Log::Log4perl::FAQ - Frequently Asked Questions on Log::Log4perl
This FAQ shows a wide variety of commonly encountered logging tasks and how to solve them in the most elegant way with Log::Log4perl. Most of the time, this will be just a matter of smartly configuring your Log::Log4perl configuration files.
That's a good question. There's dozens of logging modules on CPAN. When it comes to logging, people typically think: "Aha. Writing out debug and error messages. Debug is lower than error. Easy. I'm gonna write my own." Writing a logging module is like a rite of passage for every Perl programmer, just like writing your own templating system.
Of course, after getting the basics right, features need to be added. You'd like to write a timestamp with every message. Then timestamps with microseconds. Then messages need to be written to both the screen and a log file.
And, as your application grows in size you might wonder: Why doesn't my logging system scale along with it? You would like to switch on logging in selected parts of the application, and not all across the board, because this kills performance. This is when people turn to Log::Log4perl, because it handles all of that.
Avoid this costly switch.
Use Log::Log4perl
right from the start. Log::Log4perl
's :easy
mode supports easy logging in simple scripts:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
DEBUG "A low-level message";
ERROR "Won't make it until level gets increased to ERROR";
And when your application inevitably grows, your logging system grows with it without you having to change any code.
Please, don't re-invent logging. Log::Log4perl
is here, it's easy to use, it scales, and covers many areas you haven't thought of yet, but will enter soon.
If you just want to get all the comfort of logging, without much overhead, use Stealth Loggers. If you use Log::Log4perl in :easy
mode like
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
you'll have the following functions available in the current package:
DEBUG("message");
INFO("message");
WARN("message");
ERROR("message");
FATAL("message");
Just make sure that every package of your code where you're using them in pulls in use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy)
first, then you're set. Every stealth logger's category will be equivalent to the name of the package it's located in.
These stealth loggers will be absolutely silent until you initialize Log::Log4perl in your main program with either
# Define any Log4perl behavior
Log::Log4perl->init("foo.conf");
(using a full-blown Log4perl config file) or the super-easy method
# Just log to STDERR
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
or the parameter-style method with a complexity somewhat in between:
# Append to a log file
Log::Log4perl->easy_init( { level => $DEBUG,
file => ">>test.log" } );
For more info, please check out "Stealth Loggers" in Log::Log4perl.
After pulling in the Log::Log4perl
module, just initialize its behavior by passing in a configuration to its init
method as a string reference. Then, obtain a logger instance and write out a message with its error()
method:
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
# Define configuration
my $conf = q(
log4perl.logger = ERROR, FileApp
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d> %m%n
);
# Initialize logging behavior
Log::Log4perl->init( \$conf );
# Obtain a logger instance
my $logger = get_logger("Bar::Twix");
$logger->error("Oh my, a dreadful error!");
$logger->warn("Oh my, a dreadful warning!");
This will append something like
2002/10/29 20:11:55> Oh my, a dreadful error!
to the log file test.log
. How does this all work?
While the Log::Log4perl init()
method typically takes the name of a configuration file as its input parameter like in
Log::Log4perl->init( "/path/mylog.conf" );
the example above shows how to pass in a configuration as text in a scalar reference.
The configuration as shown defines a logger of the root category, which has an appender of type Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
attached. The line
log4perl.logger = ERROR, FileApp
doesn't list a category, defining a root logger. Compare that with
log4perl.logger.Bar.Twix = ERROR, FileApp
which would define a logger for the category Bar::Twix
, showing probably different behavior. FileApp
on the right side of the assignment is an arbitrarily defined variable name, which is only used to somehow reference an appender defined later on.
Appender settings in the configuration are defined as follows:
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
It selects the file appender of the Log::Log4perl::Appender
hierarchy, which will append to the file test.log
if it already exists. If we wanted to overwrite a potentially existing file, we would have to explicitly set the appropriate Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
parameter mode
:
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.FileApp.mode = write
Also, the configuration defines a PatternLayout format, adding the nicely formatted current date and time, an arrow (>) and a space before the messages, which is then followed by a newline:
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d> %m%n
Obtaining a logger instance and actually logging something is typically done in a different system part as the Log::Log4perl initialisation section, but in this example, it's just done right after init for the sake of compactness:
# Obtain a logger instance
my $logger = get_logger("Bar::Twix");
$logger->error("Oh my, a dreadful error!");
This retrieves an instance of the logger of the category Bar::Twix
, which, as all other categories, inherits behavior from the root logger if no other loggers are defined in the initialization section.
The error()
method fires up a message, which the root logger catches. Its priority is equal to or higher than the root logger's priority (ERROR), which causes the root logger to forward it to its attached appender. By contrast, the following
$logger->warn("Oh my, a dreadful warning!");
doesn't make it through, because the root logger sports a higher setting (ERROR and up) than the WARN priority of the message.
You can install Log::Log4perl using the CPAN client.
Alternatively you can install it using
ppm install Log-Log4perl
if you're using ActiveState perl.
That's it! Afterwards, just create a Perl script like
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
my $logger = get_logger("Twix::Bar");
$logger->debug("Watch me!");
and run it. It should print something like
2002/11/06 01:22:05 Watch me!
If you find that something doesn't work, please let us know at log4perl-devel@lists.sourceforge.net -- we'll appreciate it. Have fun!
Say, you're writing a web application and want all your log messages to include the current client's IP address. Most certainly, you don't want to include it in each and every log message like in
$logger->debug( $r->connection->remote_ip,
" Retrieving user data from DB" );
do you? Instead, you want to set it in a global data structure and have Log::Log4perl include it automatically via a PatternLayout setting in the configuration file:
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %X{ip} %m%n
The conversion specifier %X{ip}
references an entry under the key ip
in the global MDC
(mapped diagnostic context) table, which you've set once via
Log::Log4perl::MDC->put("ip", $r->connection->remote_ip);
at the start of the request handler. Note that this is a static (class) method, there's no logger object involved. You can use this method with as many key/value pairs as you like as long as you reference them under different names.
The mappings are stored in a global hash table within Log::Log4perl. Luckily, because the thread model in 5.8.0 doesn't share global variables between threads unless they're explicitly marked as such, there's no problem with multi-threaded environments.
For more details on the MDC, please refer to "Mapped Diagnostic Context (MDC)" in Log::Log4perl and Log::Log4perl::MDC.
Assuming that you already have a Log4perl configuration file like
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, FileApp
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d> %m%n
and log statements all over your code, it's very easy with Log4perl to have the same messages both printed to the logfile and the screen. No reason to change your code, of course, just add another appender to the configuration file and you're done:
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, FileApp, ScreenApp
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d> %m%n
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.stderr = 0
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.layout.ConversionPattern = %d> %m%n
The configuration file above is assuming that both appenders are active in the same logger hierarchy, in this case the root
category. But even if you've got file loggers defined in several parts of your system, belonging to different logger categories, each logging to different files, you can gobble up all logged messages by defining a root logger with a screen appender, which would duplicate messages from all your file loggers to the screen due to Log4perl's appender inheritance. Check
http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/09/11/log4perl.html
for details. Have fun!
Whenever you encounter a fatal error in your application, instead of saying something like
open FILE, "<blah" or die "Can't open blah -- bailing out!";
just use Log::Log4perl's fatal functions instead:
my $log = get_logger("Some::Package");
open FILE, "<blah" or $log->logdie("Can't open blah -- bailing out!");
This will both log the message with priority FATAL according to your current Log::Log4perl configuration and then call Perl's die()
afterwards to terminate the program. It works the same with stealth loggers (see "Stealth Loggers" in Log::Log4perl), all you need to do is call
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
open FILE, "<blah" or LOGDIE "Can't open blah -- bailing out!";
What can you do if you're using some library which doesn't use Log::Log4perl and calls die()
internally if something goes wrong? Use a $SIG{__DIE__}
pseudo signal handler
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
$SIG{__DIE__} = sub {
if($^S) {
# We're in an eval {} and don't want log
# this message but catch it later
return;
}
local $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth =
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth + 1;
my $logger = get_logger("");
$logger->fatal(@_);
die @_; # Now terminate really
};
This will catch every die()
-Exception of your application or the modules it uses. In case you want to It will fetch a root logger and pass on the die()
-Message to it. If you make sure you've configured with a root logger like this:
Log::Log4perl->init(\q{
log4perl.category = FATAL, Logfile
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = fatal_errors.log
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout.ConversionPattern = %F{1}-%L (%M)> %m%n
});
then all die()
messages will be routed to a file properly. The line
local $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth =
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth + 1;
in the pseudo signal handler above merits a more detailed explanation. With the setup above, if a module calls die()
in one of its functions, the fatal message will be logged in the signal handler and not in the original function -- which will cause the %F, %L and %M placeholders in the pattern layout to be replaced by the filename, the line number and the function/method name of the signal handler, not the error-throwing module. To adjust this, Log::Log4perl has the $caller_depth
variable, which defaults to 0, but can be set to positive integer values to offset the caller level. Increasing it by one will cause it to log the calling function's parameters, not the ones of the signal handler. See "Using Log::Log4perl from wrapper classes" in Log::Log4perl for more details.
