Skip to content

ops4j/org.ops4j.pax.logging

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

PAX-LOGGING

The goal of this project is to allow users and bundles to use well known Logging APIs like SLF4J or Commons-Logging.

Versions

1.9.x 1.10.x 1.11.x 1.12.x 2.0.x 2.1.x 2.2.x

OSGi Log version

R6 (1.3)

R6 (1.3)

R6 (1.3)

R6 (1.3)

R7 (1.4)

R7 (1.4)

R8 (1.5)

Log4j1 backend

yes

yes

yes

no

yes

no

no

Log4j2 version

2.12.4

2.17.1

2.17.1

2.22.1

2.18.0

2.18.0

2.23.1

Logback version

no

1.2.9

1.2.11

1.3.14

1.2.11

1.2.11

1.3.14

Maintained

no

no

no, use 1.12.x instead

yes

no, use 2.2.x instead

no, use 2.2.x instead

yes

Note
All versions support Log4j1 API, while only selected ones support Log4j1 backend.
History of the versions
  • Version 1.11.x was major refactor of 1.10.x where >100 integration tests were added and the behavior of Log4j1, Log4j2 and Logback backends was unified

  • New major version 2.0.x was created to provide implementation of a new version of the org.osgi.service.log package from OSGi R7 specification

  • Version 1.12.x and 2.1.x were created during Log4j crisis to provide versions that match 1.11.x and 2.0.x (respectively), but without Log4j1 backend

  • Version 2.2.x was created to provide implementation of new version of the org.osgi.service.log package from OSGi R8 specification - from day 1 without Log4j1 backend (but still with Log4j1 API)

At some point, reload4j fork of Apache log4j was used.

In 2023 I decided to stop maintaining these versions:

  • 1.11.x, because 1.12.x is compatible version but without log4j1 backend (we don’t need it in 2023). Log4j1 API is still available. 1.12.x is the only version exporting org.osgi.service.log with version 1.3

  • 2.1.x, because 2.2.x is supporting OSGi CMPN R8 (Log Service 1.5) which is compatible with R7 (Log Service 1.4)

  • 2.0.x, because 2.1.x is no longer maintained, because 2.2.x should be used instead.

1.12.x should be used for older OSGi runtimes, based for example on Karaf 4.2 (and Felix 5.6.12).

Please don’t worry about deprecating 2.0.x/2.1.x. Pax Logging 2.2.x is the same as 2.1.x, but with two exports:

...
org.osgi.service.log; version=1.4,
org.osgi.service.log; version=1.5,
...

Basics

There should be a distinction between Logging API which, by itself, doesn’t do any logging, but instead requires specific logging implementation (and related configuration) and the Logging implementation (referred to as a backend) itself.

Logging APIs (or Facades) matching the above distinction include:

Logging implementations always provide their own APIs and can be used without any of the above facades. These include:

However usage of Logback without SLF4J is very rare and won’t be implemented in pax-logging.

And the above two (with their specific configuration file syntax) are supported by (respectively):

  • pax-logging-log4j2 (log4J2)

  • pax-logging-logback (logback)

pax-logging-log4j1 was named pax-logging-service before version 2.0.0 and was removed completely in 2.1.0. However Log4j1 API was not removed.

Different Logging APIs

The fundamental interface is org.osgi.service.log.LogService from Chapter 101 of OSGi Compendium specification. The history of org.osgi.service.log package versions is:

  • 1.0: OSGi R1

  • 1.1: OSGi R2

  • 1.2: OSGi R3

  • 1.3: OSGi R4, R4.1, R4.2, R4.3, R5, R6

  • 1.4: OSGi R7

  • 1.5: OSGi R8

pax-logging-api 1.x uses version 1.3 from OSGi Compendium R6.

pax-logging-api 2.0.x/2.1.x uses version 1.4 from OSGi Compendium R7.

pax-logging-api 2.2.x uses version 1.5 from OSGi Compendium R8.

Each class that’s an entry point to specific Logging framework (like org.slf4j.LoggerFactory) interacts with pax-logging using org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingManager. This manager tracks instances of framework-specific org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService services that eventually delegate to particular framework (like Log4J2).

This indirection allows to plug-in OSGi specific mechanism (like replacing org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService implementation at runtime) without refreshing (in OSGi terms) pax-logging-api bundle.

There’s one important thing. Logging facades and frameworks share familiar concepts of category (or a logger name). This concept was introduced (afair) in Log4J1 with tree-like hierarchy of loggers where more general loggers could provide shared configuration (like appenders) for more particular loggers.

OSGi Compendium org.osgi.service.log.LogService doesn’t have this notion of category, but (without a need to provide more technical details) pax-logging implements calls to org.osgi.service.log.LogService.log() method in such way that category is (if possible) bundle’s symbolic name. This category is then used to get a logger from underlying logging backend.

In other words each org.osgi.service.log.LogService.log() call may be represended by this pseudo code:

// calculate category
category = try to take category from bundle's symbolic name

// obtain logger from underlying backend, like Log4J2
logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(bundle, category)

// log a message according to specified level
logger.info(message, throwable) // or warn() or debug(), ...

Being aware of this, it’s actually better to not use org.osgi.service.log.LogService.log() in your code directly and just use given logging facade (like SLF4J or Commons Logging) - this removes a need to obtain a logger (which is cached anyway) on each log call.

OSGi R7 Log Service

With OSGi R7, standard Log Service gets a concept of logger. This makes the service easier to use - almost like de facto standard logging facades, where some factory is used to obtain loggers that are used to invoke logging methods.

OSGi R7 adds new interface org.osgi.service.log.LoggerFactory, which is actually a new super interface of old org.osgi.service.log.LogService service.

Factory methods that return instances of org.osgi.service.log.Logger by name or class are intuitive. There are however factory methods that take new argument: Class<L> loggerType where <L extends org.osgi.service.log.Logger>. The only known/acceptable classes that can be passed to such factory methods are:

  • org.osgi.service.log.Logger

  • org.osgi.service.log.FormatterLogger

By passing org.osgi.service.log.FormatterLogger.class as an argument, user of factory method indicates that he/she wants to use printf-like formatting, for example:

ServiceReference<LoggerFactory> sr = context.getServiceReference(org.osgi.service.log.LoggerFactory.class);
LoggerFactory loggerFactory = context.getService(sr);
org.osgi.service.log.Logger log = loggerFactory.getLogger("com.example.service", FormatterLogger.class);
log.info("Hello %s", "world");

When passing org.osgi.service.log.Logger.class or when not passing anything, we assume Slf4J-like formatting:

ServiceReference<LoggerFactory> sr = context.getServiceReference(org.osgi.service.log.LoggerFactory.class);
LoggerFactory loggerFactory = context.getService(sr);
org.osgi.service.log.Logger log = loggerFactory.getLogger("com.example.service");
log.info("Hello {}", "world");

Fully Qualified Class Name

FQCN concept is very important. It’s used to mark a place inside stack trace where code that invokes logging operation transitions into the logging mechanism itself. Last stack frame before logging mechanism marks a location that can be used to obtain class name, method name, file name and line number (so called location info). Before OSGi R7, it was quite easy to implement correctly, because all the logging methods where managed by Pax Logging itself and proper FQCN could be set. With OSGi R7 logging service, logger is also a standard interface and logging methods may be called without any facade (like Slf4J).

