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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
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 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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package org.apache.log4j;

import org.apache.log4j.helpers.OptionConverter;
import org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternConverter;
import org.apache.log4j.pattern.BridgePatternConverter;
import org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent;


// Contributors:   Nelson Minar 
//                 Anders Kristensen 

/**
 * This class is an enhanced version of org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
 * which was originally developed as part of the abandoned log4j 1.3
 * effort and has been available in the extras companion.
 * This pattern layout should be used in preference to
 * org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout except when compatibility
 * where PatternLayout has been extended either through subclassing
 * or alternative pattern parsers.
 *
 *
  * 

A flexible layout configurable with pattern string. The goal of this class * is to {@link #format format} a {@link LoggingEvent} and return the results * in a {@link StringBuffer}. The format of the result depends on the * conversion pattern. *

* *

The conversion pattern is closely related to the conversion * pattern of the printf function in C. A conversion pattern is * composed of literal text and format control expressions called * conversion specifiers. * *

Note that you are free to insert any literal text within the * conversion pattern. *

Each conversion specifier starts with a percent sign (%) and is followed by optional format modifiers and a conversion character. The conversion character specifies the type of data, e.g. category, priority, date, thread name. The format modifiers control such things as field width, padding, left and right justification. The following is a simple example.

Let the conversion pattern be "%-5p [%t]: %m%n" and assume that the log4j environment was set to use a EnhancedPatternLayout. Then the statements

   Category root = Category.getRoot();
   root.debug("Message 1");
   root.warn("Message 2");
   
would yield the output
   DEBUG [main]: Message 1
   WARN  [main]: Message 2
   

Note that there is no explicit separator between text and conversion specifiers. The pattern parser knows when it has reached the end of a conversion specifier when it reads a conversion character. In the example above the conversion specifier %-5p means the priority of the logging event should be left justified to a width of five characters. The recognized conversion characters are

Conversion Character Effect
c Used to output the category of the logging event. The category conversion specifier can be optionally followed by NameAbbreviator pattern.

For example, for the category name "alpha.beta.gamma" the pattern %c{2} will output the last two elements ("beta.gamma"), %c{-2} will remove two elements leaving "gamma", %c{1.} will output "a.b.gamma".

C Used to output the fully qualified class name of the caller issuing the logging request. This conversion specifier can be optionally followed by precision specifier, that is a decimal constant in brackets. Used to output the category of the logging event. The category conversion specifier can be optionally followed by NameAbbreviator pattern.

For example, for the category name "alpha.beta.gamma" the pattern %c{2} will output the last two elements ("beta.gamma"), %c{-2} will remove two elements leaving "gamma", %c{1.} will output "a.b.gamma".

WARNING Generating the caller class information is slow. Thus, its use should be avoided unless execution speed is not an issue.

d Used to output the date of the logging event. The date conversion specifier may be followed by a set of braces containing a date and time pattern strings {@link java.text.SimpleDateFormat}, ABSOLUTE, DATE or ISO8601 and a set of braces containing a time zone id per {@link java.util.TimeZone#getTimeZone(String)}. For example, %d{HH:mm:ss,SSS}, %d{dd MMM yyyy HH:mm:ss,SSS}, %d{DATE} or %d{HH:mm:ss}{GMT+0}. If no date format specifier is given then ISO8601 format is assumed.
F Used to output the file name where the logging request was issued.

WARNING Generating caller location information is extremely slow and should be avoided unless execution speed is not an issue.

l Used to output location information of the caller which generated the logging event.

The location information depends on the JVM implementation but usually consists of the fully qualified name of the calling method followed by the callers source the file name and line number between parentheses.

The location information can be very useful. However, its generation is extremely slow and should be avoided unless execution speed is not an issue.

L Used to output the line number from where the logging request was issued.

WARNING Generating caller location information is extremely slow and should be avoided unless execution speed is not an issue.

m Used to output the application supplied message associated with the logging event.
M Used to output the method name where the logging request was issued.

WARNING Generating caller location information is extremely slow and should be avoided unless execution speed is not an issue.

n Outputs the platform dependent line separator character or characters.

This conversion character offers practically the same performance as using non-portable line separator strings such as "\n", or "\r\n". Thus, it is the preferred way of specifying a line separator.

p Used to output the priority of the logging event.
r Used to output the number of milliseconds elapsed since the construction of the layout until the creation of the logging event.
t Used to output the name of the thread that generated the logging event.
x Used to output the NDC (nested diagnostic context) associated with the thread that generated the logging event.
X

Used to output the MDC (mapped diagnostic context) associated with the thread that generated the logging event. The X conversion character can be followed by the key for the map placed between braces, as in %X{clientNumber} where clientNumber is the key. The value in the MDC corresponding to the key will be output. If no additional sub-option is specified, then the entire contents of the MDC key value pair set is output using a format {{key1,val1},{key2,val2}}

See {@link MDC} class for more details.

properties

Used to output the Properties associated with the logging event. The properties conversion word can be followed by the key for the map placed between braces, as in %properties{application} where application is the key. The value in the Properties bundle corresponding to the key will be output. If no additional sub-option is specified, then the entire contents of the Properties key value pair set is output using a format {{key1,val1},{key2,val2}}

throwable

Used to output the Throwable trace that has been bound to the LoggingEvent, by default this will output the full trace as one would normally find by a call to Throwable.printStackTrace(). %throwable{short} or %throwable{1} will output the first line of stack trace. throwable{none} or throwable{0} will suppress the stack trace. %throwable{n} will output n lines of stack trace if a positive integer or omit the last -n lines if a negative integer. If no %throwable pattern is specified, the appender will take responsibility to output the stack trace as it sees fit.