Or, to put it more generally: How can you utilize a third-party library's embedded logging and debug statements in Log::Log4perl? How can you make them print to configurable appenders, turn them on and off, just as if they were regular Log::Log4perl logging statements?
The easiest solution is to map the third-party library logging statements to Log::Log4perl's stealth loggers via a typeglob assignment.
As an example, let's take LWP, one of the most popular Perl modules, which makes handling WWW requests and responses a breeze. Internally, LWP uses its own logging and debugging system, utilizing the following calls inside the LWP code (from the LWP::Debug man page):
# Function tracing
LWP::Debug::trace('send()');
# High-granular state in functions
LWP::Debug::debug('url ok');
# Data going over the wire
LWP::Debug::conns("read $n bytes: $data");
First, let's assign Log::Log4perl priorities to these functions: I'd suggest that debug()
messages have priority INFO
, trace()
uses DEBUG
and conns()
also logs with DEBUG
-- although your mileage may certainly vary.
Now, in order to transparently hook up LWP::Debug with Log::Log4perl, all we have to do is say
package LWP::Debug;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
*trace = *INFO;
*conns = *DEBUG;
*debug = *DEBUG;
package main;
# ... go on with your regular program ...
at the beginning of our program. In this way, every time the, say, LWP::UserAgent
module calls LWP::Debug::trace()
, it will implicitly call INFO(), which is the info()
method of a stealth logger defined for the Log::Log4perl category LWP::Debug
. Is this cool or what?
Here's a complete program:
use LWP::UserAgent;
use HTTP::Request::Common;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init(
{ category => "LWP::Debug",
level => $DEBUG,
layout => "%r %p %M-%L %m%n",
});
package LWP::Debug;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
*trace = *INFO;
*conns = *DEBUG;
*debug = *DEBUG;
package main;
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new();
my $resp = $ua->request(GET "http://amazon.com");
if($resp->is_success()) {
print "Success: Received ",
length($resp->content()), "\n";
} else {
print "Error: ", $resp->code(), "\n";
}
This will generate the following output on STDERR:
174 INFO LWP::UserAgent::new-164 ()
208 INFO LWP::UserAgent::request-436 ()
211 INFO LWP::UserAgent::send_request-294 GET http://amazon.com
212 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::_need_proxy-1123 Not proxied
405 INFO LWP::Protocol::http::request-122 ()
859 DEBUG LWP::Protocol::collect-206 read 233 bytes
863 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::request-443 Simple response: Found
869 INFO LWP::UserAgent::request-436 ()
871 INFO LWP::UserAgent::send_request-294
GET http://www.amazon.com:80/exec/obidos/gateway_redirect
872 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::_need_proxy-1123 Not proxied
873 INFO LWP::Protocol::http::request-122 ()
1016 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::request-443 Simple response: Found
1020 INFO LWP::UserAgent::request-436 ()
1022 INFO LWP::UserAgent::send_request-294
GET http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/subst/home/home.html/
1023 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::_need_proxy-1123 Not proxied
1024 INFO LWP::Protocol::http::request-122 ()
1382 DEBUG LWP::Protocol::collect-206 read 632 bytes
...
2605 DEBUG LWP::Protocol::collect-206 read 77 bytes
2607 DEBUG LWP::UserAgent::request-443 Simple response: OK
Success: Received 42584
Of course, in this way, the embedded logging and debug statements within LWP can be utilized in any Log::Log4perl way you can think of. You can have them sent to different appenders, block them based on the category and everything else Log::Log4perl has to offer.
Only drawback of this method: Steering logging behavior via category is always based on the LWP::Debug
package. Although the logging statements reflect the package name of the issuing module properly, the stealth loggers in LWP::Debug
are all of the category LWP::Debug
. This implies that you can't control the logging behavior based on the package that's initiating a log request (e.g. LWP::UserAgent) but only based on the package that's actually executing the logging statement, LWP::Debug
in this case.
To work around this conundrum, we need to write a wrapper function and plant it into the LWP::Debug
package. It will determine the caller and create a logger bound to a category with the same name as the caller's package:
package LWP::Debug;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:levels get_logger);
sub l4p_wrapper {
my($prio, @message) = @_;
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth += 2;
get_logger(scalar caller(1))->log($prio, @message);
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth -= 2;
}
no warnings 'redefine';
*trace = sub { l4p_wrapper($INFO, @_); };
*debug = *conns = sub { l4p_wrapper($DEBUG, @_); };
package main;
# ... go on with your main program ...
This is less performant than the previous approach, because every log request will request a reference to a logger first, then call the wrapper, which will in turn call the appropriate log function.
This hierarchy shift has to be compensated for by increasing $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth
by 2 before calling the log function and decreasing it by 2 right afterwards. Also, the l4p_wrapper
function shown above calls caller(1)
which determines the name of the package two levels down the calling hierarchy (and therefore compensates for both the wrapper function and the anonymous subroutine calling it).
no warnings 'redefine'
suppresses a warning Perl would generate otherwise upon redefining LWP::Debug
's trace()
, debug()
and conns()
functions. In case you use a perl prior to 5.6.x, you need to manipulate $^W
instead.
To make things easy for you when dealing with LWP, Log::Log4perl 0.47 introduces Log::Log4perl->infiltrate_lwp()
which does exactly the above.
Say, your application uses Log::Log4perl for logging and therefore comes with a Log4perl configuration file, specifying the logging behavior. But, you also want it to take command line parameters to set values like the name of the log file. How can you have both a static Log4perl configuration file and a dynamic command line interface?
As of Log::Log4perl 0.28, every value in the configuration file can be specified as a Perl hook. So, instead of saying
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log
you could just as well have a Perl subroutine deliver the value dynamically:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = sub { logfile(); };
given that logfile()
is a valid function in your main
package returning a string containing the path to the log file.
Or, think about using the value of an environment variable:
log4perl.appender.DBI.user = sub { $ENV{USERNAME} };
When Log::Log4perl->init()
parses the configuration file, it will notice the assignment above because of its sub {...}
pattern and treat it in a special way: It will evaluate the subroutine (which can contain arbitrary Perl code) and take its return value as the right side of the assignment.
A typical application would be called like this on the command line:
app # log file is "test.log"
app -l mylog.txt # log file is "mylog.txt"
Here's some sample code implementing the command line interface above:
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
use Getopt::Std;
getopt('l:', \our %OPTS);
my $conf = q(
log4perl.category.Bar.Twix = WARN, Logfile
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = sub { logfile(); };
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = SimpleLayout
);
Log::Log4perl::init(\$conf);
my $logger = get_logger("Bar::Twix");
$logger->error("Blah");
###########################################
sub logfile {
###########################################
if(exists $OPTS{l}) {
return $OPTS{l};
} else {
return "test.log";
}
}
Every Perl hook may contain arbitrary perl code, just make sure to fully qualify eventual variable names (e.g. %main::OPTS
instead of %OPTS
).
SECURITY NOTE: this feature means arbitrary perl code can be embedded in the config file. In the rare case where the people who have access to your config file are different from the people who write your code and shouldn't have execute rights, you might want to call
$Log::Log4perl::Config->allow_code(0);
before you call init(). This will prevent Log::Log4perl from executing any Perl code in the config file (including code for custom conversion specifiers (see "Custom cspecs" in Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout).
Long-running applications tend to produce ever-increasing logfiles. For backup and cleanup purposes, however, it is often desirable to move the current logfile to a different location from time to time and start writing a new one.
This is a non-trivial task, because it has to happen in sync with the logging system in order not to lose any messages in the process.
Luckily, Mark Pfeiffer's Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
appender works well with Log::Log4perl to rotate your logfiles in a variety of ways.
Note, however, that having the application deal with rotating a log file is not cheap. Among other things, it requires locking the log file with every write to avoid race conditions. There are good reasons to use external rotators like newsyslog
instead. See the entry How can I rotate a logfile with newsyslog?
in the FAQ for more information on how to configure it.
When using Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
, all you have to do is specify it in your Log::Log4perl configuration file and your logfiles will be rotated automatically.
You can choose between rolling based on a maximum size ("roll if greater than 10 MB") or based on a date pattern ("roll everyday at midnight"). In both cases, Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
allows you to define a number max
of saved files to keep around until it starts overwriting the oldest ones. If you set the max
parameter to 2 and the name of your logfile is test.log
, Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
will move test.log
to test.log.1
on the first rollover. On the second rollover, it will move test.log.1
to test.log.2
and then test.log
to test.log.1
. On the third rollover, it will move test.log.1
to test.log.2
(therefore discarding the old test.log.2
) and test.log
to test.log.1
. And so forth. This way, there's always going to be a maximum of 2 saved log files around.
