conditions.
Expect these to be immediately visible on a status console.
See also
Internationalization.
-
warn - Use of deprecated APIs, poor use of API, 'almost' errors,
other runtime situations that are undesirable or unexpected, but not
necessarily "wrong".
Expect these to be immediately visible on a status console.
See also
Internationalization.
-
info - Interesting runtime events (startup/shutdown).
Expect these to be immediately visible on a console,
so be conservative and keep to a minimum.
See also
Internationalization.
-
debug - detailed information on the flow through the system.
Expect these to be written to logs only.
-
trace - more detailed information.
Expect these to be written to logs only.
Default Message Priority/Level
By default the message priority should be no lower than info.
That is, by default debug message should not be seen in the logs.
Best Practices (Enterprise)
Logging Exceptions
The general rule in dealing with exceptions is to assume that
the user (developer using a tooling/middleware API) isn't going
to follow the rules.
Since any problems that result are going to be assigned to you,
it's in your best interest to be prepared with the proactive
tools necessary to demonstrate that your component works correctly,
or at worst that the problem can be analyzed from your logs.
For this discussion, we must make a distinction between different types of exceptions
based on what kind of boundaries they cross:
-
External Boundaries - Expected Exceptions.
This classification includes exceptions such as
FileNotFoundException
that cross API/SPI boundaries, and are exposed to the user of a component/toolkit.
These are listed in the 'throws' clause of a method signature.
Appropriate handling of these exceptions depends upon the type
of code you are developing.
API's for utility functions and tools should log these at the debug level,
if they are caught at all by internal code.
For higher level frameworks and middleware components,
these exceptions should be caught immediately prior to crossing
the API/SPI interface back to user code-space,
logged with full stack trace at info level,
and rethrown.
The assures that the log contains a record of the root cause for
future analysis in the event that the exception is not caught and resolved
as expected by the user's code.
-
External Boundaries - Unexpected Exceptions.
This classification includes exceptions such as
NullPointerException
that cross API/SPI boundaries, and are exposed to the user of a component/toolkit.
These are runtime exceptions/error that are NOT
listed in the 'throws' clause of a method signature.
Appropriate handling of these exceptions depends upon the type
of code you are developing.
APIs for utility functions and tools should log these at the debug level,
if they are caught at all.
For higher level frameworks and middleware components,
these exceptions should be caught immediately prior to crossing
the API/SPI interface back to user code-space,
logged with full stack trace at info level,
and rethrown/wrapped as ComponentInternalError .
This ensures that the log contains a record of the root cause for
future analysis in the event that the exception is not caught and
logged/reported as expected by the user's code.
-
Internal Boundaries.
Exceptions that occur internally and are resolved internally.
These should be logged when caught as debug or info messages,
at the programmer's discretion.
-
Significant Internal Boundaries.
This typically only applies to middleware components that span networks or runtime processes.
Exceptions that cross over significant internal component boundaries such as networks
should be logged when caught as info messages.
Do not assume that such a (process/network) boundary will deliver exceptions to the 'other side'.
When Info Level Instead of Debug?
You want to have exception/problem information available for
first-pass problem determination in a production level
enterprise application without turning on debug
as a default log level. There is simply too much information
in debug to be appropriate for day-to-day operations.
More Control of Enterprise Exception Logging
If more control is desired for the level of detail of these
'enterprise' exceptions, then consider creating a special
logger just for these exceptions:
This allows the 'enterprise' level information to be turned on/off explicitly
by most logger implementations.
National Language Support And Internationalization
NLS internationalization involves looking up messages from
a message file by a message key, and using that message for logging.
There are various tools in Java, and provided by other components,
for working with NLS messages.
NLS enabled components are particularly appreciated
(that's an open-source-correct term for 'required by corporate end-users' :-)
for tooling and middleware components.
NLS internationalization SHOULD be strongly considered for used for
fatal, error, warn, and info messages.
It is generally considered optional for debug and trace messages.
Perhaps more direct support for internationalizing log messages
can be introduced in a future or alternate version of the Log interface.
Classloader and Memory Management
The LogFactory discovery process (see
Configuration above) is a fairly expensive
operation, so JCL certainly should not perform it each time user code
invokes:
Instead JCL caches the
LogFactory implementation created as a result of the discovery
process and uses the cached factory to return Log objects.
Since in JEE and similar multi-classloader environments, the result of the
discovery process can vary depending on the thread context classloader
(e.g. one webapp in a web container may be configured to use Log4j and
another to use java.util.logging), JCL internally caches the
LogFactory instances in a static hashtable, keyed by classloader.
