SiftingAppender: Logging Different Threads to Different Log Files
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Join For FreeOne novel feature of Logback is SiftingAppender
(JavaDoc).
In short it's a proxy appender that creates one child appender per each
unique value of a given runtime property. Typically this property is
taken from MDC. Here is an example based on the official documentation linked above:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <configuration> <appender name="SIFT" class="ch.qos.logback.classic.sift.SiftingAppender"> <discriminator> <key>userid</key> <defaultValue>unknown</defaultValue> </discriminator> <sift> <appender name="FILE-${userid}" class="ch.qos.logback.core.FileAppender"> <file>user-${userid}.log</file> <layout class="ch.qos.logback.classic.PatternLayout"> <pattern>%d{HH:mm:ss:SSS} | %-5level | %thread | %logger{20} | %msg%n%rEx</pattern> </layout> </appender> </sift> </appender> <root level="ALL"> <appender-ref ref="SIFT" /> </root> </configuration>
Notice that the <file>
property is parameterized with ${userid}
property. Where does this property come from? It has to be placed in MDC. For example in a web application using Spring Security I tend to use a servlet filter with a help of SecurityContextHolder
:
import javax.servlet._ import org.slf4j.MDC import org.springframework.security.core.context.SecurityContextHolder import org.springframework.security.core.userdetails.UserDetails class UserIdFilter extends Filter { def init(filterConfig: FilterConfig) {} def doFilter(request: ServletRequest, response: ServletResponse, chain: FilterChain) { val userid = Option( SecurityContextHolder.getContext.getAuthentication ).collect{case u: UserDetails => u.getUsername} MDC.put("userid", userid.orNull) try { chain.doFilter(request, response) } finally { MDC.remove("userid") } } def destroy() {} }
Just make sure this filter is applied after Spring Security filter. But that's not the point. The presence of ${userid}
placeholder in the file name causes sifting appender to create one
child appender for each different value of this property (thus:
different user names). Running your web application with this
configuration will quickly create several log files like user-alice.log
, user-bob.log
and user-unknown.log
in case of MDC property not set.
Another use case is using thread name rather than MDC property.
Unfortunately this is not built in, but can be easily plugged in using
custom Discriminator
as opposed to default MDCBasedDiscriminator
:
public class ThreadNameBasedDiscriminator implements Discriminator<ILoggingEvent> { private static final String KEY = "threadName"; private boolean started; @Override public String getDiscriminatingValue(ILoggingEvent iLoggingEvent) { return Thread.currentThread().getName(); } @Override public String getKey() { return KEY; } public void start() { started = true; } public void stop() { started = false; } public boolean isStarted() { return started; } }
Now we have to instruct logback.xml
to use our custom discriminator:
<appender name="SIFT" class="ch.qos.logback.classic.sift.SiftingAppender"> <discriminator class="com.blogspot.nurkiewicz.ThreadNameBasedDiscriminator"/> <sift> <appender class="ch.qos.logback.core.FileAppender"> <file>app-${threadName}.log</file> <layout class="ch.qos.logback.classic.PatternLayout"> <pattern>%d{HH:mm:ss:SSS} | %-5level | %logger{20} | %msg%n%rEx</pattern> </layout> </appender> </sift> </appender>
Note that we no longer put %thread
in PatternLayout
- it is unnecessary as thread name is part of the log file name:
app-main.log
app-http-nio-8080-exec-1.log
app-taskScheduler-1
app-ForkJoinPool-1-worker-1.log
- ...and so forth
Published at DZone with permission of Tomasz Nurkiewicz, DZone MVB. See the original article here.
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