Here's an example of a Log::Log4perl configuration file, defining a daily rollover at midnight (date pattern yyyy-MM-dd
), keeping a maximum of 5 saved logfiles around:
log4perl.category = WARN, Logfile
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.Logfile.max = 5
log4perl.appender.Logfile.DatePattern = yyyy-MM-dd
log4perl.appender.Logfile.TZ = PST
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout.ConversionPattern = %d %m %n
Please see the Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
documentation for details. Log::Dispatch::FileRotate
is available on CPAN.
In addition to category-based levels and appender thresholds, Log::Log4perl supports system-wide logging thresholds. This is the minimum level the system will require of any logging events in order for them to make it through to any configured appenders.
For example, putting the line
log4perl.threshold = ERROR
anywhere in your configuration file will limit any output to any appender to events with priority of ERROR or higher (ERROR or FATAL that is).
However, in order to suppress all logging entirely, you need to use a priority that's higher than FATAL: It is simply called OFF
, and it is never used by any logger. By definition, it is higher than the highest defined logger level.
Therefore, if you keep the line
log4perl.threshold = OFF
somewhere in your Log::Log4perl configuration, the system will be quiet as a graveyard. If you deactivate the line (e.g. by commenting it out), the system will, upon config reload, snap back to normal operation, providing logging messages according to the rest of the configuration file again.
You need one logger with two appenders attached to it:
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, Screen, File
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.File.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.File.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.Screen.Threshold = INFO
Since the file logger isn't supposed to get any messages with a priority less than INFO, the appender's Threshold
setting blocks those out, although the logger forwards them.
It's a common mistake to think you can define two loggers for this, but it won't work unless those two loggers have different categories. If you wanted to log all DEBUG and above messages from the Foo::Bar module to a file and all INFO and above messages from the Quack::Schmack module to the screen, then you could have defined two loggers with different levels log4perl.logger.Foo.Bar
(level INFO) and log4perl.logger.Quack.Schmack
(level DEBUG) and assigned the file appender to the former and the screen appender to the latter. But what we wanted to accomplish was to route all messages, regardless of which module (or category) they came from, to both appenders. The only way to accomplish this is to define the root logger with the lower level (DEBUG), assign both appenders to it, and block unwanted messages at the file appender (Threshold
set to INFO).
Having several settings for related categories in the Log4perl configuration file sometimes leads to a phenomenon called "message duplication". It can be very confusing at first, but if thought through properly, it turns out that Log4perl behaves as advertised. But, don't despair, of course there's a number of ways to avoid message duplication in your logs.
Here's a sample Log4perl configuration file that produces the phenomenon:
log4perl.logger.Cat = ERROR, Screen
log4perl.logger.Cat.Subcat = WARN, Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout
It defines two loggers, one for category Cat
and one for Cat::Subcat
, which is obviously a subcategory of Cat
. The parent logger has a priority setting of ERROR, the child is set to the lower WARN
level.
Now imagine the following code in your program:
my $logger = get_logger("Cat.Subcat");
$logger->warn("Warning!");
What do you think will happen? An unexperienced Log4perl user might think: "Well, the message is being sent with level WARN, so the Cat::Subcat
logger will accept it and forward it to the attached Screen
appender. Then, the message will percolate up the logger hierarchy, find the Cat
logger, which will suppress the message because of its ERROR setting." But, perhaps surprisingly, what you'll get with the code snippet above is not one but two log messages written to the screen:
WARN - Warning!
WARN - Warning!
What happened? The culprit is that once the logger Cat::Subcat
decides to fire, it will forward the message unconditionally to all directly or indirectly attached appenders. The Cat
logger will never be asked if it wants the message or not -- the message will just be pushed through to the appender attached to Cat
.
One way to prevent the message from bubbling up the logger hierarchy is to set the additivity
flag of the subordinate logger to 0
:
log4perl.logger.Cat = ERROR, Screen
log4perl.logger.Cat.Subcat = WARN, Screen
log4perl.additivity.Cat.Subcat = 0
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout
The message will now be accepted by the Cat::Subcat
logger, forwarded to its appender, but then Cat::Subcat
will suppress any further action. While this setting avoids duplicate messages as seen before, it is often not the desired behavior. Messages percolating up the hierarchy are a useful Log4perl feature.
If you're defining different appenders for the two loggers, one other option is to define an appender threshold for the higher-level appender. Typically it is set to be equal to the logger's level setting:
log4perl.logger.Cat = ERROR, Screen1
log4perl.logger.Cat.Subcat = WARN, Screen2
log4perl.appender.Screen1 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen1.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.Screen1.Threshold = ERROR
log4perl.appender.Screen2 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen2.layout = SimpleLayout
Since the Screen1
appender now blocks every message with a priority less than ERROR, even if the logger in charge lets it through, the message percolating up the hierarchy is being blocked at the last minute and not appended to Screen1
.
So far, we've been operating well within the boundaries of the Log4j standard, which Log4perl adheres to. However, if you would really, really like to use a single appender and keep the message percolation intact without having to deal with message duplication, there's a non-standard solution for you:
log4perl.logger.Cat = ERROR, Screen
log4perl.logger.Cat.Subcat = WARN, Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.oneMessagePerAppender = 1
The oneMessagePerAppender
flag will suppress duplicate messages to the same appender. Again, that's non-standard. But way cool :).
Some incidents require immediate action. You can't wait until someone checks the log files, you need to get notified on your pager right away.
The easiest way to do that is by using the Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend
module as an appender. It comes with the Log::Dispatch
bundle and allows you to specify recipient and subject of outgoing emails in the Log4perl configuration file:
log4perl.category = FATAL, Mailer
log4perl.appender.Mailer = Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend
log4perl.appender.Mailer.to = drone@pageme.net
log4perl.appender.Mailer.subject = Something's broken!
log4perl.appender.Mailer.layout = SimpleLayout
The message of every log incident this appender gets will then be forwarded to the given email address. Check the Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend
documentation for details. And please make sure there's not a flood of email messages sent out by your application, filling up the recipient's inbox.
There's one caveat you need to know about: The Log::Dispatch::Email
hierarchy of appenders turns on buffering by default. This means that the appender will not send out messages right away but wait until a certain threshold has been reached. If you'd rather have your alerts sent out immediately, use
log4perl.appender.Mailer.buffered = 0
to turn buffering off.
First off, Log::Log4perl comes with a set of standard appenders. Then, there's a lot of Log4perl-compatible appenders already available on CPAN: Just run a search for Log::Dispatch
on http://search.cpan.org and chances are that what you're looking for has already been developed, debugged and been used successfully in production -- no need for you to reinvent the wheel.
Also, Log::Log4perl ships with a nifty database appender named Log::Log4perl::Appender::DBI -- check it out if talking to databases is your desire.
But if you're up for a truly exotic task, you might have to write an appender yourself. That's very easy -- it takes no longer than a couple of minutes.
Say, we wanted to create an appender of the class ColorScreenAppender
, which logs messages to the screen in a configurable color. Just create a new class in ColorScreenAppender.pm
:
package ColorScreenAppender;
Now let's assume that your Log::Log4perl configuration file test.conf
looks like this:
log4perl.logger = INFO, ColorApp
log4perl.appender.ColorApp=ColorScreenAppender
log4perl.appender.ColorApp.color=blue
log4perl.appender.ColorApp.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.ColorApp.layout.ConversionPattern=%d %m %n
This will cause Log::Log4perl on init()
to look for a class ColorScreenAppender and call its constructor new(). Let's add new() to ColorScreenAppender.pm:
sub new {
my($class, %options) = @_;
my $self = { %options };
bless $self, $class;
return $self;
}
To initialize this appender, Log::Log4perl will call and pass all attributes of the appender as defined in the configuration file to the constructor as name/value pairs (in this case just one):
ColorScreenAppender->new(color => "blue");
The new() method listed above stores the contents of the %options hash in the object's instance data hash (referred to by $self). That's all for initializing a new appender with Log::Log4perl.
Second, ColorScreenAppender needs to expose a log()
method, which will be called by Log::Log4perl every time it thinks the appender should fire. Along with the object reference (as usual in Perl's object world), log() will receive a list of name/value pairs, of which only the one under the key message
shall be of interest for now since it is the message string to be logged. At this point, Log::Log4perl has already taken care of joining the message to be a single string.
For our special appender ColorScreenAppender, we're using the Term::ANSIColor module to colorize the output:
use Term::ANSIColor;
sub log {
my($self, %params) = @_;
print colored($params{message},
$self->{color});
}
The color (as configured in the Log::Log4perl configuration file) is available as $self->{color} in the appender object. Don't forget to return
1;
at the end of ColorScreenAppender.pm and you're done. Install the new appender somewhere where perl can find it and try it with a test script like
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init("test.conf");
ERROR("blah");
to see the new colored output. Is this cool or what?