Pax Logging had to carefuly handle all the entry points into logging mechanism, to correctly determine FQCN.

Concepts

pax-logging is not trivial bridge to different (2 actually) logging frameworks (Log4J2, Logback), it also provides SPI layer that allows users to extend any logging framework. The most clear usage is when user wants to provide custom appender that processes logging events.

Logging events

Each time a method like log.info() is called in any code fragment, new logging event is created. This event is a representation of a fact that user wants to log some message/information. Each logging event has some information associated like timestamp, code location (if available), message, exception (if needed) and severity (importance) of the event.

Appenders

Appender is kind of processor that does something with the logging event - usually appending new information (typically a line) to a file.

Level and threshold

This is a bit confusing part. At first glance it looks trivial - when user wants to invoke logging method, he/she may use one of typical methods like info(), warn(), trace() or other.

Simply from this set of alternatives we can derive the concept of logging event level (or severity).

Let’s start with something we can treat as canonical - Syslog. Here are the level names and their numerical equivalents:

Table 1. Syslog levels
Numerical value Severity/level name

0

Emergency

1

Alert

2

Critical

3

Error

4

Warning

5

Notice

6

Informational

7

Debug

From the above, we can try to summarize:

Numerically higher level is less important.

A concept related to level is threshold. Without giving precise constraints, threshold is a limit for logging events. For the above, Syslog example, setting a threshold value to Warning means that we’re interested in events with Warning or (numerically) lower events.

Thus:

The higher (numerically) the threshold, the more logging events are processed. Less important events are processed.

Adding more confusion

Logging frameworks (and APIs) used in pax-logging treat the level concept differently…​ Log4J1 has direct relation to Syslog levels, but it’s not a case with Log4J2 and java.util.logging. Here’s a table where Syslog and Log4J1 can be directly related. Placement of levels from other libraries is a bit arbitrary and related to logging level name equivalents.

  • Log4J1: constants in org.apache.log4j.Level class

  • Log4J2: values in org.apache.logging.log4j.spi.StandardLevel enum

  • Logback: constants in ch.qos.logback.classic.Level class

  • java.util.logging: values in java.util.logging.Level class

  • Slf4J: constants in org.slf4j.spi.LocationAwareLogger interface

  • OSGi R6: constants in org.osgi.service.log.LogService interface

  • OSGi R7: values in org.osgi.service.log.LogLevel enum

Syslog Log4J1 Log4J2 Logback java.util.logging SLF4J OSGi R6 OSGi R7

0 - Emergency

Integer.MAX_VALUE - OFF

0 - OFF

Integer.MAX_VALUE - OFF

Integer.MAX_VALUE - OFF

0 - AUDIT

0 - Emergency

50000 - FATAL

100 - FATAL

1000 - SEVERE

1 - Alert

2 - Critical

3 - Error

40000 - ERROR

200 - ERROR

40000 - ERROR

1000 - SEVERE

40 - ERROR

1 - ERROR

1 - ERROR

4 - Warning

30000 - WARN

300 - WARN

30000 - WARN

900 - WARNING

30 - WARN

2 - WARNING

2 - WARN

5 - Notice

6 - Informational

20000 - INFO

400 - INFO

20000 - INFO

800 - INFO, 700 - CONFIG

20 - INFO

3 - INFO

3 - INFO

7 - Debug

10000 - DEBUG

500 - DEBUG

10000 - DEBUG

500 - FINE

10 - DEBUG

4 - DEBUG

4 - DEBUG

7 - Debug

5000 - TRACE

600 - TRACE

5000 - TRACE

400 - FINER

0 - TRACE

5 - TRACE

300 - FINEST

7 - Debug

Integer.MIN_VALUE - ALL

Integer.MAX_VALUE - ALL

Integer.MIN_VALUE - ALL

Integer.MIN_VALUE - ALL

Notes and confusing parts:

  • Log4J1’s OFF level matches numerical value of Syslog Emergency level

  • java.util.logging: there are too many less important levels (FINE, FINER, FINEST) and too little more critical ones (only SEVERE)

  • Syslog doesn’t define trace level, so its debug entry is duplicated to cover constants from logging frameworks

  • Syslog, Log4J2 and OSGi use increasing numerical level for decreasing event importance

  • Log4J1, java.util.logging and SLF4J use higher numerical levels for more important events

  • Mapping of java.util.logging levels to more popular level names is implemented in org.ops4j.pax.logging.spi.support.BackendSupport.toJULLevel()

  • OFF and ALL special levels have to be treated carefully by pax-logging because the usage of numerical values is totally unintuitive.

  • OSGi R7 introduces AUDIT log level for information that must always be logged - thus suggesting that it’s more than error - I’ve associated it with Syslog’s Emergency level. Though matching value from org.apache.log4j.Priority has comment is intended to turn off logging.

Markers

Markers allow to pass/associate additional, dynamic information with logging operation itself. Just as logger name (category) and level are static aspects of the logger itself, marker is associated with single logging invocation (thus effectively with logging event). Single logger may be used to log message with or without marker and it’s up to specific implementation (Logback, Log4J2) to handle the marker accordingly.

For example, Log4J1 doesn’t support markers, so slf4j-log4j12 bridges to Log4J1 using org.slf4j.helpers.MarkerIgnoringBase abstract base class which simply ignores markers. Logback and Log4J2 implement full org.slf4j.spi.LocationAwareLogger with marker support.

Markers are used usually by implementation-specific filters and appenders:

  • filters may be configured to restrict logging statements to ones using (or not using) particular marker

  • some appenders may simply do not do anything if specific marker is (or is not) present (for example that’s the case with ch.qos.logback.classic.boolex.OnMarkerEvaluator that may be attached to ch.qos.logback.classic.net.SMTPAppender)

Finally, a marker may have parent (or child) marker(s) associated - making them something slightly more complex than single name.

In Pax Logging, org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLogger interface didn’t contain methods accepting markers. PAXLOGGING-160 passed marker as String attribute through thread-bound org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxContext. PAXLOGGING-259 adds such methods to this interface.

Remember - in Pax Logging, it’s possible to use for example Log4J2 API to log information that’s effectively handled by Logback, so despite the API being aware of markers, they may not be used correctly by actual logging implementation. As consequence, isXXXEnabled(…​, marker, …​) methods may not be handled early in the process of logging.

SLF4J

slf4j-api-1.7.33-sources.jar contains more sources than slf4j-api-1.7.33.jar has classes - in particular, org.slf4j.impl package is removed from the jar and the responsibility to provide:

  • org.ops4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder

  • org.ops4j.impl.StaticMDCBinder

  • org.ops4j.impl.StaticMarkerBinder

classes lies on the side of binding library for SLF4J API. Such classes are provided by (among others):

  • logback-classic-1.2.10.jar

  • log4j-slf4j-impl-2.17.1.jar

  • slf4j-nop-1.7.33.jar

  • slf4j-log4j12-1.7.33.jar

  • slf4j-simple-1.7.33.jar

pax-logging-api provides own implementation of these three classes. All other classes are directly repackaged (using bndlib) from slf4j-api-1.7.33.jar - classes that don’t have to be changed are no longer shipped in pax-logging-api source directory.

