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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.juli.logging;
import java.util.Properties;
import java.util.logging.LogManager;
/**
* Modified LogFactory: removed all discovery, hardcode a specific implementation
* If you like a different logging implementation - use either the discovery-based
* commons-logging, or better - another implementation hardcoded to your favourite
* logging impl.
*
* Why ? Each application and deployment can choose a logging implementation -
* that involves configuration, installing the logger jar and optional plugins, etc.
* As part of this process - they can as well install the commons-logging implementation
* that corresponds to their logger of choice. This completely avoids any discovery
* problem, while still allowing the user to switch.
*
* Note that this implementation is not just a wrapper around JDK logging ( like
* the original commons-logging impl ). It adds 2 features - a simpler configuration
* ( which is in fact a subset of log4j.properties ) and a formatter that is
* less ugly.
*
* The removal of 'abstract' preserves binary backward compatibility. It is possible
* to preserve the abstract - and introduce another ( hardcoded ) factory - but I
* see no benefit.
*
* Since this class is not intended to be extended - and provides
* no plugin for other LogFactory implementation - all protected methods are removed.
* This can be changed - but again, there is little value in keeping dead code.
* Just take a quick look at the removed code ( and it's complexity)
*
* --------------
*
* Original comment:
* Factory for creating {@link Log} instances, with discovery and
* configuration features similar to that employed by standard Java APIs
* such as JAXP.
*
* IMPLEMENTATION NOTE - This implementation is heavily
* based on the SAXParserFactory and DocumentBuilderFactory implementations
* (corresponding to the JAXP pluggability APIs) found in Apache Xerces.
*
*
* @author Craig R. McClanahan
* @author Costin Manolache
* @author Richard A. Sitze
*/
public /* abstract */ class LogFactory {
// ----------------------------------------------------- Manifest Constants
/**
* The name of the property used to identify the LogFactory implementation
* class name.
*/
public static final String FACTORY_PROPERTY =
"org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory";
/**
* The fully qualified class name of the fallback LogFactory
* implementation class to use, if no other can be found.
*/
public static final String FACTORY_DEFAULT =
"org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl";
/**
* The name of the properties file to search for.
*/
public static final String FACTORY_PROPERTIES =
"commons-logging.properties";
/**
* Setting this system property value allows the Hashtable
used to store
* classloaders to be substituted by an alternative implementation.
*
*
* Note: LogFactory
will print:
*
* [ERROR] LogFactory: Load of custom hashtable failed
*
* to system error and then continue using a standard Hashtable.
*
*
* Usage: Set this property when Java is invoked
* and LogFactory
will attempt to load a new instance
* of the given implementation class.
* For example, running the following ant scriptlet:
*
* will mean that
* <java classname="${test.runner}" fork="yes" failonerror="${test.failonerror}">
* ...
* <sysproperty
* key="org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory.HashtableImpl"
* value="org.apache.commons.logging.AltHashtable"/>
* </java>
*
LogFactory
will load an instance of
* org.apache.commons.logging.AltHashtable
.
*
* A typical use case is to allow a custom * Hashtable implementation using weak references to be substituted. * This will allow classloaders to be garbage collected without * the need to release them (on 1.3+ JVMs only, of course ;) *
*/ public static final String HASHTABLE_IMPLEMENTATION_PROPERTY = "org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory.HashtableImpl"; private static LogFactory singleton=new LogFactory(); Properties logConfig; // ----------------------------------------------------------- Constructors /** * Protected constructor that is not available for public use. */ private LogFactory() { logConfig=new Properties(); } // hook for syserr logger - class level void setLogConfig( Properties p ) { this.logConfig=p; } // --------------------------------------------------------- Public Methods // only those 2 methods need to change to use a different direct logger. /** *Construct (if necessary) and return a Log
instance,
* using the factory's current set of configuration attributes.
NOTE - Depending upon the implementation of
* the LogFactory
you are using, the Log
* instance you are returned may or may not be local to the current
* application, and may or may not be returned again on a subsequent
* call with the same name argument.
Log
instance to be
* returned (the meaning of this name is only known to the underlying
* logging implementation that is being wrapped)
*
* @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable Log
* instance cannot be returned
*/
public Log getInstance(String name)
throws LogConfigurationException {
return DirectJDKLog.getInstance(name);
}
/**
* Release any internal references to previously created {@link Log}
* instances returned by this factory. This is useful in environments
* like servlet containers, which implement application reloading by
* throwing away a ClassLoader. Dangling references to objects in that
* class loader would prevent garbage collection.