And it gets even better: You can write dynamically generated appender classes using the Class::Prototyped
module. Here's an example of an appender prepending every outgoing message with a configurable number of bullets:
use Class::Prototyped;
my $class = Class::Prototyped->newPackage(
"MyAppenders::Bulletizer",
bullets => 1,
log => sub {
my($self, %params) = @_;
print "*" x $self->bullets(),
$params{message};
},
);
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init(\ q{
log4perl.logger = INFO, Bully
log4perl.appender.Bully=MyAppenders::Bulletizer
log4perl.appender.Bully.bullets=3
log4perl.appender.Bully.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.Bully.layout.ConversionPattern=%m %n
});
# ... prints: "***Boo!\n";
INFO "Boo!";
If you've got a reference to a nested structure or object, then you probably don't want to log it as HASH(0x81141d4)
but rather dump it as something like
$VAR1 = {
'a' => 'b',
'd' => 'e'
};
via a module like Data::Dumper. While it's syntactically correct to say
$logger->debug(Data::Dumper::Dumper($ref));
this call imposes a huge performance penalty on your application if the message is suppressed by Log::Log4perl, because Data::Dumper will perform its expensive operations in any case, because it doesn't know that its output will be thrown away immediately.
As of Log::Log4perl 0.28, there's a better way: Use the message output filter format as in
$logger->debug( {filter => \&Data::Dumper::Dumper,
value => $ref} );
and Log::Log4perl won't call the filter function unless the message really gets written out to an appender. Just make sure to pass the whole slew as a reference to a hash specifying a filter function (as a sub reference) under the key filter
and the value to be passed to the filter function in value
). When it comes to logging, Log::Log4perl will call the filter function, pass the value
as an argument and log the return value. Saves you serious cycles.
Suppose you have employed Log4perl all over your system and you've already activated logging in various subsystems. On top of that, without disrupting any other settings, how can you collect all FATAL messages all over the system and send them to a separate log file?
If you define a root logger like this:
log4perl.logger = FATAL, File
log4perl.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.File.filename = /tmp/fatal.txt
log4perl.appender.File.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.File.layout.ConversionPattern= %d %m %n
# !!! Something's missing ...
you'll be surprised to not only receive all FATAL messages issued anywhere in the system, but also everything else -- gazillions of ERROR, WARN, INFO and even DEBUG messages will end up in your fatal.txt logfile! Reason for this is Log4perl's (or better: Log4j's) appender additivity. Once a lower-level logger decides to fire, the message is going to be forwarded to all appenders upstream -- without further priority checks with their attached loggers.
There's a way to prevent this, however: If your appender defines a minimum threshold, only messages of this priority or higher are going to be logged. So, just add
log4perl.appender.File.Threshold = FATAL
to the configuration above, and you'll get what you wanted in the first place: An overall system FATAL message collector.
Would you like to tally the messages arriving at your appender and dump out a summary once they're exceeding a certain threshold? So that something like
$logger->error("Blah");
$logger->error("Blah");
$logger->error("Blah");
won't be logged as
Blah
Blah
Blah
but as
[3] Blah
instead? If you'd like to hold off on logging a message until it has been sent a couple of times, you can roll that out by creating a buffered appender.
Let's define a new appender like
package TallyAppender;
sub new {
my($class, %options) = @_;
my $self = { maxcount => 5,
%options
};
bless $self, $class;
$self->{last_message} = "";
$self->{last_message_count} = 0;
return $self;
}
with two additional instance variables last_message
and last_message_count
, storing the content of the last message sent and a counter of how many times this has happened. Also, it features a configuration parameter maxcount
which defaults to 5 in the snippet above but can be set in the Log4perl configuration file like this:
log4perl.logger = INFO, A
log4perl.appender.A=TallyAppender
log4perl.appender.A.maxcount = 3
The main tallying logic lies in the appender's log
method, which is called every time Log4perl thinks a message needs to get logged by our appender:
sub log {
my($self, %params) = @_;
# Message changed? Print buffer.
if($self->{last_message} and
$params{message} ne $self->{last_message}) {
print "[$self->{last_message_count}]: " .
"$self->{last_message}";
$self->{last_message_count} = 1;
$self->{last_message} = $params{message};
return;
}
$self->{last_message_count}++;
$self->{last_message} = $params{message};
# Threshold exceeded? Print, reset counter
if($self->{last_message_count} >=
$self->{maxcount}) {
print "[$self->{last_message_count}]: " .
"$params{message}";
$self->{last_message_count} = 0;
$self->{last_message} = "";
return;
}
}
We basically just check if the oncoming message in $param{message}
is equal to what we've saved before in the last_message
instance variable. If so, we're increasing last_message_count
. We print the message in two cases: If the new message is different than the buffered one, because then we need to dump the old stuff and store the new. Or, if the counter exceeds the threshold, as defined by the maxcount
configuration parameter.
Please note that the appender always gets the fully rendered message and just compares it as a whole -- so if there's a date/timestamp in there, that might confuse your logic. You can work around this by specifying %m %n as a layout and add the date later on in the appender. Or, make the comparison smart enough to omit the date.
At last, don't forget what happens if the program is being shut down. If there's still messages in the buffer, they should be printed out at that point. That's easy to do in the appender's DESTROY method, which gets called at object destruction time:
sub DESTROY {
my($self) = @_;
if($self->{last_message_count}) {
print "[$self->{last_message_count}]: " .
"$self->{last_message}";
return;
}
}
This will ensure that none of the buffered messages are lost. Happy buffering!
Let's assume you wanted to have each logging statement written to a different file, based on the statement's priority. Messages with priority WARN
are supposed to go to /tmp/app.warn
, events prioritized as ERROR
should end up in /tmp/app.error
.
Now, if you define two appenders AppWarn
and AppError
and assign them both to the root logger, messages bubbling up from any loggers below will be logged by both appenders because of Log4perl's message propagation feature. If you limit their exposure via the appender threshold mechanism and set AppWarn
's threshold to WARN
and AppError
's to ERROR
, you'll still get ERROR
messages in AppWarn
, because AppWarn
's WARN
setting will just filter out messages with a lower priority than WARN
-- ERROR
is higher and will be allowed to pass through.
What we need for this is a Log4perl Custom Filter, available with Log::Log4perl 0.30.
Both appenders need to verify that the priority of the oncoming messages exactly matches the priority the appender is supposed to log messages of. To accomplish this task, let's define two custom filters, MatchError
and MatchWarn
, which, when attached to their appenders, will limit messages passed on to them to those matching a given priority:
log4perl.logger = WARN, AppWarn, AppError
# Filter to match level ERROR
log4perl.filter.MatchError = Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch
log4perl.filter.MatchError.LevelToMatch = ERROR
log4perl.filter.MatchError.AcceptOnMatch = true
# Filter to match level WARN
log4perl.filter.MatchWarn = Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch
log4perl.filter.MatchWarn.LevelToMatch = WARN
log4perl.filter.MatchWarn.AcceptOnMatch = true
# Error appender
log4perl.appender.AppError = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.AppError.filename = /tmp/app.err
log4perl.appender.AppError.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.AppError.Filter = MatchError
# Warning appender
log4perl.appender.AppWarn = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.AppWarn.filename = /tmp/app.warn
log4perl.appender.AppWarn.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.AppWarn.Filter = MatchWarn
The appenders AppWarn
and AppError
defined above are logging to /tmp/app.warn
and /tmp/app.err
respectively and have the custom filters MatchWarn
and MatchError
attached. This setup will direct all WARN messages, issued anywhere in the system, to /tmp/app.warn (and ERROR messages to /tmp/app.error) -- without any overlaps.
You sure can, because Log::Log4perl allows you to specify attribute values dynamically. Let's say that one of your appenders expects the host's IP address as one of its attributes. Now, you could certainly roll out different configuration files for every host and specify the value like
log4perl.appender.MyAppender = Log::Log4perl::Appender::SomeAppender
log4perl.appender.MyAppender.ip = 10.0.0.127
but that's a maintenance nightmare. Instead, you can have Log::Log4perl figure out the IP address at configuration time and set the appender's value correctly:
# Set the IP address dynamically
log4perl.appender.MyAppender = Log::Log4perl::Appender::SomeAppender
log4perl.appender.MyAppender.ip = sub { \
use Sys::Hostname; \
use Socket; \
return inet_ntoa(scalar gethostbyname hostname); \
}
If Log::Log4perl detects that an attribute value starts with something like "sub {..."
, it will interpret it as a perl subroutine which is to be executed once at configuration time (not runtime!) and its return value is to be used as the attribute value. This comes in handy for rolling out applications where Log::Log4perl configuration files show small host-specific differences, because you can deploy the unmodified application distribution on all instances of the server farm.
If you're using Log4perl's feature to specify the configuration as a string in your program (as opposed to a separate configuration file), chances are that you've written it like this:
# *** WRONG! ***
Log::Log4perl->init( \ <<END_HERE);
log4perl.logger = WARN, A1
log4perl.appender.A1 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.A1.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern = %m%n
END_HERE
# *** WRONG! ***
and you're getting the following error message:
Layout not specified for appender A1 at .../Config.pm line 342.
