Yes, I saw your posting of PMSRepositorySelector. That's where I got the idea to use the MDC. The twist is that I'm using the Spring IOC container to create instances of my classes, including my Quartz jobs (Spring has classes that support Quartz). When the IOC container starts, it automatically creates instances of the jobs in its "startup" thread, and maintains the job instances as singletons (using the Spring singleton scope). When the job instance is created, the logger for that job is created as an instance variable of the job. Then, when a job is run (its trigger fires), a *new* thread runs the job. So, how do I tell the RepositorySelector which hierarchy to choose for my other classes that a job uses?
Thanks. Robert Pepersack Senior Lead Developer Maryland Insurance Administration 410-468-2054 >>> "Bender Heri" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/07/2008 2:39 PM >>> Hi The problem of different log files within the same app does not arise on the "main" classes of each job (this can be configured very easy through different appenders), but in all underlying framework and helper classes. If the log outputs of these underlying classes should be separated too, then the RepositorySelector is a good choice, and the selector criteria can be defined via MDC. I did this in a similar project (a scheduler starts different jobs at given time intervals, each job has its own log file, but all self written without any big framework). To achieve this you have to ensure the following: - each job must be executed in an own fresh Thread (to enable the selection criteria through MDC) - classes which are common to different jobs must not have static Logger instances but instance member loggers (assuming the class is newly instantiated on a new job) - utility classes with static helper methods must neither have static nor class member Logger instances but have to fetch the correct Logger within each call of each method - on start of each job (Thread) you have to put a distinct value into MDC (i.e. "JobName=JobA"), before any logger is fetched from the repository - The RepositorySelector maintains a Repository for each JobName. When it is asked for the correct repository the Selector will fetch the actual job name from MDC. - Somewhere the file appender(s) for the different files must be supplied with the desired file name. This can be done at the same code location where the job starts and the MDC is updated. Iterate over the found appenders and change the file name. I posted this solution some times ago (~2-3 years) to this news group. There was even a second selector criteria beside the actual job: each job was done on different mandators, so we had to log into different files for each job/mandator pair. Both criterias were in the MDC, the RepositorySelector maintained a Respository for each such pair. If you dont find my posting write me and I will send you the solution. Heri > -----Original Message----- > From: Jacob Kjome [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 7:42 PM > To: Log4J Users List > Subject: [SPAM (Bayesain Analysis)] - Re: Different Loggers for > Different Instances of Same Class - Bayesian Filter detected spam > > > So, because you use Spring setter injection, you think you > can't name your > loggers in a custom way? Why not use a combination of > constructor and setter > injection? I'm not sure why you'd need a repository selector > in this case > anyway? What would be the selection criteria? Are you > thinking thread? > While that is possible, it seems both heavyweight and unnecesary. > > It doesn't take multiple logger repositories to get > differently named logger > output into separate files. In Spring, just use... > > <constructor-arg type="java.lang.String" > value="InstanceNameQualifierValue"/> > OR > <constructor-arg index="0" > value="InstanceNameQualifierValue"/> > OR (if it's the only constructor argument) > <constructor-arg value="InstanceNameQualifierValue"/> > > Now, you mentioned MDC, and that's a separate, and seemingly > unrelated, issue. > What problems are you having with MDC? > > If I'm missing something, please let me know. > > Jake > > On Mon, 07 Apr 2008 08:24:25 -0400 > "Robert Pepersack" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi Jake, > > > > Thanks for your response. > > > > I did some reading from my copy of "The complete log4j > manual". Chapter 8 > >has a solution to this problem: create a > RepositorySelector. But, for me > >this is only a partial solution. This is because I'm using > the Spring > >Framework's IOC container to manage my application (which is > a Java job > >scheduler that uses Quartz). This means that, when I first start my > >application, the IOC container creates most of the instances > of my classes > >(including my Quartz jobs), and uses setter injection to > create the state for > >my classes. I don't know how to get my loggers, and > associate them with the > >current thread using the MDC, when they have already been > created by the > >Spring IOC container. Do you know how? > > > > Thanks, > > > > Robert Pepersack > > Senior Lead Developer > > Maryland Insurance Administration > > 410-468-2054 > > > >>>> Jacob Kjome <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 04/06/2008 4:42 PM >>> > > > > You can use per-instance loggers and name you loggers as... > > > > private Logger logger; > > > > JdbcFacade(String instanceNameQualifier) { > > this.logger = this.getClass().getName() + istanceNameQualifier; > > } > > > > instanceNameQualifier might be "A" or "B" or whether else > you want it to be. > > > > > > Jake > > > > Robert Pepersack wrote: > >> Hello. > >> > >> Thanks in advance for your help. > >> > >> I'm running scheduled jobs, and they create their own > instances of my JDBC > >>class. For example, JobA creates a new JdbcFacadeA, and > JobB creates its own > >>JdbcFacadeB. I would like to log each job in its own log > (easy). But, I > >>want the output from JdbcFacadeA to go to the log for JobA, > and I want the > >>output from JdbcFacadeB to go to JobB's log. I'm using the > log4j convention > >>for naming loggers, which uses the fully qualified class name. > >> > >> How can I do this? > >> > >> Thanks, > >> > >> Robert Pepersack > >> Senior Lead Developer > >> Maryland Insurance Administration > >> 410-468-2054 > >> > >> > >> > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> For additional commands, e-mail: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >> > >> > >> > >> > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > >For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]