Commons Logging

While SLF4J takes simple and elegant approach for finding the actual implementation (StaticLoggerBinder), Commons Logging uses old school discovery through various ClassLoader and ServiceLoader tricks.

In pax-logging, all this discovery is not needed, so the only reimplemented class is org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory with all the discovery code removed.

Apache JULI

Apache JULI is specialized (and repackaged) version of Commons Logging with original discovery mechanism already removed for Tomcat’s internal logging mechanism purposes.

In pax-logging, there was less work to do - discovery mechanism was already removed, only org.apache.juli.logging.LogFactory.getInstance(java.lang.String) method was changed to delegate to PaxLoggingManager.

Avalon Logging

Ancient Avalon framework predates most (if not all) Java server frameworks aiming to provide code and component organization patterns and programming model. Without dealing much with archeology, pax-logging-api provides support for org.apache.avalon.framework.logger package where the ultimate source of truth is this SVN tag and directory.

There are no factory methods to access Avalong loggers as we know from SLF4J or even from Commons Logging. There’s simply new instance creation, where the reference may be assigned to org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.Logger interface. Thus pax-logging-api doesn’t include any source from Avalon Framework. Simply implementation of org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.Logger is provided.

Excalibur (actual library/framework using Avalon) simply provides concrete implementations of org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.Logger, like:

  • org.apache.avalon.excalibur.logger.Log4JLogger

  • org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.NullLogger

  • org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.CommonsLogger

  • org.apache.avalon.excalibur.logger.ServletLogger

  • org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.Jdk14Logger

  • org.apache.avalon.framework.logger.ConsoleLogger

To achieve factory method approach, pax-logging-api exports org.ops4j.pax.logging.avalon package with special (not implied from Avalon Framework design) factory class for Avalon loggers. For other facades, package with factory classes is not org.ops4j.pax.logging.*.

JBoss Logging

JBoss started to use dedicated logging bridge (facade) with Hibernate 4.0. Similarly to e.g., Commons Logging, actual logging framework is discovered at runtime.

JBoss Logging can delegate to either concrete logging implementation (like Log4J2) or another logging facade (like SLF4J or Commons Logging). It uses discovery (ClassLoader + ServiceLoader) mechanism to find the framework to delegate to.

Originally, org.jboss.logging.provider property may be set to one of these values:

  • jboss

  • jdk

  • log4j2

  • log4j

  • slf4j

Then discovery checks ServiceLoader for org.jboss.logging.Provider provider (/META-INF/services/org.jboss.logging.Provider).

pax-logging API doesn’t yet delegate JBoss Logging API to pax-logging OSGi manager. PAXLOGGING-251 tracks this issue.

Log4j

Ah, the grandfather of all configurable Logging frameworks. Created when there was no logging bridges/facades around. Actually first facade (Commons Logging) was created to bridge common logging API to one of different logging frameworks (back then, it was only Log4J1 and Java Util Logging (JUL) from JDK1.4).

Because its origins are in pre-logging bridge times, Log4J1’s API was used directly by very large amount of code. That’s why pax-logging fully supports its native API. However in Pax Logging 1.12.x and 2.1.x I’ve removed the implementation (in particular the appenders) based on Log4J1.

Also, this was the first logging framework embraced by pax-logging project itself.

Here, the problem is with splitting original log4j:log4j JAR into API (for pax-logging-api) and implementation (for pax-logging-log4j1).

The original Export-Package header of log4j:log4j (yes - it is correct OSGi bundle) is (after formatting):

org.apache.log4j;         version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.pattern,org.apache.log4j.or,org.apache.log4j.config",
org.apache.log4j.config;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.helpers; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j.pattern",
org.apache.log4j.jdbc;    version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.jmx;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,javax.management,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.net;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,javax.naming,org.apache.log4j.helpers,javax.jms,org.apache.log4j.xml,javax.mail,javax.mail.internet,org.w3c.dom,javax.jmdns",
org.apache.log4j.nt;      version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.or;      version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j",
org.apache.log4j.or.jms;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,javax.jms,org.apache.log4j.or",
org.apache.log4j.or.sax;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.or,org.xml.sax",
org.apache.log4j.pattern; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.or",
org.apache.log4j.rewrite; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.xml,org.w3c.dom",
org.apache.log4j.spi;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.or",
org.apache.log4j.varia;   version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.helpers"
org.apache.log4j.xml;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="javax.xml.parsers,org.w3c.dom,org.xml.sax,org.apache.log4j.config,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j.or",

Additionally, the jar contains:

  • org.apache.log4j.chainsaw

  • org.apache.log4j.lf5.*

pax-logging-api exports these (from log4j1):

org.apache.log4j;     version=1.2.15; uses:="org.apache.log4j.spi org.ops4j.pax.logging org.osgi.framework"
org.apache.log4j.spi; version=1.2.15; uses:="org.apache.log4j"
org.apache.log4j.xml; version=1.2.15; uses:="javax.xml.parsers org.w3c.dom"

I checked original log4j:log4j and started with single reexport of org.apache.log4j package. The closure of exports turned out to be:

Export-Package:
 org.apache.log4j;         version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.or,org.apache.log4j.spi",
 org.apache.log4j.config;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j",
 org.apache.log4j.helpers; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
 org.apache.log4j.or;      version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.spi",
 org.apache.log4j.pattern; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.spi",
 org.apache.log4j.spi;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.or",
 org.apache.log4j.xml;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.config,org.apache.log4j.spi"
Import-Package:
 com.ibm.uvm.tools;resolution:=optional

com.ibm.uvm.tools was additional import generated by analyzing (bndlib) org.apache.log4j.spi.LocationInfo class.

So the remaining exports from original log4j:log4j that are not part of the above closure are:

org.apache.log4j.jdbc;    version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.jmx;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,javax.management,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.net;     version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,javax.naming,org.apache.log4j.helpers,javax.jms,org.apache.log4j.xml,javax.mail,javax.mail.internet,org.w3c.dom,javax.jmdns",
org.apache.log4j.nt;      version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi",
org.apache.log4j.or.jms;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.helpers,javax.jms,org.apache.log4j.or",
org.apache.log4j.or.sax;  version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.or,org.xml.sax",
org.apache.log4j.rewrite; version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j.helpers,org.apache.log4j.xml,org.w3c.dom",
org.apache.log4j.varia;   version="1.2.17"; uses:="org.apache.log4j.spi,org.apache.log4j,org.apache.log4j.helpers"

Not exported packages:

  • org.apache.log4j.chainsaw

  • org.apache.log4j.lf5

pax-logging-log4j1 (before it was removed) did not export anything.