What's wrong? The problem is that you're using a here-document with substitution enabled (<<END_HERE
) and that Perl won't interpret backslashes at line-ends as continuation characters but will essentially throw them out. So, in the code above, the layout line will look like
log4perl.appender.A1.layout =
to Log::Log4perl which causes it to report an error. To interpret the backslash at the end of the line correctly as a line-continuation character, use the non-interpreting mode of the here-document like in
# *** RIGHT! ***
Log::Log4perl->init( \ <<'END_HERE');
log4perl.logger = WARN, A1
log4perl.appender.A1 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.A1.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern = %m%n
END_HERE
# *** RIGHT! ***
(note the single quotes around 'END_HERE'
) or use q{...}
instead of a here-document and Perl will treat the backslashes at line-end as intended.
Let's assume you've plastered all your functions with Log4perl statements like
sub some_func {
INFO("Begin of function");
# ... Stuff happens here ...
INFO("End of function");
}
to issue two log messages, one at the beginning and one at the end of each function. Now you want to suppress the message at the beginning and only keep the one at the end, what can you do? You can't use the category mechanism, because both messages are issued from the same package.
Log::Log4perl's custom filters (0.30 or better) provide an interface for the Log4perl user to step in right before a message gets logged and decide if it should be written out or suppressed, based on the message content or other parameters:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl::init( \ <<'EOT' );
log4perl.logger = INFO, A1
log4perl.appender.A1 = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.A1.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern = %m%n
log4perl.filter.M1 = Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch
log4perl.filter.M1.StringToMatch = Begin
log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = false
log4perl.appender.A1.Filter = M1
EOT
The last four statements in the configuration above are defining a custom filter M1
of type Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch
, which comes with Log4perl right out of the box and allows you to define a text pattern to match (as a perl regular expression) and a flag AcceptOnMatch
indicating if a match is supposed to suppress the message or let it pass through.
The last line then assigns this filter to the A1
appender, which will call it every time it receives a message to be logged and throw all messages out not matching the regular expression Begin
.
Instead of using the standard Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch
filter, you can define your own, simply using a perl subroutine:
log4perl.filter.ExcludeBegin = sub { !/Begin/ }
log4perl.appender.A1.Filter = ExcludeBegin
For details on custom filters, check Log::Log4perl::Filter.
If a Perl module uses Log::Log4perl, it will typically rely on the calling program to initialize it. If it is using Log::Log4perl in :easy
mode, like in
package MyMod;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
sub foo {
DEBUG("In foo");
}
1;
and the calling program doesn't initialize Log::Log4perl at all (e.g. because it has no clue that it's available), Log::Log4perl will silently ignore all logging messages. However, if the module is using Log::Log4perl in regular mode like in
package MyMod;
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
sub foo {
my $logger = get_logger("");
$logger->debug("blah");
}
1;
and the main program is just using the module like in
use MyMode;
MyMode::foo();
then Log::Log4perl will also ignore all logging messages but issue a warning like
Log4perl: Seems like no initialization happened.
Forgot to call init()?
(only once!) to remind novice users to not forget to initialize the logging system before using it. However, if you want to suppress this message, just add the :nowarn
target to the module's use Log::Log4perl
call:
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger :nowarn);
This will have Log::Log4perl silently ignore all logging statements if no initialization has taken place. If, instead of using init(), you're using Log4perl's API to define loggers and appenders, the same notification happens if no call to add_appenders() is made, i.e. no appenders are defined.
If the module wants to figure out if some other program part has already initialized Log::Log4perl, it can do so by calling
Log::Log4perl::initialized()
which will return a true value in case Log::Log4perl has been initialized and a false value if not.
If you're using the same instance of an appender in multiple processes, and each process is passing on messages to the appender in parallel, you might end up with overlapping log entries.
Typical scenarios include a file appender that you create in the main program, and which will then be shared between the parent and a forked child process. Or two separate processes, each initializing a Log4perl file appender on the same logfile.
Log::Log4perl won't synchronize access to the shared logfile by default. Depending on your operating system's flush mechanism, buffer size and the size of your messages, there's a small chance of an overlap.
The easiest way to prevent overlapping messages in logfiles written to by multiple processes is setting the file appender's syswrite
flag along with a file write mode of "append"
. This makes sure that Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
uses syswrite()
(which is guaranteed to run uninterrupted) instead of print()
which might buffer the message or get interrupted by the OS while it is writing. And in "append"
mode, the OS kernel ensures that multiple processes share one end-of-file marker, ensuring that each process writes to the real end of the file. (The value of "append"
for the mode
parameter is the default setting in Log4perl's file appender so you don't have to set it explicitly.)
# Guarantees atomic writes
log4perl.category.Bar.Twix = WARN, Logfile
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.Logfile.mode = append
log4perl.appender.Logfile.syswrite = 1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = SimpleLayout
Another guaranteed way of having messages separated with any kind of appender is putting a Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized composite appender in between Log::Log4perl and the real appender. It will make sure to let messages pass through this virtual gate one by one only.
Here's a sample configuration to synchronize access to a file appender:
log4perl.category.Bar.Twix = WARN, Syncer
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.Logfile.autoflush = 1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.Syncer = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized
log4perl.appender.Syncer.appender = Logfile
Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized
uses the IPC::Shareable
module and its semaphores, which will slow down writing the log messages, but ensures sequential access featuring atomic checks. Check Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized for details.
Yes, Log::Log4perl can be configured to send its events to log4j's graphical log UI Chainsaw.
Figure 1: Chainsaw receives Log::Log4perl events |
Here's how it works:
Get Guido Carls' <gcarls@cpan.org> Log::Log4perl extension Log::Log4perl::Layout::XMLLayout
from CPAN and install it:
perl -MCPAN -eshell
cpan> install Log::Log4perl::Layout::XMLLayout
Install and start Chainsaw, which is part of the log4j
distribution now (see http://jakarta.apache.org/log4j ). Create a configuration file like
<log4j:configuration debug="true">
<plugin name="XMLSocketReceiver"
class="org.apache.log4j.net.XMLSocketReceiver">
<param name="decoder" value="org.apache.log4j.xml.XMLDecoder"/>
<param name="Port" value="4445"/>
</plugin>
<root> <level value="debug"/> </root>
</log4j:configuration>
and name it e.g. config.xml
. Then start Chainsaw like
java -Dlog4j.debug=true -Dlog4j.configuration=config.xml \
-classpath ".:log4j-1.3alpha.jar:log4j-chainsaw-1.3alpha.jar" \
org.apache.log4j.chainsaw.LogUI
and watch the GUI coming up.
Configure Log::Log4perl to use a socket appender with an XMLLayout, pointing to the host/port where Chainsaw (as configured above) is waiting with its XMLSocketReceiver:
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
use Log::Log4perl::Layout::XMLLayout;
my $conf = q(
log4perl.category.Bar.Twix = WARN, Appender
log4perl.appender.Appender = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Socket
log4perl.appender.Appender.PeerAddr = localhost
log4perl.appender.Appender.PeerPort = 4445
log4perl.appender.Appender.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::XMLLayout
);
Log::Log4perl::init(\$conf);
# Nasty hack to suppress encoding header
my $app = Log::Log4perl::appenders->{"Appender"};
$app->layout()->{enc_set} = 1;
my $logger = get_logger("Bar.Twix");
$logger->error("One");
The nasty hack shown in the code snippet above is currently (October 2003) necessary, because Chainsaw expects XML messages to arrive in a format like
<log4j:event logger="Bar.Twix"
timestamp="1066794904310"
level="ERROR"
thread="10567">
<log4j:message><![CDATA[Two]]></log4j:message>
<log4j:NDC><![CDATA[undef]]></log4j:NDC>
<log4j:locationInfo class="main"
method="main"
file="./t"
line="32">
</log4j:locationInfo>
</log4j:event>
without a preceding
<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "iso8859-1"?>
which Log::Log4perl::Layout::XMLLayout applies to the first event sent over the socket.
See figure 1 for a screenshot of Chainsaw in action, receiving events from the Perl script shown above.
Many thanks to Chainsaw's Scott Deboy <sdeboy@comotivsystems.com> for his support!
In persistent environments it's important to play by the rules outlined in section "Initialize once and only once" in Log::Log4perl. If you haven't read this yet, please go ahead and read it right now. It's very important.
And no matter if you use a startup handler to init() Log::Log4perl or use the init_once() strategy (added in 0.42), either way you're very likely to have unsynchronized writes to logfiles.
If Log::Log4perl is configured with a log file appender, and it is initialized via the Apache startup handler, the file handle created initially will be shared among all Apache processes. Similarly, with the init_once() approach: although every process has a separate L4p configuration, processes are gonna share the appender file names instead, effectively opening several different file handles on the same file.
