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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-1713?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15812998#comment-15812998
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Kurt Seidel commented on LOG4J2-1713:
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Thanks for the reply. I think that answers my question. I am using the default 
ClassLoaderContextSelector, and as you point out, and as I have found, this 
only allows a single LoggerContext per ClassLoader. Most of our logging is done 
within the context of webapps, where each webapp has it's own log 
configuration, and the log4j2 jar files are bundled into the webapp's 
WEB-INF/lib. Creating a customized ContextSelector to solve my problem sounds 
like it would interfere with the ClassLoaderContextSelector required for proper 
isolated webapp logging, since this custom ContextSelector class is specified 
at the system level. I will likely go with using the Composite Configuration to 
deal with the common jars.

> Allow for more general serialization of Log4j2 configurations
> -------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: LOG4J2-1713
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-1713
>             Project: Log4j 2
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Configurators
>    Affects Versions: 2.7
>            Reporter: Steve Cohen
>
> We want to implement the following system:
> We would like to write an external program that reads several Log4j 
> Configuration Files, combines the configurations, and then outputs the 
> combined configuration to a new Log4j configuration file. This file can then 
> simply be dropped on a running log4j instance on a server, and cause an 
> update of the running configuration.
> Existing APIs do not support this use case.  There is nothing that supports 
> the serialization to XML of a loaded configuration.  There is the new 
> ConfigurationBuilder.writeToXml() method in 2.7, but that's on 
> ConfigurationBuilder, not Configuration.  Nor is it possible to take a 
> Configuration, and get a ConfigurationBuilder from it.  Another way it could 
> work is having some sort of ConfigurationBuilder that accepted parameters of 
> type Logger, Appender, etc. These would enable Loggers and Appenders and 
> other Log4j2 objects to be copied from an existing configuration to a new one 
> being built.  But this doesn't exist either.  One would have to drill down 
> into each component, extract the necessary data, and add it to a builder.
> In other words (H/T to Gary Gregory)
> c1 = load config from XML file 1 (but do not apply the c1 configuration)
> c2 = load config from XML file 2 (but do not apply the c2 configuration)
> c3 = c1 + c2 (but do not apply the c3 configuration) write c3 to disk
> In case you wonder, there is actually a use case behind this:
> Imagine a Servlet web-app that, depending on request parameters, invokes one 
> of a number of possible EJBs (they could also be non-EJB POJOs, but for the 
> purposes of this discussion, we assume EJBs), in order to produce a response. 
>  This is not a shopping cart but a back end system.  We do NOT wish to deploy 
> these into a single EAR file but want separate deployment of each component, 
> and each component to have a separate logging configuration, deployable at 
> the same time as the component.  Since Log4j allows only one configuration 
> context per class-loader, the ideal scheme would be there can only be one 
> configuration file.  The only way to update it non-programatically is to drop 
> a new configuration in the correct location.  In order to produce this, we 
> would like the separate logging configs deployed to some directory.  A 
> separate program would read in all of these and add the loggers and appenders 
> to a new master configuration which would then be written out to disk and 
> copied to the proper location.  The usual change mechanism would then load 
> the new configuration.  The current configuration of the running system would 
> always match what is in this master configuration file, which is not the case 
> with programmatic configuration.
> Without something like this, how is it possible to run multiple EJBs out of a 
> web-app that are separately deployable and have separately manageable logging 
> configurations?
> One could manually of course parse the individual files on the XML level (or 
> JSON, YAML, whatever), combine them, and serialize the output.  But since 
> log4j knows its own object model better than any xml parser, it makes sense 
> to have this capability within log4j.
> And yes, I've thought of the fact that property-name, logger-name, 
> appender-name collisions are possible and could cause trouble.  I would be 
> prepared to live with real restrictions that prevent this.  I don't think 
> there is any need to support concatenation of random config files that do not 
> prevent such collisions.



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