Additionally, apache-log4j-extras-1.2.17.jar has some new packages:

OSGi Exported:

  • org.apache.log4j.extras

  • org.apache.log4j.filter

  • org.apache.log4j.rolling

  • org.apache.log4j.rule

Not OSGi exported:

  • org.apache.log4j.component

  • org.apache.log4j.receivers

apache-log4j-extras-1.2.17.jar duplicates some packages from log4j-1.2.17.jar, but with additional classes (most of the classes are the same):

  • org.apache.log4j (has additional DBAppender.class, LoggerRepositoryExImpl.class (with 2 inner classes))

  • org.apache.log4j.pattern (has additional ExtrasFormattingInfo.class, ExtrasPatternParser.class and ExtrasPatternParser$ReadOnlyMap.class)

  • org.apache.log4j.spi (has additional LoggingEventFieldResolver.class)

  • org.apache.log4j.varia (has additional SoundAppender.class)

  • org.apache.log4j.xml (has additional XSLTLayout.class)

With PAXLOGGING-252, I’d like to make it easier to maintain pax-logging itself. The goals (and kind of work log) are:

  • if some classes are needed from original Log4J1 (and later with Log4J2 too) they should be Export-Packaged

  • if some classes have to be adjusted for pax-logging (OSGi in general), they should be copied and committed without changing. Changes should be done in separate commit to distinguish original version from changes.

  • log4j classes should only be exported by pax-logging-api or Private-Packaged by pax-logging-log4j1 - never both (so far it was the case with org.apache.log4j.Category)

  • I’m going to export org.apache.log4j package with the closure of uses, which is:

    • org.apache.log4j

    • org.apache.log4j.config

    • org.apache.log4j.helpers

    • org.apache.log4j.or

    • org.apache.log4j.pattern

    • org.apache.log4j.spi

    • org.apache.log4j.xml

  • possibly the above list will change, if some pax-logging adjustments will remove some uses from the closure.

  • I’ve removed all log4j1 sources from pax-logging, I’m going to copy org.apache.log4j.Logger, org.apache.log4j.MDC and org.apache.log4j.NDC classes and the classes they require, reapply all the changes done so far in pax-logging-api with better tracking (diffability, cherrypickability) and finally remove the sources that don’t have changes (those classes will then be simply Export-Packaged from log4j:log4j dependency).

  • After adjusting some classes to pax-logging (like making configuration methods dummy), it turned out that these packages don’t have to be exported:

    • org.apache.log4j.config

    • org.apache.log4j.xml

  • But because org.apache.log4j.xml was exported in previous versions of pax-logging-api, I’ll leave it as is. Also because pax-logging-log4j1 requires some classes from org.apache.log4j.config and I don’t want this bundle to duplicate any pax-logging-api classes (whether exported or private), I’ll add export for org.apache.log4j.config package in pax-logging-api.

Update

My plan was to export the above set of packages from pax-logging-api and import them in pax-logging-log4j1 with few exceptions. Mainly, org.apache.log4j.Logger class has to be exported by pax-logging-api (with changes related to delegation to pax-logging services), but it also has to be private packaged in pax-logging-log4j1, because it actually has to call log4j:log4j functionality (like keeping hierarchy of loggers).

OSGi R6 Core specification says:

3.9.4 Overall Search Order

Frameworks must adhere to the following rules for class or resource loading. When a bundle’s class loader is requested to load a class or find a resource, the search must be performed in the following order:

3. If the class or resource is in a package that is imported using Import-Package or was imported dynamically in a previous load, then the request is delegated to the exporting bundle’s class loader […​]

…​

5. Search the bundle’s embedded classpath.

So it was not possible:

  • to have changed org.apache.log4j.Logger class exported from in pax-logging-api and

  • to have unchanged org.apache.log4j.Logger class private-packaged in pax-logging-log4j1, while other classes from org.apache.log4j package kept being imported from pax-logging-api

The only solution is to not import org.apache.log4j package from pax-logging-api to pax-logging-log4j1 bundle. Some Maven tricks (maven-dependency-plugin:unpack) have to be involved.

This is set of rules I found:

  • first, pax-logging-api has to export consistent set of packages, even if some classes are adjusted for OSGi purposes. This is easy by Export-Packaging and copying to src/main/java if needed

  • if pax-logging-log4j1 can use all the classes from one of the above exported packages from pax-logging-api, it should import them

  • if there’s at least one class from the above exported packages, that has to be different in pax-logging-log4j1 (like org.apache.log4j.Category or org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl), then pax-logging-log4j1 has to Private-Package such package

  • but because Private-Package handling (by maven-bundle-plugin and bndlib) involves discovery using classpath, we have to be careful. We can only assume that org.apache.felix.bundleplugin.BundlePlugin.getClasspath() method uses currentProject.getBuild().getOutputDirectory() as first directory/location when checking the package.

  • because org.apache.log4j package is available both from pax-logging-api and log4j:log4j (and log4j:apache-log4j-extras) dependencies of pax-logging-log4j1, we have to ensure that classes from log4j:log4j are taken. Instead of relying on <dependency> order in pax-logging-log4j1 POM, we rather use maven-dependency-plugin:unpack with this configuration:

Summary of package splitting for Log4J1 (deprecated information in 1.12.x and 2.1.x)

I think users deserve this summary, because there are 4 bundles/jars:

  • pax-logging-api

  • pax-logging-log4j1 (the Log4J1 backend)

  • log4j:log4j - the implementation

  • log4j:apache-log4j-extras which is log4j:log4j + some additional classes

And there’s this design flaw that single JAR is treated as both API and Implementation (what’s worse - some packages mix API and Implementation classes).

log4j:apache-log4j-extras source JAR (and github repository) duplicates these packages from log4j:log4j:

  • org.apache.log4j

  • org.apache.log4j.pattern

  • org.apache.log4j.spi

  • org.apache.log4j.varia

  • org.apache.log4j.xml

But fortunately doesn’t duplicate any of actual source files.

log4j:apache-log4j-extras JAR duplicates the above packages where the classes are simply merged from own project and from log4j:log4j JAR. However, pax-logging-api re-exports org.apache.log4j, org.apache.log4j.pattern, org.apache.log4j.spi and org.apache.log4j.xml from the log4j:log4j JAR, not from log4j:apache-log4j-extras, because some additional classes (like org.apache.log4j.DBAppender) introduce too many additional packages that have to be re-exported (because of uses clause).

Here’s full list of packages and notes about how it’s used in pax-logging.

org.apache.log4j

This is the main package mixing all kinds of classes (API, Implementation, internal functionality, …​)

  • pax-logging-api re-exports all the classes from log4j:log4j, but BasicConfigurator, Category, Hierarchy, Logger, LogManager, MDC, NDC, Priority and PropertyConfigurator are changed to adjust them for OSGi/pax-logging requirements. The changes turn some methods into noop variants. While factory methods (the most important get logger for example) delegate to pax logging services to obtain loggers.