Now, having several appenders using the same file handle or having several appenders logging to the same file unsynchronized, this might result in overlapping messages. Sometimes, this is acceptable. If it's not, here's two strategies:
Use the Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized appender to connect to your file appenders. Here's the writeup: http://log4perl.sourceforge.net/releases/Log-Log4perl/docs/html/Log/Log4perl/FAQ.html#23804
Use a different logfile for every process like in
#log4perl.conf
...
log4perl.appender.A1.filename = sub { "mylog.$$.log" }
If your program already uses Perl's warn()
function to spew out error messages and you'd like to channel those into the Log4perl world, just define a __WARN__
handler where your program or module resides:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
$SIG{__WARN__} = sub {
local $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth =
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth + 1;
WARN @_;
};
Why the local
setting of $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth
? If you leave that out, PatternLayout
conversion specifiers like %M
or %F
(printing the current function/method and source filename) will refer to where the __WARN__ handler resides, not the environment Perl's warn()
function was issued from. Increasing caller_depth
adjusts for this offset. Having it local
, makes sure the level gets set back after the handler exits.
Once done, if your program does something like
sub some_func {
warn "Here's a warning";
}
you'll get (depending on your Log::Log4perl configuration) something like
2004/02/19 20:41:02-main::some_func: Here's a warning at ./t line 25.
in the appropriate appender instead of having a screen full of STDERR messages. It also works with the Carp
module and its carp()
and cluck()
functions.
If, on the other hand, catching die()
and friends is required, a __DIE__
handler is appropriate:
$SIG{__DIE__} = sub {
if($^S) {
# We're in an eval {} and don't want log
# this message but catch it later
return;
}
local $Log::Log4perl::caller_depth =
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth + 1;
LOGDIE @_;
};
This will call Log4perl's LOGDIE()
function, which will log a fatal error and then call die() internally, causing the program to exit. Works equally well with Carp
's croak()
and confess()
functions.
If a module you're using doesn't use Log::Log4perl but prints logging messages to STDERR instead, like
########################################
package IgnorantModule;
########################################
sub some_method {
print STDERR "Parbleu! An error!\n";
}
1;
there's still a way to capture these messages and funnel them into Log::Log4perl, even without touching the module. What you need is a trapper module like
########################################
package Trapper;
########################################
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
sub TIEHANDLE {
my $class = shift;
bless [], $class;
}
sub PRINT {
my $self = shift;
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth++;
DEBUG @_;
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth--;
}
1;
and a tie
command in the main program to tie STDERR to the trapper module along with regular Log::Log4perl initialization:
########################################
package main;
########################################
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init(
{level => $DEBUG,
file => 'stdout', # make sure not to use stderr here!
layout => "%d %M: %m%n",
});
tie *STDERR, "Trapper";
Make sure not to use STDERR as Log::Log4perl's file appender here (which would be the default in :easy
mode), because it would end up in an endless recursion.
Now, calling
IgnorantModule::some_method();
will result in the desired output
2004/05/06 11:13:04 IgnorantModule::some_method: Parbleu! An error!
If not instructed otherwise, Log::Log4perl
dynamically pulls in appender classes found in its configuration. If you specify
#!/usr/bin/perl
# mytest.pl
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
my $conf = q(
log4perl.category.Bar.Twix = WARN, Logfile
log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = SimpleLayout
);
Log::Log4perl::init(\$conf);
my $logger = get_logger("Bar::Twix");
$logger->error("Blah");
then Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
will be pulled in while the program runs, not at compile time. If you have PAR compile the script above to an executable binary via
pp -o mytest mytest.pl
and then run mytest
on a machine without having Log::Log4perl installed, you'll get an error message like
ERROR: can't load appenderclass 'Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen'
Can't locate Log/Log4perl/Appender/Screen.pm in @INC ...
Why? At compile time, pp
didn't realize that Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
would be needed later on and didn't wrap it into the executable created. To avoid this, either say use Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
in the script explicitly or compile it with
pp -o mytest -M Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen mytest.pl
to make sure the appender class gets included.
Any appender defined in the configuration file or somewhere in the code can be accessed later via Log::Log4perl->appender_by_name("appender_name")
, which returns a reference of the appender object.
Once you've got a hold of the object, it can be queried or modified to your liking. For example, see the custom IndentAppender
defined below: After calling init()
to define the Log4perl settings, the appender object is retrieved to call its indent_more()
and indent_less()
methods to control indentation of messages:
package IndentAppender;
sub new {
bless { indent => 0 }, $_[0];
}
sub indent_more { $_[0]->{indent}++ }
sub indent_less { $_[0]->{indent}-- }
sub log {
my($self, %params) = @_;
print " " x $self->{indent}, $params{message};
}
package main;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
my $conf = q(
log4perl.category = DEBUG, Indented
log4perl.appender.Indented = IndentAppender
log4perl.appender.Indented.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
);
Log::Log4perl::init(\$conf);
my $appender = Log::Log4perl->appender_by_name("Indented");
DEBUG "No identation";
$appender->indent_more();
DEBUG "One more";
$appender->indent_more();
DEBUG "Two more";
$appender->indent_less();
DEBUG "One less";
As you would expect, this will print
DEBUG - No identation
DEBUG - One more
DEBUG - Two more
DEBUG - One less
because the very appender used by Log4perl is modified dynamically at runtime.
In case your script needs to be prepared for environments that may or may not have Log::Log4perl installed, there's a trick.
If you put the following BEGIN blocks at the top of the program, you'll be able to use the DEBUG(), INFO(), etc. macros in Log::Log4perl's :easy
mode. If Log::Log4perl is installed in the target environment, the regular Log::Log4perl rules apply. If not, all of DEBUG(), INFO(), etc. are "stubbed" out, i.e. they turn into no-ops:
use warnings;
use strict;
BEGIN {
eval { require Log::Log4perl; };
if($@) {
print "Log::Log4perl not installed - stubbing.\n";
no strict qw(refs);
*{"main::$_"} = sub { } for qw(DEBUG INFO WARN ERROR FATAL);
} else {
no warnings;
print "Log::Log4perl installed - life is good.\n";
require Log::Log4perl::Level;
Log::Log4perl::Level->import(__PACKAGE__);
Log::Log4perl->import(qw(:easy));
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($main::DEBUG);
}
}
# The regular script begins ...
DEBUG "Hey now!";
This snippet will first probe for Log::Log4perl, and if it can't be found, it will alias DEBUG(), INFO(), with empty subroutines via typeglobs. If Log::Log4perl is available, its level constants are first imported ($DEBUG
, $INFO
, etc.) and then easy_init()
gets called to initialize the logging system.
Typically, when Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
creates a new file, its permissions are set to rw-r--r--
. Why? Because your environment's umask most likely defaults to 0022
, that's the standard setting.
What's a umask, you're asking? It's a template that's applied to the permissions of all newly created files. While calls like open(FILE, ">foo")
will always try to create files in rw-rw-rw-
mode, the system will apply the current umask template to determine the final permission setting. umask is a bit mask that's inverted and then applied to the requested permission setting, using a bitwise AND:
$request_permission &~ $umask
So, a umask setting of 0000 (the leading 0 simply indicates an octal value) will create files in rw-rw-rw-
mode, a setting of 0277 will use r--------
, and the standard 0022 will use rw-r--r--
.
As an example, if you want your log files to be created with rw-r--rw-
permissions, use a umask of 0020
before calling Log::Log4perl->init():
use Log::Log4perl;
umask 0020;
# Creates log.out in rw-r--rw mode
Log::Log4perl->init(\ q{
log4perl.logger = WARN, File
log4perl.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.File.filename = log.out
log4perl.appender.File.layout = SimpleLayout
});
It's not easy to get to this error, but if you write something like
END { Log::Log4perl::get_logger()->debug("Hey there."); }
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
it won't work. The reason is that Log::Log4perl
defines an END block that cleans up all loggers. And perl will run END blocks in the reverse order as they're encountered in the compile phase, so in the scenario above, the END block will run after Log4perl has cleaned up its loggers.
Placing END blocks using Log4perl after a use Log::Log4perl
statement fixes the problem:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
END { Log::Log4perl::get_logger()->debug("Hey there."); }
In this scenario, the shown END block is executed before Log4perl cleans up and the debug message will be processed properly.
This warning shows up when Unicode strings are printed without precautions. The warning goes away if the complaining appender is set to utf-8 mode:
# Either in the log4perl configuration file:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.Logfile.utf8 = 1
# Or, in easy mode:
Log::Log4perl->easy_init( {
level => $DEBUG,
file => ":utf8> test.log"
} );
If the complaining appender is a screen appender, set its utf8
option:
log4perl.appender.Screen.stderr = 1
log4perl.appender.Screen.utf8 = 1
Alternatively, binmode
does the trick:
# Either STDOUT ...
binmode(STDOUT, ":utf8);
# ... or STDERR.
binmode(STDERR, ":utf8);
Some background on this: Perl's strings are either byte strings or Unicode strings. "Mike"
is a byte string. "\x{30DE}\x{30A4}\x{30AF}"
is a Unicode string. Unicode strings are marked specially and are UTF-8 encoded internally.
