org.apache.log4j.varia.LevelRangeFilter Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
* contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with
* this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
* The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
* (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
* the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.apache.log4j.varia;
import org.apache.log4j.Level;
import org.apache.log4j.spi.Filter;
import org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent;
/**
* This is a very simple filter based on level matching, which can be used to
* reject messages with priorities outside a certain range.
*
*
* The filter admits three options LevelMin, LevelMax and
* AcceptOnMatch.
*
*
* If the level of the {@link LoggingEvent} is not between Min and Max
* (inclusive), then {@link Filter#DENY} is returned.
*
*
* If the Logging event level is within the specified range, then if
* AcceptOnMatch is true, {@link Filter#ACCEPT} is returned, and if
* AcceptOnMatch is false, {@link Filter#NEUTRAL} is returned.
*
*
* If LevelMin
w is not defined, then there is no minimum acceptable
* level (ie a level is never rejected for being too "low"/unimportant). If
* LevelMax
is not defined, then there is no maximum acceptable
* level (ie a level is never rejected for beeing too "high"/important).
*
*
* Refer to the {@link org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton#setThreshold
* setThreshold} method available to all
appenders extending
* {@link org.apache.log4j.AppenderSkeleton} for a more convenient way to filter
* out events by level.
*
* @author Simon Kitching
* @author based on code by Ceki Gülcü
*/
public class LevelRangeFilter extends Filter {
/**
* Do we return ACCEPT when a match occurs. Default is false
, so
* that later filters get run by default
*/
boolean acceptOnMatch = false;
Level levelMin;
Level levelMax;
/**
* Return the decision of this filter.
*/
public int decide(LoggingEvent event) {
if (this.levelMin != null) {
if (event.getLevel().isGreaterOrEqual(levelMin) == false) {
// level of event is less than minimum
return Filter.DENY;
}
}
if (this.levelMax != null) {
if (event.getLevel().toInt() > levelMax.toInt()) {
// level of event is greater than maximum
// Alas, there is no Level.isGreater method. and using
// a combo of isGreaterOrEqual && !Equal seems worse than
// checking the int values of the level objects..
return Filter.DENY;
}
}
if (acceptOnMatch) {
// this filter set up to bypass later filters and always return
// accept if level in range
return Filter.ACCEPT;
} else {
// event is ok for this filter; allow later filters to have a look..
return Filter.NEUTRAL;
}
}
/**
* Get the value of the LevelMax
option.
*/
public Level getLevelMax() {
return levelMax;
}
/**
* Get the value of the LevelMin
option.
*/
public Level getLevelMin() {
return levelMin;
}
/**
* Get the value of the AcceptOnMatch
option.
*/
public boolean getAcceptOnMatch() {
return acceptOnMatch;
}
/**
* Set the LevelMax
option.
*/
public void setLevelMax(Level levelMax) {
this.levelMax = levelMax;
}
/**
* Set the LevelMin
option.
*/
public void setLevelMin(Level levelMin) {
this.levelMin = levelMin;
}
/**
* Set the AcceptOnMatch
option.
*/
public void setAcceptOnMatch(boolean acceptOnMatch) {
this.acceptOnMatch = acceptOnMatch;
}
}