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1   /*
2    * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
3    * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
4    * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
5    * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
6    * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
7    * the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
8    *
9    *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
10   *
11   * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
12   * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
13   * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
14   * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
15   * limitations under the License.
16   */
17  
18  package org.apache.commons.configuration2.io;
19  
20  import org.apache.commons.logging.Log;
21  import org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory;
22  import org.apache.commons.logging.impl.NoOpLog;
23  
24  /**
25   * <p>
26   * A class providing basic logging capabilities.
27   * </p>
28   * <p>
29   * When reading configuration files in complex scenarios having log output is useful for diagnostic purposes. Therefore,
30   * <em>Commons Configuration</em> produces some logging output. As concrete projects have different requirements on the
31   * amount and detail of logging, there is a way of configuring logging: All classes derived from
32   * {@link org.apache.commons.configuration2.AbstractConfiguration} can be assigned a logger which is then used for all
33   * log statements generated.
34   * </p>
35   * <p>
36   * Allowing a logger object to be passed to a configuration creates a direct dependency to a concrete logging framework
37   * in the configuration API. This would make it impossible to switch to an alternative logging framework without
38   * breaking backwards compatibility. To avoid this, the {@code ConfigurationLogger} class is introduced. It is a minimum
39   * abstraction over a logging framework offering only very basic logging capabilities. The methods defined in this class
40   * are used by configuration implementations to produce their logging statements. Client applications can create
41   * specialized instances and pass them to configuration objects without having to deal with a concrete logging
42   * framework. It is even possible to create a subclass that uses a completely different logging framework.
43   * </p>
44   *
45   * @since 2.0
46   */
47  public class ConfigurationLogger {
48      /**
49       * Creates an internal logger for the given class. Throws an exception if the class is undefined.
50       *
51       * @param cls the logger class
52       * @return the logger object
53       * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the logger class is undefined
54       */
55      private static Log createLoggerForClass(final Class<?> cls) {
56          if (cls == null) {
57              throw new IllegalArgumentException("Logger class must not be null!");
58          }
59          return LogFactory.getLog(cls);
60      }
61  
62      /**
63       * Creates an internal logger for the given name. Throws an exception if the name is undefined.
64       *
65       * @param name the name of the logger
66       * @return the logger object
67       * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the logger name is undefined
68       */
69      private static Log createLoggerForName(final String name) {
70          if (name == null) {
71              throw new IllegalArgumentException("Logger name must not be null!");
72          }
73          return LogFactory.getLog(name);
74      }
75  
76      /**
77       * Creates a new dummy logger which produces no output. If such a logger is passed to a configuration object, logging is
78       * effectively disabled.
79       *
80       * @return the new dummy logger
81       */
82      public static ConfigurationLogger newDummyLogger() {
83          return new ConfigurationLogger(new NoOpLog());
84      }
85  
86      /** The internal logger. */
87      private final Log log;
88  
89      /**
90       * Creates a new, uninitialized instance of {@code ConfigurationLogger}. This constructor can be used by derived classes
91       * that implement their own specific logging mechanism. Such classes must override all methods because the default
92       * implementations do not work in this uninitialized state.
93       */
94      protected ConfigurationLogger() {
95          this((Log) null);
96      }
97  
98      /**
99       * Creates a new instance of {@code ConfigurationLogger} that uses a logger whose name is derived from the provided
100      * class.
101      *
102      * @param logCls the class whose name is to be used for logging (must not be <b>null</b>)
103      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the logger class is <b>null</b>
104      */
105     public ConfigurationLogger(final Class<?> logCls) {
106         this(createLoggerForClass(logCls));
107     }
108 
109     /**
110      * Creates a new instance of {@code ConfigurationLogger} which wraps the specified logger.
111      *
112      * @param wrapped the logger to be wrapped
113      */
114     ConfigurationLogger(final Log wrapped) {
115         log = wrapped;
116     }
117 
118     /**
119      * Creates a new instance of {@code ConfigurationLogger} that uses the specified logger name.
120      *
121      * @param loggerName the logger name (must not be <b>null</b>)
122      * @throws IllegalArgumentException if the logger name is <b>null</b>
123      */
124     public ConfigurationLogger(final String loggerName) {
125         this(createLoggerForName(loggerName));
126     }
127 
128     /**
129      * Logs the specified message on debug level.
130      *
131      * @param msg the message to be logged
132      */
133     public void debug(final String msg) {
134         getLog().debug(msg);
135     }
136 
137     /**
138      * Logs the specified message on error level.
139      *
140      * @param msg the message to be logged
141      */
142     public void error(final String msg) {
143         getLog().error(msg);
144     }
145 
146     /**
147      * Logs the specified exception on error level.
148      *
149      * @param msg the message to be logged
150      * @param ex the exception to be logged
151      */
152     public void error(final String msg, final Throwable ex) {
153         getLog().error(msg, ex);
154     }
155 
156     /**
157      * Gets the internal logger.
158      *
159      * @return the internal logger
160      */
161     Log getLog() {
162         return log;
163     }
164 
165     /**
166      * Logs the specified message on info level.
167      *
168      * @param msg the message to be logged
169      */
170     public void info(final String msg) {
171         getLog().info(msg);
172     }
173 
174     /**
175      * Returns a flag whether logging on debug level is enabled.
176      *
177      * @return <b>true</b> if debug logging is enabled, <b>false</b> otherwise
178      */
179     public boolean isDebugEnabled() {
180         return getLog().isDebugEnabled();
181     }
182 
183     /**
184      * Returns a flag whether logging on info level is enabled.
185      *
186      * @return <b>true</b> if debug logging is enabled, <b>false</b> otherwise
187      */
188     public boolean isInfoEnabled() {
189         return getLog().isInfoEnabled();
190     }
191 
192     /**
193      * Logs the specified message on warn level.
194      *
195      * @param msg the message to be logged
196      */
197     public void warn(final String msg) {
198         getLog().warn(msg);
199     }
200 
201     /**
202      * Logs the specified exception on warn level.
203      *
204      * @param msg the message to be logged
205      * @param ex the exception to be logged
206      */
207     public void warn(final String msg, final Throwable ex) {
208         getLog().warn(msg, ex);
209     }
210 }