If you print a byte string to STDOUT, all is well, because STDOUT is by default set to byte mode. However, if you print a Unicode string to STDOUT without precautions, perl
will try to transform the Unicode string back to a byte string before printing it out. This is troublesome if the Unicode string contains 'wide' characters which can't be represented in Latin-1.
For example, if you create a Unicode string with three japanese Katakana characters as in
perl -le 'print "\x{30DE}\x{30A4}\x{30AF}"'
(coincidentally pronounced Ma-i-ku, the japanese pronunciation of "Mike"), STDOUT is in byte mode and the warning
Wide character in print at ./script.pl line 14.
appears. Setting STDOUT to UTF-8 mode as in
perl -le 'binmode(STDOUT, ":utf8"); print "\x{30DE}\x{30A4}\x{30AF}"'
will silently print the Unicode string to STDOUT in UTF-8. To see the characters printed, you'll need a UTF-8 terminal with a font including japanese Katakana characters.
Let's assume you want to maintain a detailed DEBUG output in a file and only messages of level ERROR and higher should be printed on the screen. Often times, developers come up with something like this:
# Wrong!!!
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, FileApp
log4perl.logger = ERROR, ScreenApp
# Wrong!!!
This won't work, however. Logger definitions aren't additive, and the second statement will overwrite the first one. Log4perl versions below 1.04 were silently accepting this, leaving people confused why it wouldn't work as expected. As of 1.04, this will throw a fatal error to notify the user of the problem.
What you want to do instead, is this:
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, FileApp, ScreenApp
log4perl.appender.FileApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.FileApp.filename = test.log
log4perl.appender.FileApp.layout = SimpleLayout
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.stderr = 0
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.layout = SimpleLayout
### limiting output to ERROR messages
log4perl.appender.ScreenApp.Threshold = ERROR
###
Note that without the second appender's Threshold
setting, both appenders would receive all messages prioritized DEBUG and higher. With the threshold set to ERROR, the second appender will filter the messages as required.
Your log files may go anywhere you want them, but the effective user id of the calling process must have write access.
If the log file doesn't exist at program start, Log4perl's file appender will create it. For this, it needs write access to the directory where the new file will be located in. If the log file already exists at startup, the process simply needs write access to the file. Note that it will need write access to the file's directory if you're encountering situations where the logfile gets recreated, e.g. during log rotation.
If Log::Log4perl is used by a web server application (e.g. in a CGI script or mod_perl), then the webserver's user (usually nobody
or www
) must have the permissions mentioned above.
To prepare your web server to use log4perl, we'd recommend:
webserver:~$ su -
webserver:~# mkdir /var/log/cgiapps
webserver:~# chown nobody:root /var/log/cgiapps/
webserver:~# chown nobody:root -R /var/log/cgiapps/
webserver:~# chmod 02755 -R /var/log/cgiapps/
Then set your /etc/log4perl.conf file to include:
log4perl.appender.FileAppndr1.filename =
/var/log/cgiapps/<app-name>.log
The file appender that comes with Log4perl, Log::Log4perl::Appender::File, will open a specified log file at initialization time and will keep writing to it via a file handle.
In case the associated file goes way, messages written by a long-running process will still be written to the file handle. In case the file has been moved to a different location on the same file system, the writer will keep writing to it under the new filename. In case the file has been removed from the file system, the log messages will end up in nowhere land. This is not a bug in Log4perl, this is how Unix works. There is no error message in this case, because the writer has no idea that the file handle is not associated with a visible file.
To prevent the loss of log messages when log files disappear, the file appender's recreate
option needs to be set to a true value:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate = 1
This will instruct the file appender to check in regular intervals (default: 30 seconds) if the log file is still there. If it finds out that the file is missing, it will recreate it.
Continuously checking if the log file still exists is fairly expensive. For this reason it is only performed every 30 seconds. To change this interval, the option recreate_check_interval
can be set to the number of seconds between checks. In the extreme case where the check should be performed before every write, it can even be set to 0:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate = 1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate_check_interval = 0
To avoid having to check the file system so frequently, a signal handler can be set up:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate = 1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate_check_signal = USR1
This will install a signal handler which will recreate a missing log file immediately when it receives the defined signal.
Note that the init_and_watch() method for Log4perl's initialization can also be instructed to install a signal handler, usually using the HUP signal. Make sure to use a different signal if you're using both of them at the same time.
Here's a few things that need to be taken care of when using the popular log file rotating utility newsyslog
(http://www.courtesan.com/newsyslog) with Log4perl's file appender in long-running processes.
For example, with a newsyslog configuration like
# newsyslog.conf
/tmp/test.log 666 12 5 * B
and a call to
# newsyslog -f /path/to/newsyslog.conf
newsyslog
will take action if /tmp/test.log
is larger than the specified 5K in size. It will move the current log file /tmp/test.log
to /tmp/test.log.0
and create a new and empty /tmp/test.log
with the specified permissions (this is why newsyslog
needs to run as root). An already existing /tmp/test.log.0
would be moved to /tmp/test.log.1
, /tmp/test.log.1
to /tmp/test.log.2
, and so forth, for every one of a max number of 12 archived logfiles that have been configured in newsyslog.conf
.
Although a new file has been created, from Log4perl's appender's point of view, this situation is identical to the one described in the previous FAQ entry, labeled How can my file appender deal with disappearing log files
.
To make sure that log messages are written to the new log file and not to an archived one or end up in nowhere land, the appender's recreate
and recreate_check_interval
have to be configured to deal with the 'disappearing' log file.
The situation gets interesting when newsyslog
's option to compress archived log files is enabled. This causes the original log file not to be moved, but to disappear. If the file appender isn't configured to recreate the logfile in this situation, log messages will actually be lost without warning. This also applies for the short time frame of recreate_check_interval
seconds in between the recreator's file checks.
To make sure that no messages get lost, one option is to set the interval to
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate_check_interval = 0
However, this is fairly expensive. A better approach is to define a signal handler:
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate = 1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate_check_signal = USR1
log4perl.appender.Logfile.recreate_pid_write = /tmp/myappid
As a service for newsyslog
users, Log4perl's file appender writes the current process ID to a PID file specified by the recreate_pid_write
option. newsyslog
then needs to be configured as in
# newsyslog.conf configuration for compressing archive files and
# sending a signal to the Log4perl-enabled application
/tmp/test.log 666 12 5 * B /tmp/myappid 30
to send the defined signal (30, which is USR1 on FreeBSD) to the application process at rotation time. Note that the signal number is different on Linux, where USR1 denotes as 10. Check man signal
for details.
This scenario often occurs in configurations where processes run under various user IDs but need to write to a log file under a fixed, but different user id.
With a traditional file appender, the log file will probably be created under one user's id and appended to under a different user's id. With a typical umask of 0002, the file will be created with -rw-rw-r-- permissions. If a user who's not in the first user's group subsequently appends to the log file, it will fail because of a permission problem.
Two potential solutions come to mind:
Creating the file with a umask of 0000 will allow all users to append to the log file. Log4perl's file appender Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
has an umask
option that can be set to support this:
log4perl.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File
log4perl.appender.File.umask = sub { 0000 };
This way, the log file will be created with -rw-rw-rw- permissions and therefore has world write permissions. This might open up the logfile for unwanted manipulations by arbitrary users, though.
Running the process under an effective user id of root
will allow it to write to the log file, no matter who started the process. However, this is not a good idea, because of security concerns.
Luckily, under Unix, there's the syslog daemon which runs as root and takes log requests from user processes over a socket and writes them to log files as configured in /etc/syslog.conf
.
By modifying /etc/syslog.conf
and HUPing the syslog daemon, you can configure new log files:
# /etc/syslog.conf
...
user.* /some/path/file.log
Using the Log::Dispatch::Syslog
appender, which comes with the Log::Log4perl
distribution, you can then send messages via syslog:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init(\<<EOT);
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, app
log4perl.appender.app=Log::Dispatch::Syslog
log4perl.appender.app.Facility=user
log4perl.appender.app.layout=SimpleLayout
EOT
# Writes to /some/path/file.log
ERROR "Message!";
This way, the syslog daemon will solve the permission problem.
Note that while it is possible to use syslog() without Log4perl (syslog supports log levels, too), traditional syslog setups have a significant drawback.
Without Log4perl's ability to activate logging in only specific parts of a system, complex systems will trigger log events all over the place and slow down execution to a crawl at high debug levels.
Remote-controlling logging in the hierarchical parts of an application via Log4perl's categories is one of its most distinguished features. It allows for enabling high debug levels in specified areas without noticeable performance impact.
If a layout defines a date, Log::Log4perl uses local time to populate it. If you want UTC instead, set
log4perl.utcDateTimes = 1
in your configuration. Alternatively, you can set
$Log::Log4perl::DateFormat::GMTIME = 1;
in your program before the first log statement.
