LogFactor5

LF5 User Guide

Log4j Project

Reading Log Files

FileAppender and derived classes give you the ability to output log messages to a files. LogFactor5 provides developers with two easy ways to open and view these log files. Log files can be opened locally using the File->Open menu item or log files can be opened from a remote server using the File->Open URL menu item.

An additional feature that was added to LogFactor5 was the ability to start the console window independently of log4j. That is to say, you do not need to add a LF5Appender to your properties file to use LogFactor5. The benefit of this feature is that developers who run utilities like Ant to test their applications can now view their log files off-line (i.e. after their application has completed the test and the JVM has shut down). Moreover, the ability to open log files on a remote server provides the ability for multiple developers working on the same application to view log files independently. It also gives developers the ability to view log files both internally and from remote locations.

LogFactor5 can read in log files created with RollingFileAppender. The format of the log file can be set in the log4j.properties or a standard properties file and must follow the LogFactor5 layout conventions in order for LogFactor5 to read the file. The following is an example of a properties file with the LogFactor5 conversion pattern added:


log4j.rootLogger=debug, R

# R is the RollingFileAppender that outputs to a rolling log 
# file called sample.log.

log4j.appender.R=org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.R.File=sample.log

# Define a pattern layout for the file.  
# For more information on conversion characters (i.e. d,p,t,c,l,m,n)
# please see the PatternLayout class of the Log4j API.

log4j.appender.R.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout

# The following normally appears on one single line.
log4j.appender.R.layout.ConversionPattern=[slf5s.start]%d{DATE}[slf5s.DATE]%n\
   %p[slf5s.PRIORITY]%n%x[slf5s.NDC]%n%t[slf5s.THREAD]%n\
   %c[slf5s.CATEGORY]%n%l[slf5s.LOCATION]%n%m[slf5s.MESSAGE]%n%n

# Set the max size of the file 
log4j.appender.R.MaxFileSize=500KB

You are free to use any or all of the main conversion characters to create your log file (i.e. %p for Priority). There are only two requirements for the conversion pattern. First, the conversion pattern string must start with the tag [slf5s.start]. Second, for each log4j conversion character listed in the conversion pattern string, a corresponding LogFactor5 tag must be placed immediately after the character. The following is a complete list of the log4j characters and LogFactor5 tags:

Date - %d{DATE}[slf5s.DATE]
Priority - %p[slf5s.PRIORITY]
NDC - %x[slf5s.NDC]
Thread - %t[slf5s.THREAD]
Category - %c[slf5s.CATEGORY]
Location - %l[slf5s.LOCATION]
Message - %m[slf5s.MESSAGE]

Note: The order of the characters does not matter so you are free to layout your log file any way you like. Just remember to include the LogFactor5 start tag at the beginning of the string and any LogFactor5 tags after each corresponding log4j conversion character. For more information or to see a working example, try the OpeningLogFiles example in the examples directory.



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