public class LogFactory
extends java.lang.Object
Factory for creating 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.
Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
---|---|
static java.lang.String |
FACTORY_DEFAULT
The fully qualified class name of the fallback
LogFactory
implementation class to use, if no other can be found. |
static java.lang.String |
FACTORY_PROPERTIES
The name of the properties file to search for.
|
static java.lang.String |
FACTORY_PROPERTY
The name of the property used to identify the LogFactory implementation
class name.
|
static java.lang.String |
HASHTABLE_IMPLEMENTATION_PROPERTY
Setting this system property value allows the
Hashtable used to store
classloaders to be substituted by an alternative implementation. |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
java.lang.Object |
getAttribute(java.lang.String name)
Return the configuration attribute with the specified name (if any),
or
null if there is no such attribute. |
java.lang.String[] |
getAttributeNames()
Return an array containing the names of all currently defined
configuration attributes.
|
static LogFactory |
getFactory()
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. |
Log |
getInstance(java.lang.Class<?> clazz)
Convenience method to derive a name from the specified class and
call
getInstance(String) with it. |
Log |
getInstance(java.lang.String name)
Construct (if necessary) and return a
Log instance,
using the factory's current set of configuration attributes. |
static Log |
getLog(java.lang.Class<?> clazz)
Convenience method to return a named logger, without the application
having to care about factories.
|
static Log |
getLog(java.lang.String name)
Convenience method to return a named logger, without the application
having to care about factories.
|
static java.lang.String |
objectId(java.lang.Object o)
Returns a string that uniquely identifies the specified object, including
its class.
|
void |
release()
Release any internal references to previously created
Log
instances returned by this factory. |
static void |
release(java.lang.ClassLoader classLoader)
Release any internal references to previously created
LogFactory
instances that have been associated with the specified class loader
(if any), after calling the instance method release() on
each of them. |
static void |
releaseAll()
Release any internal references to previously created
LogFactory
instances, after calling the instance method release() on
each of them. |
void |
removeAttribute(java.lang.String name)
Remove any configuration attribute associated with the specified name.
|
void |
setAttribute(java.lang.String name,
java.lang.Object value)
Set the configuration attribute with the specified name.
|
public static final java.lang.String FACTORY_PROPERTY
public static final java.lang.String FACTORY_DEFAULT
LogFactory
implementation class to use, if no other can be found.public static final java.lang.String FACTORY_PROPERTIES
public static final java.lang.String HASHTABLE_IMPLEMENTATION_PROPERTY
Setting this system property value allows the Hashtable
used to store
classloaders to be substituted by an alternative implementation.
Note: LogFactory
will print:
to system error and then continue using a standard Hashtable.
[ERROR] LogFactory: Load of custom hashtable failed
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 Log getInstance(java.lang.String name) throws LogConfigurationException
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.
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)LogConfigurationException
- if a suitable Log
instance cannot be returnedpublic void release()
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 java.lang.Object getAttribute(java.lang.String name)
null
if there is no such attribute.name
- Name of the attribute to returnpublic java.lang.String[] getAttributeNames()
public void removeAttribute(java.lang.String name)
name
- Name of the attribute to removepublic void setAttribute(java.lang.String name, java.lang.Object value)
null
value is equivalent to calling
removeAttribute(name)
.name
- Name of the attribute to setvalue
- Value of the attribute to set, or null
to remove any setting for this attributepublic Log getInstance(java.lang.Class<?> clazz) throws LogConfigurationException
getInstance(String)
with it.clazz
- Class for which a suitable Log name will be derivedLogConfigurationException
- if a suitable Log
instance cannot be returnedpublic static LogFactory getFactory() throws LogConfigurationException
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.
org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory
system
property.commons-logging.properties
file, if found in the class path of this class. The configuration
file is in standard java.util.Properties
format and
contains the fully qualified name of the implementation class
with the key being the system property defined above.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.
LogConfigurationException
- if the implementation class is not
available or cannot be instantiated.public static Log getLog(java.lang.Class<?> clazz) throws LogConfigurationException
clazz
- Class from which a log name will be derivedLogConfigurationException
- if a suitable Log
instance cannot be returnedpublic static Log getLog(java.lang.String name) throws LogConfigurationException
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)LogConfigurationException
- if a suitable Log
instance cannot be returnedpublic static void release(java.lang.ClassLoader classLoader)
LogFactory
instances that have been associated with the specified class loader
(if any), after calling the instance method release()
on
each of them.classLoader
- ClassLoader for which to release the LogFactorypublic static void releaseAll()
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 java.lang.String objectId(java.lang.Object o)
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.
o
- may be null.Copyright © 2000-2015 Apache Software Foundation. All Rights Reserved.