You have a function that prints to a filehandle. You want to tie into that filehandle and forward all arriving messages to a Log4perl logger.
First, let's write a package that ties a file handle and forwards it to a Log4perl logger:
package FileHandleLogger;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:levels get_logger);
sub TIEHANDLE {
my($class, %options) = @_;
my $self = {
level => $DEBUG,
category => '',
%options
};
$self->{logger} = get_logger($self->{category}),
bless $self, $class;
}
sub PRINT {
my($self, @rest) = @_;
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth++;
$self->{logger}->log($self->{level}, @rest);
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth--;
}
sub PRINTF {
my($self, $fmt, @rest) = @_;
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth++;
$self->PRINT(sprintf($fmt, @rest));
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth--;
}
1;
Now, if you have a function like
sub function_printing_to_fh {
my($fh) = @_;
printf $fh "Hi there!\n";
}
which takes a filehandle and prints something to it, it can be used with Log4perl:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
usa FileHandleLogger;
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
tie *SOMEHANDLE, 'FileHandleLogger' or
die "tie failed ($!)";
function_printing_to_fh(*SOMEHANDLE);
# prints "2007/03/22 21:43:30 Hi there!"
If you want, you can even specify a different log level or category:
tie *SOMEHANDLE, 'FileHandleLogger',
level => $INFO, category => "Foo::Bar" or die "tie failed ($!)";
With the standard PatternLayout
, if you send a multiline message to an appender as in
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log
it gets rendered this way:
2007/04/04 23:23:39 multi
line
message
If you want each line to be rendered separately according to the layout use Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout::Multiline
:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init(\<<EOT);
log4perl.category = DEBUG, Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = \\
Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout::Multiline
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout.ConversionPattern = %d %m %n
EOT
DEBUG "some\nmultiline\nmessage";
and you'll get
2007/04/04 23:23:39 some
2007/04/04 23:23:39 multiline
2007/04/04 23:23:39 message
instead.
If you're on Windows and are getting warning messages like
Constant subroutine Log::Log4perl::_INTERNAL_DEBUG redefined at
C:/Programme/Perl/lib/constant.pm line 103.
Subroutine import redefined at
C:/Programme/Perl/site/lib/Log/Log4Perl.pm line 69.
Subroutine initialized redefined at
C:/Programme/Perl/site/lib/Log/Log4Perl.pm line 207.
then chances are that you're using 'Log::Log4Perl' (wrong uppercase P) instead of the correct 'Log::Log4perl'. Perl on Windows doesn't handle this error well and spits out a slew of confusing warning messages. But now you know, just use the correct module name and you'll be fine.
If you're using Log4perl log commands in DESTROY methods of your objects, you might see confusing messages like
Log4perl: Seems like no initialization happened. Forgot to call init()?
Use of uninitialized value in subroutine entry at
/home/y/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.6.1/Log/Log4perl.pm line 134 during global
destruction. (in cleanup) Undefined subroutine &main:: called at
/home/y/lib/perl5/site_perl/5.6.1/Log/Log4perl.pm line 134 during global
destruction.
when the program shuts down. What's going on?
This phenomenon happens if you have circular references in your objects, which perl can't clean up when an object goes out of scope but waits until global destruction instead. At this time, however, Log4perl has already shut down, so you can't use it anymore.
For example, here's a simple class which uses a logger in its DESTROY method:
package A;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
sub new { bless {}, shift }
sub DESTROY { DEBUG "Waaah!"; }
Now, if the main program creates a self-referencing object, like in
package main;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
my $a = A->new();
$a->{selfref} = $a;
then you'll see the error message shown above during global destruction. How to tackle this problem?
First, you should clean up your circular references before global destruction. They will not only cause objects to be destroyed in an order that's hard to predict, but also eat up memory until the program shuts down.
So, the program above could easily be fixed by putting
$a->{selfref} = undef;
at the end or in an END handler. If that's hard to do, use weak references:
package main;
use Scalar::Util qw(weaken);
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG);
my $a = A->new();
$a->{selfref} = weaken $a;
This allows perl to clean up the circular reference when the object goes out of scope, and doesn't wait until global destruction.
POE is a framework for creating multitasked applications running in a single process and a single thread. POE's threads equivalents are 'sessions' and since they run quasi-simultaneously, you can't use Log4perl's global NDC/MDC to hold session-specific data.
However, POE already maintains a data store for every session. It is called 'heap' and is just a hash storing session-specific data in key-value pairs. To access this per-session heap data from a Log4perl layout, define a custom cspec and reference it with the newly defined pattern in the layout:
use strict;
use POE;
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->init( \ q{
log4perl.logger = DEBUG, Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = PatternLayout
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout.ConversionPattern = %U %m%n
log4perl.PatternLayout.cspec.U = \
sub { POE::Kernel->get_active_session->get_heap()->{ user } }
} );
for (qw( Huey Lewey Dewey )) {
POE::Session->create(
inline_states => {
_start => sub {
$_[HEAP]->{user} = $_;
POE::Kernel->yield('hello');
},
hello => sub {
DEBUG "I'm here now";
}
}
);
}
POE::Kernel->run();
exit;
The code snippet above defines a new layout placeholder (called 'cspec' in Log4perl) %U which calls a subroutine, retrieves the active session, gets its heap and looks up the entry specified ('user').
Starting with Log::Log4perl 1.20, cspecs also support parameters in curly braces, so you can say
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout.ConversionPattern = %U{user} %U{id} %m%n
log4perl.PatternLayout.cspec.U = \
sub { POE::Kernel->get_active_session-> \
get_heap()->{ $_[0]->{curlies} } }
and print the POE session heap entries 'user' and 'id' with every logged message. For more details on cpecs, read the PatternLayout manual.
Sometimes it's a script that's supposed to log messages regardless if Log4perl has been initialized or not. Or there's a logging statement that's not going to be suppressed under any circumstances -- many people want to have the final word, make the executive decision, because it seems like the only logical choice.
But think about it: First off, if a messages is supposed to be printed, where is it supposed to end up at? STDOUT? STDERR? And are you sure you want to set in stone that this message needs to be printed, while someone else might find it annoying and wants to get rid of it?
The truth is, there's always going to be someone who wants to log a messages at all cost, but also another person who wants to suppress it with equal vigilance. There's no good way to serve these two conflicting desires, someone will always want to win at the cost of leaving the other party disappointed.
So, the best Log4perl offers is the ALWAYS level for a message that even fires if the system log level is set to $OFF:
use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);
Log::Log4perl->easy_init( $OFF );
ALWAYS "This gets logged always. Well, almost always";
The logger won't fire, though, if Log4perl hasn't been initialized or if someone defines a custom log hurdle that's higher than $OFF.
Bottom line: Leave the setting of the logging level to the initial Perl script -- let their owners decided what they want, no matter how tempting it may be to decide it for them.
If you have code like
use Log::Log4perl qw( :easy );
Log::Log4perl->easy_init( { level => $DEBUG, file => "my.log" } );
END { unlink "my.log" or die };
then you might be in for a surprise when you're running it on Windows, because the unlink()
call in the END handler will complain that the file is still in use.
What happens in Perl if you have something like
END { print "first end in main\n"; }
use Module;
END { print "second end in main\n"; }
and
package Module;
END { print "end in module\n"; }
1;
is that you get
second end in main
end in module
first end in main
because perl stacks the END handlers in reverse order in which it encounters them in the compile phase.
Log4perl defines an END handler that cleans up left-over appenders (e.g. file appenders which still hold files open), because those appenders have circular references and therefore aren't cleaned up otherwise.
Now if you define an END handler after "use Log::Log4perl", it'll trigger before Log4perl gets a chance to clean up, which isn't a problem on Unix where you can delete a file even if some process has a handle to it open, but it's a problem on Win32, where the OS won't let you do that.
The solution is easy, just place the END handler before Log4perl gets loaded, like in
END { unlink "my.log" or die };
use Log::Log4perl qw( :easy );
Log::Log4perl->easy_init( { level => $DEBUG, file => "my.log" } );
which will call the END handlers in the intended order.
Log::Log4perl
Copyright 2002-2013 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
Please contribute patches to the project on Github:
http://github.com/mschilli/log4perl
Send bug reports or requests for enhancements to the authors via our
MAILING LIST (questions, bug reports, suggestions/patches): log4perl-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
Authors (please contact them via the list above, not directly): Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com>, Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>
Contributors (in alphabetical order): Ateeq Altaf, Cory Bennett, Jens Berthold, Jeremy Bopp, Hutton Davidson, Chris R. Donnelly, Matisse Enzer, Hugh Esco, Anthony Foiani, James FitzGibbon, Carl Franks, Dennis Gregorovic, Andy Grundman, Paul Harrington, Alexander Hartmaier David Hull, Robert Jacobson, Jason Kohles, Jeff Macdonald, Markus Peter, Brett Rann, Peter Rabbitson, Erik Selberg, Aaron Straup Cope, Lars Thegler, David Viner, Mac Yang.