  • pax-logging-log4j1 doesn’t import this package from pax-logging-api, instead it Private-Packages all the classes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras without exporting, but there are some additional and changed classes:

    • AsyncAppender has fixes related to PAXLOGGING-101 and PAXLOGGING-182

    • Category has fixes related to PAXLOGGING-99 and PAXLOGGING-182

    • ConsoleAppender has fixes related to PAXLOGGING-90

    • There’s new DailyZipRollingFileAppender class related to PAXLOGGING-226 - it’s not available in original Log4J1

    • There’s new OsgiThrowableRenderer introduced with PAXLOGGING-80

    • There’s new PaxLoggingConfigurator that handles special, OSGi configuration parsing (with references to OSGi services implementing interfaces from org.ops4j.pax.logging.spi package)

    • There’s new SanitizingPatternLayout introduced with PAXLOGGING-201

org.apache.log4j.chainsaw

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.component.*

This package (and subpackages) comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.config

This package comes from log4j:log4j.

  • It’s exported from pax-logging-api without changes

  • It’s Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 from log4j:log4j without importing from pax-logging-api. There’s one additional class:

    • PaxPropertySetter' which is a copy of `PropertySetter with fixes related to PAXLOGGING-83

org.apache.log4j.extras

This package comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.filter

This package comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1. pax-logging-log4j1 contains additional classes:

  • MatchFilterBase and MDCMatchFilter come from abandoned Log4J 1.3 release moved at some point to log4j-sandbox

org.apache.log4j.helpers

This package is tricky. It’s in uses closure of packages exported from pax-logging-api, but pax-logging-log4j1 can’t import it. pax-logging-log4j1 fixes performance problems with AppenderAttachableImpl, but it can’t import this package from pax-logging-api, because it can’t import org.apache.log4j package and this root package contains org.apache.log4j.Appender class which is used as argument to some of AppenderAttachableImpl methods.

  • pax-logging-api re-exports this package from log4j:log4j and:

    • changes Loader class to load classes using OSGi methods

    • changes LogLog class to delegate to fallback logger from pax-logging-api itself

    • adds MessageFormatter class from sandbox/abandoned Log4J1 1.3

  • pax-logging-log4j1 Private-Packages this package from …​ pax-logging-api (to include the fixes for Loader and LogLog classes) and:

org.apache.log4j.jdbc

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.jmx

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.lf5.*

This package (and subpackages) comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.net

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.nt

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.or (Object Renderer)
  • pax-logging-api re-exports this package from log4j:log4j without changes, because it’s in the uses closure of the exported Log4J1 API.

  • pax-logging-log4j1 imports this package from pax-logging-api, because it doesn’t add any own changes

org.apache.log4j.or.jms

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.or.sax

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.pattern

This package comes from log4j:log4j, but log4j:apache-log4j-extras adds ExtrasFormattingInfo and ExtrasPatternParser.

  • pax-logging-api exports this package from log4j:log4j (because pax-logging-api can’t have Maven dependency on log4j:apache-log4j-extras) and keeps a copy if these two additional classes taken directly from log4j:apache-log4j-extras

  • pax-logging-log4j1 imports this package from pax-logging-api

org.apache.log4j.receivers.*

This package (and subpackages) comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.rewrite

This package comes from log4j:log4j and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.rolling.*

This package (and subpackages) comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1.

org.apache.log4j.rule

This package comes from log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.sift

That’s entirely pax-logging-log4j1 private package with MDCSiftingLoggingAppender class created for PAXLOGGING-83

org.apache.log4j.spi
  • pax-logging-api re-exports this package from log4j:log4j without changes

  • pax-logging-log4j1 doesn’t import this package from pax-logging-api, instead, it Private-Packages it from both log4j:log4j and log4j:apache-log4j-extras.

    • log4j:apache-log4j-extras has LoggingEventFieldResolver - it couldn’t be exported from pax-logging-api because it requires classes from org.apache.log4j.rule package, which we don’t want to export from pax-logging-api

    • pax-logging-log4j1 adds OptionFactory - new class created for PAXLOGGING-83

org.apache.log4j.varia

This package comes from both log4j:log4j and log4j:apache-log4j-extras and is Private-Packaged in pax-logging-log4j1 without changes.

org.apache.log4j.xml

This package comes from both log4j:log4j and log4j:apache-log4j-extras (which adds XSLTLayout class).

  • pax-logging-api re-exports this package from log4j:log4j, and:

    • adds XSLTLayout copied directly from log4j:apache-log4j-extras to own src/main/java

    • changes DOMConfigurator, so methods are effectively no-op

  • pax-logging-log4j1 imports this package from pax-logging-api

org.apache.log4j.zip

That’s entirely pax-logging-log4j1 private package with ZipRollingFileAppender class created for PAXLOGGING-116

Location Info

When Log4J1 is used with pattern layout that deals with class/method names and/or file names and line numbers, there’s a need to analyze stack trace to get this info.

When log4J1 is called normally, without ANY facade (and outside of pax-logging), the relevant stack trace fragment is:

"main@1" prio=5 tid=0x1 nid=NA runnable
  java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LocationInfo.<init>(LocationInfo.java:144)
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent.getLocationInformation(LoggingEvent.java:253)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$LocationPatternConverter.convert(PatternParser.java:500)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternConverter.format(PatternConverter.java:65)
	  at org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout.format(PatternLayout.java:506)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.subAppend(WriterAppender.java:310)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.append(WriterAppender.java:162)
	  at org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton.doAppend(AppenderSkeleton.java:251)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl.appendLoopOnAppenders(AppenderAttachableImpl.java:66)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders(Category.java:206)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog(Category.java:391)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.info(Category.java:666)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.log4j1.Log4j1NativeApiTest.loggerAPI(Log4j1NativeApiTest.java:80)
...

The discovered class name shuold be org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.log4j1.Log4j1NativeApiTest. What log4j ensures to make it work is passing org.apache.log4j.Category.FQCN (or org.apache.log4j.Logger.FQCN) value down through org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog method. Then the last stack trace element before FQCN is used to collection location info.

When Log4J1 is used through SLF4J, org.slf4j.impl.Log4jLoggerAdapter.FQCN is used to pass through org.apache.log4j.Category.log() and org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders().

With pax-logging, the stack trace is a bit more complex:

"Karaf Shell Console Thread@9179" daemon prio=5 tid=0x31 nid=NA runnable
  java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LocationInfo.<init>(LocationInfo.java:136)
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent.getLocationInformation(LoggingEvent.java:253)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$ClassNamePatternConverter.getFullyQualifiedName(PatternParser.java:555)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$NamedPatternConverter.convert(PatternParser.java:528)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternConverter.format(PatternConverter.java:65)
	  at org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout.format(PatternLayout.java:506)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.subAppend(WriterAppender.java:310)
	  at org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender.subAppend(RollingFileAppender.java:276)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.append(WriterAppender.java:162)
	  at org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton.doAppend(AppenderSkeleton.java:251)
	  - locked <0x2402> (a org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl.appendLoopOnAppenders(AppenderAttachableImpl.java:59)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders(Category.java:179)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog(Category.java:333)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:724)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog0(PaxLoggerImpl.java:152)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog(PaxLoggerImpl.java:145)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.inform(PaxLoggerImpl.java:179)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.TrackingLogger.inform(TrackingLogger.java:86)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.slf4j.Slf4jLogger.info(Slf4jLogger.java:476)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.log4j1.Log4j1PaxLoggingApiTest.loggerAPI(...)
...