% The sequence %% outputs a single percent sign.

By default the relevant information is output as is. However, with the aid of format modifiers it is possible to change the minimum field width, the maximum field width and justification.

The optional format modifier is placed between the percent sign and the conversion character.

The first optional format modifier is the left justification flag which is just the minus (-) character. Then comes the optional minimum field width modifier. This is a decimal constant that represents the minimum number of characters to output. If the data item requires fewer characters, it is padded on either the left or the right until the minimum width is reached. The default is to pad on the left (right justify) but you can specify right padding with the left justification flag. The padding character is space. If the data item is larger than the minimum field width, the field is expanded to accommodate the data. The value is never truncated.

This behavior can be changed using the maximum field width modifier which is designated by a period followed by a decimal constant. If the data item is longer than the maximum field, then the extra characters are removed from the beginning of the data item and not from the end. For example, it the maximum field width is eight and the data item is ten characters long, then the first two characters of the data item are dropped. This behavior deviates from the printf function in C where truncation is done from the end.

Below are various format modifier examples for the category conversion specifier.

Format modifier left justify minimum width maximum width comment
%20c false 20 none Left pad with spaces if the category name is less than 20 characters long.
%-20c true 20 none Right pad with spaces if the category name is less than 20 characters long.
%.30c NA none 30 Truncate from the beginning if the category name is longer than 30 characters.
%20.30c false 20 30 Left pad with spaces if the category name is shorter than 20 characters. However, if category name is longer than 30 characters, then truncate from the beginning.
%-20.30c true 20 30 Right pad with spaces if the category name is shorter than 20 characters. However, if category name is longer than 30 characters, then truncate from the beginning.

Below are some examples of conversion patterns.

%r [%t] %-5p %c %x - %m%n

This is essentially the TTCC layout.

%-6r [%15.15t] %-5p %30.30c %x - %m%n

Similar to the TTCC layout except that the relative time is right padded if less than 6 digits, thread name is right padded if less than 15 characters and truncated if longer and the category name is left padded if shorter than 30 characters and truncated if longer.

The above text is largely inspired from Peter A. Darnell and Philip E. Margolis' highly recommended book "C -- a Software Engineering Approach", ISBN 0-387-97389-3. @author James P. Cakalic @author Ceki Gülcü @since 1.2.16 */ public class EnhancedPatternLayout extends Layout { /** Default pattern string for log output. Currently set to the string "%m%n" which just prints the application supplied message. */ public static final String DEFAULT_CONVERSION_PATTERN = "%m%n"; /** A conversion pattern equivalent to the TTCCCLayout. Current value is %r [%t] %p %c %x - %m%n. */ public static final String TTCC_CONVERSION_PATTERN = "%r [%t] %p %c %x - %m%n"; /** * Initial size of internal buffer, no longer used. * @deprecated since 1.3 */ protected final int BUF_SIZE = 256; /** * Maximum capacity of internal buffer, no longer used. * @deprecated since 1.3 */ protected final int MAX_CAPACITY = 1024; /** * Customized pattern conversion rules are stored under this key in the * {@link org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggerRepository LoggerRepository} object store. */ public static final String PATTERN_RULE_REGISTRY = "PATTERN_RULE_REGISTRY"; /** * Initial converter for pattern. */ private PatternConverter head; /** * Conversion pattern. */ private String conversionPattern; /** * True if any element in pattern formats information from exceptions. */ private boolean handlesExceptions; /** Constructs a EnhancedPatternLayout using the DEFAULT_LAYOUT_PATTERN. The default pattern just produces the application supplied message. */ public EnhancedPatternLayout() { this(DEFAULT_CONVERSION_PATTERN); } /** * Constructs a EnhancedPatternLayout using the supplied conversion pattern. * @param pattern conversion pattern. */ public EnhancedPatternLayout(final String pattern) { this.conversionPattern = pattern; head = createPatternParser( (pattern == null) ? DEFAULT_CONVERSION_PATTERN : pattern).parse(); if (head instanceof BridgePatternConverter) { handlesExceptions = !((BridgePatternConverter) head).ignoresThrowable(); } else { handlesExceptions = false; } } /** * Set the ConversionPattern option. This is the string which * controls formatting and consists of a mix of literal content and * conversion specifiers. * * @param conversionPattern conversion pattern. */ public void setConversionPattern(final String conversionPattern) { this.conversionPattern = OptionConverter.convertSpecialChars(conversionPattern); head = createPatternParser(this.conversionPattern).parse(); if (head instanceof BridgePatternConverter) { handlesExceptions = !((BridgePatternConverter) head).ignoresThrowable(); } else { handlesExceptions = false; } } /** * Returns the value of the ConversionPattern option. * @return conversion pattern. */ public String getConversionPattern() { return conversionPattern; } /** Returns PatternParser used to parse the conversion string. Subclasses may override this to return a subclass of PatternParser which recognize custom conversion characters. @since 0.9.0 */ protected org.apache.log4j.helpers.PatternParser createPatternParser(String pattern) { return new org.apache.log4j.pattern.BridgePatternParser(pattern); } /** Activates the conversion pattern. Do not forget to call this method after you change the parameters of the EnhancedPatternLayout instance. */ public void activateOptions() { // nothing to do. } /** * Formats a logging event to a writer. * @param event logging event to be formatted. */ public String format(final LoggingEvent event) { StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer(); for(PatternConverter c = head; c != null; c = c.next) { c.format(buf, event); } return buf.toString(); } /** * Will return false if any of the conversion specifiers in the pattern * handles {@link Exception Exceptions}. * @return true if the pattern formats any information from exceptions. */ public boolean ignoresThrowable() { return !handlesExceptions; } }





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