*/
public void release() {
DirectJDKLog.release();
}
/**
* Return the configuration attribute with the specified name (if any),
* or null
if there is no such attribute.
*
* @param name Name of the attribute to return
*/
public Object getAttribute(String name) {
return logConfig.get(name);
}
/**
* Return an array containing the names of all currently defined
* configuration attributes. If there are no such attributes, a zero
* length array is returned.
*/
public String[] getAttributeNames() {
String result[] = new String[logConfig.size()];
return logConfig.keySet().toArray(result);
}
/**
* Remove any configuration attribute associated with the specified name.
* If there is no such attribute, no action is taken.
*
* @param name Name of the attribute to remove
*/
public void removeAttribute(String name) {
logConfig.remove(name);
}
/**
* Set the configuration attribute with the specified name. Calling
* this with a null
value is equivalent to calling
* removeAttribute(name)
.
*
* @param name Name of the attribute to set
* @param value Value of the attribute to set, or null
* to remove any setting for this attribute
*/
public void setAttribute(String name, Object value) {
logConfig.put(name, value);
}
/**
* Convenience method to derive a name from the specified class and
* call getInstance(String)
with it.
*
* @param clazz Class for which a suitable Log name will be derived
*
* @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable Log
* instance cannot be returned
*/
public Log getInstance(Class> clazz)
throws LogConfigurationException {
return getInstance( clazz.getName());
}
// ------------------------------------------------------- Static Variables
// --------------------------------------------------------- Static Methods
/**
* Construct (if necessary) and return a LogFactory
* instance, using the following ordered lookup procedure to determine
* the name of the implementation class to be loaded.
-
*
- The
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
system * property.
* - The JDK 1.3 Service Discovery mechanism *
- Use the properties file
commons-logging.properties
* file, if found in the class path of this class. The configuration * file is in standardjava.util.Properties
format and * contains the fully qualified name of the implementation class * with the key being the system property defined above.
* - Fall back to a default implementation class
* (
org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl
).
*
NOTE - If the properties file method of identifying the
* LogFactory
implementation class is utilized, all of the
* properties defined in this file will be set as configuration attributes
* on the corresponding LogFactory
instance.
Log
* instance cannot be returned
*/
public static Log getLog(Class> clazz)
throws LogConfigurationException {
return (getFactory().getInstance(clazz));
}
/**
* Convenience method to return a named logger, without the application
* having to care about factories.
*
* @param name Logical name of the Log
instance to be
* returned (the meaning of this name is only known to the underlying
* logging implementation that is being wrapped)
*
* @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable Log
* instance cannot be returned
*/
public static Log getLog(String name)
throws LogConfigurationException {
return (getFactory().getInstance(name));
}
/**
* Release any internal references to previously created {@link LogFactory}
* instances that have been associated with the specified class loader
* (if any), after calling the instance method release()
on
* each of them.
*
* @param classLoader ClassLoader for which to release the LogFactory
*/
public static void release(ClassLoader classLoader) {
// JULI's log manager looks at the current classLoader so there is no
// need to use the passed in classLoader, the default implementation
// does not so calling reset in that case will break things
if (!LogManager.getLogManager().getClass().getName().equals(
"java.util.logging.LogManager")) {
LogManager.getLogManager().reset();
}
}
/**
* Release any internal references to previously created {@link LogFactory}
* instances, after calling the instance method release()
on
* each of them. This is useful in environments like servlet containers,
* which implement application reloading by throwing away a ClassLoader.
* Dangling references to objects in that class loader would prevent
* garbage collection.
*/
public static void releaseAll() {
singleton.release();
}
/**
* Returns a string that uniquely identifies the specified object, including
* its class.
*
* The returned string is of form "classname@hashcode", ie is the same as
* the return value of the Object.toString() method, but works even when
* the specified object's class has overridden the toString method.
*
* @param o may be null.
* @return a string of form classname@hashcode, or "null" if param o is null.
*/
public static String objectId(Object o) {
if (o == null) {
return "null";
} else {
return o.getClass().getName() + "@" + System.identityHashCode(o);
}
}
}