And the FQCN that’s equal to org.ops4j.pax.logging.slf4j.Slf4jLogger is ensured by pax-logging-api and shaded classes from given facade (here - SLF4J).

When pax-logging is used with Log4J1 and without SLF4J, stack trace is like:

"Karaf Shell Console Thread@9190" daemon prio=5 tid=0x31 nid=NA runnable
  java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LocationInfo.<init>(LocationInfo.java:136)
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent.getLocationInformation(LoggingEvent.java:253)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$ClassNamePatternConverter.getFullyQualifiedName(PatternParser.java:555)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$NamedPatternConverter.convert(PatternParser.java:528)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternConverter.format(PatternConverter.java:65)
	  at org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout.format(PatternLayout.java:506)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.subAppend(WriterAppender.java:310)
	  at org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender.subAppend(RollingFileAppender.java:276)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.append(WriterAppender.java:162)
	  at org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton.doAppend(AppenderSkeleton.java:251)
	  - locked <0x240e> (a org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl.appendLoopOnAppenders(AppenderAttachableImpl.java:59)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders(Category.java:179)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog(Category.java:333)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:724)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog0(PaxLoggerImpl.java:152)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog(PaxLoggerImpl.java:145)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.inform(PaxLoggerImpl.java:179)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.TrackingLogger.inform(TrackingLogger.java:86)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.info(Category.java:623)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Logger.info(Logger.java:585)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.log4j1.Log4j1PaxLoggingApiTest.loggerAPI(...)
...

So the FQCN should be org.apache.log4j.Logger. Even if the logger is obtained via org.apache.log4j.Category static methods, the logger is of org.apache.log4j.Logger class and stack trace analysis works without problems. Also, trace/debug/info/warn/error/fatal methods are defined in Category class, but overriden in Logger, to properly detect the calling class/method.

But not all logging methods are overriden…​

"Karaf Shell Console Thread@9205" daemon prio=5 tid=0x31 nid=NA runnable
  java.lang.Thread.State: RUNNABLE
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LocationInfo.<init>(LocationInfo.java:136)
	  at org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent.getLocationInformation(LoggingEvent.java:253)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$ClassNamePatternConverter.getFullyQualifiedName(PatternParser.java:555)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser$NamedPatternConverter.convert(PatternParser.java:528)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternConverter.format(PatternConverter.java:65)
	  at org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout.format(PatternLayout.java:506)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.subAppend(WriterAppender.java:310)
	  at org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender.subAppend(RollingFileAppender.java:276)
	  at org.apache.log4j.WriterAppender.append(WriterAppender.java:162)
	  at org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton.doAppend(AppenderSkeleton.java:251)
	  - locked <0x240c> (a org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender)
	  at org.apache.log4j.helpers.AppenderAttachableImpl.appendLoopOnAppenders(AppenderAttachableImpl.java:59)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.callAppenders(Category.java:179)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.forcedLog(Category.java:333)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:724)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog0(PaxLoggerImpl.java:152)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.doLog(PaxLoggerImpl.java:145)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.log4j1.internal.PaxLoggerImpl.inform(PaxLoggerImpl.java:179)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.TrackingLogger.inform(TrackingLogger.java:86)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.info(Category.java:644)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Logger.info(Logger.java:589)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:858)
	  at org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:829)
	  at org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.log4j1.Log4j1PaxLoggingApiTest.loggerAPI(...)
...

When calling org.apache.log4j.Category.log(org.apache.log4j.Priority, java.lang.Object) directly, the method is defined in Category class, so when analyzing stack trace, org.apache.log4j.Category.log(Category.java:858) will be detected as logging event location. This will be fixed with PAXLOGGING-252.

The location info should be org.ops4j.pax.logging.test.OsgiLogServiceApiTest.logServiceAPI(). FQCN is …​ "" location can’t be found and in logs we can see (for pattern %d{ISO8601} | %-5.5p | {%t} [%c]/[%C] (%F:%L) | %m%n and symbolic name = my-bundle):

2019-04-26 08:11:53,126 | INFO  | {Karaf Shell Console Thread} [my-bundle]/[?] (?:?) | Hello!

API / Implementation separation

The biggest problem with Log4J1 is not only OSGi-specific problem of having API and implementation classes in single log4j:log4j library. Even methods are mixed within single class.

org.apache.log4j.Logger (together with its superclass org.apache.log4j.Category) class contains ~80 methods. These methods can be groupped into:

  • factory methods used to obtain a logger (which is of the same instance org.apache.log4j.Logger): getLogger, getInstance, getRootLogger, …​

  • logging methods used to log messages: info, debug, warn, …​ (with different parameter list)

  • logging threshold methods: isInfoEnabled, isDebugEnabled, …​

  • methods related to appenders: addAppender, isAttached, …​ - these methods allow (in original usage) to attach appenders to loggers dynamically. In OSGi it doesn’t make sense, because Log4J1 API may be used to log messages which are eventually handled by Logback or Log4J2 backend (or even DefaultServiceLog if pax-logging backend is not (yet) installed)

  • methods related to logger configuration: getAddittivity, getParent, setLevel, …​

  • meta methods related to logging repository: getCurrentCategories, getHierarchy, getLoggerRepository, shutdown, …​ - these methods are generally throwing UnsupportedOperationException in pax-logging-api.

The above groupping is much better implemented in other logging frameworks which have separate logger and factory classes and also do the configuration and all the meta in different way (than through single logger class).

Logback

As mentioned on project’s web page, Logback picks up where log4j leaves off.

Logback was created after the logging-bridge (r)evolution and even if it may be used without any logging facade/bridge, it is very uncommon to do so. That’s why there are no special API classes in pax-logging-api related to Logback. Logback is handled by pax-logging only through implementation of org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService.

Logback is mostly used behind SLF4J facade and both logger factory and MDC/NDC API comes from SLF4J itself when dealing with Logback.

Logback is initialized using org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder Slf4J mechanism - but only if such class is explicitly requested/loaded (e.g., through org.slf4j.LoggerFactory.getLogger() and org.slf4j.LoggerFactory.bind()). With pax-logging-logback, Logback’s version of org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder is neither exported nor used.

pax-logging-logback implementation of org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService explicitly configures ch.qos.logback.classic.LoggerContext instance (which, by the way, implements org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory).

Logback contrib

There are several additional JARs we Private-Package in pax-logging-logback:

  • logback-jackson

  • logback-json-core

  • logback-json-classic

After private-packaging the above, I’ve adjusted the generated Import-Package header providing explicit version ranges for Groovy and Jackson and making some imports optional.

Log4J2

After huge (in my humble, subjective opinion) success of Logback, Log4J2 was created as modernized version of original Log4j project with full awareness of logging bridges/facades and weird properties file syntax.

pax-logging provides dedicated implementation of org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService that delegates to Log4J2.