While this approach is efficient, it can lead to memory leaks if container
implementors are not careful to call
whenever a classloader that has utilized JCL is undeployed. If
release() is not called, a reference to the undeployed
classloader (and thus to all the classes loaded by it) will be
held in LogFactory 's static hashtable.
LogFactory caches factory implementations in a
"WeakHashtable". This class is similar to java.util.WeakHashMap in
that it holds a WeakReference to each key (but a strong reference
to each value), thus allowing classloaders to be GC'd even if
LogFactory.release() is never invoked.
If a custom LogFactory implementation is used, however, then a
WeakHashtable alone can be insufficient to allow garbage collection
of a classloader without a call to release . If the abstract class
LogFactory is loaded by a parent classloader and a concrete
subclass implementation of LogFactory is loaded by a child
classloader, the WeakHashtable's key is a weak reference to the TCCL (child
classloader), but the value is a strong reference to the LogFactory instance,
which in turn contains a strong reference to its class and thus loading
classloader - the child classloader. This chain of strong references prevents
the child loader from being garbage collected.
If use of a custom LogFactory subclass is desired, ensuring that
the custom subclass is loaded by the same classloader as LogFactory
will prevent problems. In normal deployments, the standard implementations
of LogFactory found in package org.apache.commons.logging.impl
will be loaded by the same classloader that loads LogFactory
itself, so use of the standard LogFactory implementation
should not pose problems. Alternatively, use the provided ServletContextCleaner
to ensure this reference is explicitly released on webapp unload.
Extending Commons Logging
JCL is designed to encourage extensions to be created that add functionality.
Typically, extensions to JCL fall into two categories:
- new
Log implementations that provide new bridges to logging systems
-
new
LogFactory implementations that provide alternative discovery strategies
Contract
When creating new implementations for Log and LogFactory ,
it is important to understand the implied contract between the factory
and the log implementations:
- Life cycle
The JCL LogFactory implementation must assume responsibility for
either connecting/disconnecting to a logging toolkit,
or instantiating/initializing/destroying a logging toolkit.
- Exception handling
The JCL Log interface doesn't specify any exceptions to be handled,
the implementation must catch any exceptions.
- Multiple threads
The JCL Log and LogFactory implementations must ensure
that any synchronization required by the logging toolkit
is met.
Creating a Log Implementation
The minimum requirement to integrate with another logger
is to provide an implementation of the
org.apache.commons.logging.Log interface.
In addition, an implementation of the
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory interface
can be provided to meet
specific requirements for connecting to, or instantiating, a logger.
The default LogFactory provided by JCL
can be configured to instantiate a specific implementation of the
org.apache.commons.logging.Log interface
by setting the property of the same name (org.apache.commons.logging.Log ).
This property can be specified as a system property,
or in the commons-logging.properties file,
which must exist in the CLASSPATH.
Creating A LogFactory Implementation
If desired, the default implementation of the
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
interface can be overridden,
allowing the JDK 1.3 Service Provider discovery process
to locate and create a LogFactory specific to the needs of the application.
Review the Javadoc for the LogFactoryImpl.java
for details.
A Quick Guide To Simple Log
JCL is distributed with a very simple Log implementation named
org.apache.commons.logging.impl.SimpleLog . This is intended to be a minimal
implementation. Developers requiring a fully functional open source logging system are
directed to Log4J.
SimpleLog sends all (enabled) log messages,
for all defined loggers, to System.err . The following system properties
are supported to configure the behavior of this logger:
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.defaultlog -
Default logging detail level for all instances of SimpleLog.
Must be one of:
trace
debug
info
warn
error
fatal
If not specified, defaults to info .
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.log.xxxxx -
Logging detail level for a SimpleLog instance named "xxxxx".
Must be one of:
trace
debug
info
warn
error
fatal
If not specified, the default logging detail level is used.
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.showlogname -
Set to
true if you want the Log instance name to be
included in output messages. Defaults to false .
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.showShortLogname -
Set to
true if you want the last component of the name to be
included in output messages. Defaults to true .
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.showdatetime -
Set to
true if you want the current date and time
to be included in output messages. Default is false .
- org.apache.commons.logging.simplelog.dateTimeFormat -
The date and time format to be used in the output messages.
The pattern describing the date and time format is the same that is
used in
java.text.SimpleDateFormat . If the format is not
specified or is invalid, the default format is used.
The default format is yyyy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss:SSS zzz .
In addition to looking for system properties with the names specified
above, this implementation also checks for a class loader resource named
"simplelog.properties" , and includes any matching definitions
from this resource (if it exists).
Frequently Asked Questions
See the FAQ document
on the commons-logging wiki site
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