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Tomcat uses
Commons Logging
throughout its internal code allowing the
developer to choose a logging configuration that suits their needs, e.g
java.util.logging or
Log4J.
Commons Logging provides Tomcat with the ability to log
hierarchically across various log levels without needing to rely on a
particular logging implementation.
By default, only java.util.logging is available for the logs generated by
the Tomcat internal loggers, as Tomcat uses a package renamed commons
logging implementation which is hardcoded to use java.util.logging. Use of
alternative logging frameworks requires building or downloading the
extras components which include a full
commons-logging implementation. Instructions for configuring the extras
components to enable log4j to be used for Tomcat's internal logging may be
found below.
Tomcat no longer uses
The default implementation of java.util.logging provided in the JDK is too
limited to be useful. A limitation of JDK Logging appears to be the
inability to have per-web application logging, as the configuration is
per-VM. As a result, Tomcat will, in the default configuration, replace the
default LogManager implementation with a container friendly implementation
called JULI, which addresses these shortcomings. It supports the same
configuration mechanisms as the standard JDK java.util.logging, using either
a programmatic approach, or properties files. The main difference is that
per-classloader properties files can be set (which enables easy redeployment
friendly webapp configuration), and the properties files support slightly
extended constructs which allows more freedom for defining handlers and
assigning them to loggers.
JULI is enabled by default, and supports per classloader configuration, in
addition to the regular global java.util.logging configuration. This means
that logging can be configured at the following layers:
localhost_log as the runtime
exception/stack trace log. These types of error are usually thrown by
uncaught exceptions, but are still valuable to the developer. They can now
be found in the stdout log.
$JAVA_HOME/jre/lib.
Alternately, it can also use a global configuration file located elsewhere
by using the system property java.util.logging.config.file,
or programmatic configuration using
java.util.logging.config.class.
The default logging.properties specifies a ConsoleHandler for routing logging to stdout and also a FileHandler. A handler's log level threshold can be set using SEVERE, WARNING, INFO, CONFIG, FINE, FINER, FINEST or ALL. The logging.properties shipped with JDK is set to INFO. You can also target specific packages to collect logging from and specify a level. Here is how you would set debugging from Tomcat. You would need to ensure the ConsoleHandler's level is also set to collect this threshold, so FINEST or ALL should be set. Please refer to Sun's java.util.logging documentation for the complete details.
The configuration used by JULI is extremely similar, but uses a few extensions to allow better flexibility in assigning loggers. The main differences are:
22foobar. is a valid
prefix.loggerName.handlers property.loggerName.useParentHandlers property, which accepts a
boolean value..handlers property.bufferSize property of a handler. A value of 0
uses system default buffering (typically an 8K buffer will be used). A
value of <0 forces a writer flush upon each log write. A
value >0 uses a BufferedOutputStream with the defined
value but note that the system default buffering will also be
applied.
Example logging.properties file to be placed in $CATALINA_BASE/conf:
Example logging.properties for the servlet-examples web application to be
placed in WEB-INF/classes inside the web application:
This section explains how to configure Tomcat to use log4j rather than java.util.logging for all Tomcat's internal logging. The following steps describe configuring log4j to output Tomcat's internal logging to a file named tomcat.log.
$CATALINA_HOME/bin/tomcat-juli.jar with
output/extras/tomcat-juli.jar.output/extras/tomcat-juli-adapters.jar in
$CATALINA_HOME/lib.$CATALINA_BASE/conf/logging.properties to
prevent java.util.logging generating zero length log files.This log4j configuration sets up a file called tomcat.log in your Tomcat logs folder with a maximum file size of 10MB and up to 10 backups. INFO level is specified which will result in a similar level of detail to the standard java.util.logging confgiuration. Use DEBUG level logging for the most verbose output from Tomcat.
You can (and should) be more picky about which packages to include
in the logging. Tomcat defines loggers by Engine and Host names.
For example, for a more detailed Catalina localhost log, add this to the
end of the log4j.properties above. Note that there are known issues with
using this naming convention (with square brackets) in log4j XML based
configuration files, so we recommend you use a properties file as
described until a future version of log4j allows this convention.
log4j.logger.org.apache.catalina.core=DEBUG
log4j.logger.org.apache.catalina.session=DEBUG
Your web applications should certainly use their own log4j configuration. This is valid with the above configuration. You would place a similar log4j.properties file in your web application's WEB-INF/classes directory, and log4jx.y.z.jar into WEB-INF/lib. Then specify your package level logging. This is a basic setup of log4j which does *not* require Commons-Logging, and you should consult the log4j documentation for more options. This page is intended only as a bootstrapping guide.
If you have multiple instances of Tomcat, each with a separate
$CATALINA_BASE but a shared $CATALINA_HOME then
you can configure log4j on a per instance basis by replacing references to
$CATALINA_HOME in the above instructions with
$CATALINA_BASE. Note that if you do this then you may need to
make some, or all, of the following additional changes:
$CATALINA_BASE/bin directory$CATALINA_BASE/lib directory$CATALINA_BASE/conf/catalina.policy