Again, Log4J2 itself may be used without bridge/facade and (differently than with Logback) pax-logging fully supports its native API.

Here’s a list of all org.apache.logging.log4j artifacts I found in version 2.11.2:

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-api

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-1.2-api

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-appserver

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-cassandra

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-core

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-couchdb

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-flume-ng

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-iostreams

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jcl

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jdbc-dbcp2

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jmx-gui

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jpa

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jul

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-liquibase

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-mongodb2

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-mongodb3

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-osgi

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j-impl

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j18-impl

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j2-impl

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-taglib

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-to-slf4j

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-web

Currently, pax-logging uses 3:

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-api

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-core

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j2-impl

I’m going to include some more just like with log4j:apache-log4j-extras and ch.qos.logback.contrib.

These won’t be supported/embedded/referenced:

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-1.2-api - it’s Log4J1 "API" (with all the restrictions I mentioned when talking about API/Impl separation problems of Log4J1) and actually it’s very similar to how pax-logging-api itself changes original Log4J1 classes

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jcl - it’s Apache Commons Logging service defined in /META-INF/services/org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory, effectively bridging Apache Commons Logging directly into Log4J2. pax-logging-api does it a bit differently.

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jul - it provides java.util.logging.LogManager implementation to be used with -Djava.util.logging.manager system property. pax-logging-api however registers global java.util.logging.Handler which bridges Java Util Logging into pax-logging.

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j-impl - provides org.apache.logging.slf4j.Log4jLoggerFactory which is implementation of Slf4J’s org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory. pax-logging-api provides own org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder with own org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory implementation

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j18-impl - just like the above, but for Slf4J 1.8.x (still beta at the time of writing)

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-to-slf4j - is a library that enforces kind of reversed usage. Log4J2 API calls are directed to Slf4J which (by design) has to be bridged to target logging framework. See https://logging.apache.org/log4j/2.x/log4j-to-slf4j/index.html. This definitely isn’t something pax-logging should support.

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-osgi - strange "bundle" including only some non-pax-exam tests that install other Log4J2 bundles.

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-appserver - org.apache.logging.log4j.appserver.jetty.Log4j2Logger (Jetty) and org.apache.logging.log4j.appserver.tomcat.TomcatLogger (Tomcat JULI) implementations

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-web - /META-INF/services/javax.servlet.ServletContainerInitializer service that installs org.apache.logging.log4j.web.Log4jServletFilter filter and org.apache.logging.log4j.web.Log4jServletContextListener listener

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-taglib - http://logging.apache.org/log4j/tld/log tag library to be used in JSP pages

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-jmx-gui - /META-INF/services/com.sun.tools.jconsole.JConsolePlugin service for JConsole.

  • org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-liquibase - bridges liquibase.logging.core.AbstractLogger into Log4J2

The remaining Log4J2 artifacts can be split into 3 categories:

The original exports of org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-api are:

org.apache.logging.log4j;         version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j.message, org.apache.logging.log4j.spi, org.apache.logging.log4j.util"
org.apache.logging.log4j.message; version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j.util"
org.apache.logging.log4j.simple;  version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j,org.apache.logging.log4j.message,org.apache.logging.log4j.spi,org.apache.logging.log4j.util"
org.apache.logging.log4j.spi;     version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j,org.apache.logging.log4j.message,org.apache.logging.log4j.util"
org.apache.logging.log4j.status;  version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j,org.apache.logging.log4j.message,org.apache.logging.log4j.spi"
org.apache.logging.log4j.util;    version="2.11.2"; uses:="org.apache.logging.log4j.message,org.apache.logging.log4j.spi,org.osgi.framework"

This perfectly matches what pax-logging-api (re)exported. These are actually all the packages included in org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-api.

Plugins

Log4J2 is extended using plugin system. Quoting the manual:

In Log4j 2 a plugin is declared by adding a @Plugin annotation to the class declaration. During initialization the Configuration will invoke the PluginManager to load the built-in Log4j plugins as well as any custom plugins. The PluginManager locates plugins by looking in five places:

  1. Serialized plugin listing files on the classpath. These files are generated automatically during the build (more details below).

  2. (OSGi only) Serialized plugin listing files in each active OSGi bundle. A BundleListener is added on activation to continue checking new bundles after log4j-core has started.

  3. A comma-separated list of packages specified by the log4j.plugin.packages system property.

  4. Packages passed to the static PluginManager.addPackages method (before Log4j configuration occurs).

  5. The packages declared in your log4j2 configuration file.

Currently, pax-logging doesn’t do the same discovery as bundle activator of original org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-core. Though similar mechanism may be added in the future.

org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.util.PluginManager.collectPlugins() collects the plugins from different sources. The cache file is declared as org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.processor.PluginProcessor.PLUGIN_CACHE_FILE and refers to META-INF/org/apache/logging/log4j/core/config/plugins/Log4j2Plugins.dat. It’s a binary file conforming to java.io.DataInputStream which may occur multiple times on the classpath.

pax-logging-log4j2 bundle directly uses the original plugin cache file from org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-core and additional plugins are added using org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.util.PluginManager.addPackage() during pax-logging-log4j2 initialization.

Default cache file contains exactly these categories and numbers of plugins (206 total):

cache = {org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.processor.PluginCache@1030}
 categories: java.util.Map  = {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1059}  size = 6
  "core" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1069}  size = 117
  "converter" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1071}  size = 44
  "lookup" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1073}  size = 13
  "configurationfactory" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1075}  size = 4
  "fileconverter" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1077}  size = 2
  "typeconverter" -> {java.util.LinkedHashMap@1079}  size = 26

Configuration

Log4J2 has complex configuration mechanisms and can process configuration from different sources. Configuration may be stored in XML, JSON, YAML and properties files. Among these, properties file (very common in Log4J1 times) is the most confusing…​

org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.builder.impl.DefaultConfigurationBuilder is the most important class here that allows to understand how configuration is organized. This builder includes org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.builder.api.Component components for these concepts:

  • root

  • loggers

  • appenders

  • filters

  • properties

  • custom levels

  • scripts

org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.builder.api.Component is generally a container for:

  • attributes (a map)

  • child org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.builder.api.Component instances

  • plugin type

  • name

Plugin types of components inside "root" component may be one of:

  • "Scripts"

  • "Loggers"

  • "Appenders"

  • "Filters"

  • "Properties"

  • "CustomLevels"

But generally, plugin type is a key for org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.util.PluginManager.plugins map which maps names to org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.plugins.util.PluginType

Testing in Karaf

That’s tricky problem. If we want to use Pax Exam and test Pax Logging under Karaf with Maven we have to consider:

  • Maven runs maven-surefire|failsafe-plugin test in separate JVM (by default)

  • When using pax-exam-container-karaf, 3rd JVM process is launched

  • We can’t use normal Karaf (even minimal one) because it uses fixed pax-logging version for bundles started from etc/startup.properties

  • So we have to prepare custom Karaf distribution, where initial (startup) bundles are the ones from current Pax Logging version (the one being tested)

Then, taking into account the logging process itself:

  • We want logging statement issued by pax-exam itself to be handled properly (before launching Karaf) - ideally using src/test/resources/log4j2-test.properties

  • Thus test classpath has to contain org.slf4j:slf4j-api and org.apache.logging.log4j:log4j-slf4j2-impl

  • Karaf has to start without any org.ops4j.pax.logging PID configured, but we want logging statements to be handled properly even if invoked from pax-logging-api bundle activator

  • Thus proper default service log has to be configured in etc/config.properties

  • Remember that maven-surefire|failsafe-plugin can be configured with <redirectTestOutputToFile>

Summarizing (for pax-logging-it-karaf/karaf-it):

  • there’s src/test/resources/log4j2-test.properties with Console and RollingFile appenders. Both will start and end logging with these:

EXAM> 12:22:55.205 [main] INFO  (DefaultExamSystem.java:127) org.ops4j.pax.exam.spi.DefaultExamSystem - Pax Exam System (Version: 4.13.1) created.
...
EXAM> 12:22:59.423 [main] INFO  (ReactorManager.java:444) org.ops4j.pax.exam.spi.reactors.ReactorManager - suite finished
  • for RollingFile appender, the output will go to pax-logging-it-karaf/karaf-it/target/logs/pax-exam-test.log (as configured in src/test/resources/log4j2-test.properties)

  • for Console appender, the output will go to:

    • stdout, if maven-failsafe-plugin is configured with <redirectTestOutputToFile>false</redirectTestOutputToFile>

    • pax-logging-it-karaf/karaf-it/target/failsafe-reports/org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.CleanIntegrationTest-output.txt if maven-failsafe-plugin is configured with <redirectTestOutputToFile>true</redirectTestOutputToFile>

  • When Karaf starts, before pax-logging-api is resolved (it doesn’t have to be started/active to provide the exported classes!) each early bundle (like fileinstall or configadmin) has to dynamically deal with logging. Such bundles usually don’t use e.g., SLF4J API. For example, configadmin uses org.apache.felix.cm.impl.Log and fileinstall uses org.apache.felix.fileinstall.internal.Util.Logger (and subclasses). If a bundle uses e.g., SLF4J API, pax-logging-api has to be resolved.

  • When a bundle (I created special org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf:karaf-base-logger) uses e.g., SLF4J API (imports org.slf4j package), but pax-logging-api bundle is not yet started, console based org.ops4j.pax.logging.spi.support.DefaultServiceLog is used internally. Even if org.ops4j.pax.logging.spi.support.FileServiceLog could be used as indicated by etc/config.properties, it’s not used when pax-logging-api is stopped (because I implemented special synchronization of file-backend for such fallback logger).

    • then such bundle (e.g., in org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf.base.Activator.start()) simply writes to stdout using DefaultServiceLog. This is printed to stdout (if maven-failsafe-plugin is told so) (with layout hardcoded in DefaultServiceLog):

org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf.base-logger [org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf.base.Activator] INFO : Starting before pax-logging-api
  • Then pax-logging-api starts and in its activator again calls logging methods through various logging APIs (managed by itself). Now, because this bundle is already starting, FileServiceLog may be used (as indicated by etc/config.properties - configured using editConfigurationFilePut("etc/custom.properties", "org.ops4j.pax.logging.useFileLogFallback", fileName) in Pax Exam configuration). This is printed to pax-logging-it-karaf/karaf-it/target/logs-default/CleanIntegrationTest.log:

org.ops4j.pax.logging.pax-logging-api [org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.Activator] INFO : Enabling Java Util Logging API support.
org.ops4j.pax.logging.pax-logging-api [org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.Activator] INFO : Enabling SLF4J API support.
...
org.ops4j.pax.logging.pax-logging-api [org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.Activator] INFO : Disabling Log4J v2 API support.
org.ops4j.pax.logging.pax-logging-api [org.ops4j.pax.logging.internal.Activator] INFO : Disabling Java Util Logging API support.
  • Then pax-logging-log4j2 starts, finds there’s no org.ops4j.pax.logging PID so defaults are used (in this particular case from org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.AbstractConfiguration.setToDefault()). The pattern is org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.DefaultConfiguration.DEFAULT_PATTERN and no file appender is configured, so this is printed to stdout (if maven-failsafe-plugin is told so):

13:23:05.344 [FelixStartLevel] DEBUG org.apache.felix.configadmin - Registering service [org.osgi.service.log.LogService, xxx, org.ops4j.pax.logging.PaxLoggingService, org.osgi.service.cm.ManagedService, id=15, bundle=7/mvn:org.ops4j.pax.logging/pax-logging-log4j2/1.11.0-SNAPSHOT]
13:23:05.353 [FelixStartLevel] DEBUG org.apache.felix.configadmin - Scheduling task ManagedService Update: pid=[org.ops4j.pax.logging]
13:23:05.358 [FelixStartLevel] DEBUG org.apache.felix.configadmin - [ManagedService Update: pid=[org.ops4j.pax.logging]] scheduled
13:23:05.544 [CM Configuration Updater (Update: pid=org.apache.karaf.features)] DEBUG org.apache.felix.configadmin - Running task Update: pid=org.apache.karaf.features
...
13:23:06.664 [BundleWatcher: 1] DEBUG org.ops4j.pax.exam.raw.extender.intern.Probe - Registering Service: org.ops4j.pax.exam.ProbeInvoker with Probe-Signature="PaxExam-3be14d5b-583b-4688-ae78-9f8c1c2ef280" and expression="org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.CleanIntegrationTest;justRun"
13:23:06.786 [RMI TCP Connection(1)-127.0.0.1] INFO  org.ops4j.pax.exam.invoker.junit.internal.ContainerTestRunner - running justRun in reactor
13:23:06.789 [RMI TCP Connection(1)-127.0.0.1] INFO  org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.AbstractControlledIntegrationTestBase - ========== Running org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.CleanIntegrationTest.justRun() ==========
13:23:06.790 [RMI TCP Connection(1)-127.0.0.1] INFO  org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.CleanIntegrationTest - #0: org.apache.felix.framework (System Bundle)
13:23:06.790 [RMI TCP Connection(1)-127.0.0.1] INFO  org.ops4j.pax.logging.it.karaf.CleanIntegrationTest - #1: org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf.base-logger (mvn:org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf/karaf-base-logger/1.11.0-SNAPSHOT)
...
13:23:06.815 [FelixStartLevel] DEBUG org.ops4j.pax.swissbox.extender.BundleWatcher - Releasing bundle [org.apache.geronimo.specs.geronimo-atinject_1.0_spec]
13:23:06.825 [FelixStartLevel] DEBUG org.apache.felix.configadmin - Unregistering service [org.osgi.service.cm.ManagedService, id=28, bundle=8/mvn:org.apache.karaf.features/org.apache.karaf.features.core/4.2.6]
org.ops4j.pax.logging.pax-logging-api [org.ops4j.pax.logging.karaf.base.Activator] INFO : Stopping after pax-logging-api
  • The above listing contains entries from logging invocations made inside @Test methods using SLF4J API.