When you make a custom Logger wrapper, you need to use the logMessage() methods that include the fqcn string which should be the fully qualified class name of the logger wrapper. See AbstractLogger for an example.
On 10 September 2016 at 13:57, Juan Fuentes <juanmarianofuen...@gmail.com> wrote: > Dear all, > > After spending half a day on this I have decide to try luck on the > official mailing list, hopefully some dev can throw some light over this. > > I’m trying to use a wrapper over a Logger object to restrict the methods > of the API to the ones on my interface, for example: > > class Log4JLogger implements com.opencms.core.logging.Logger { > > private Logger logger; > > public Log4JLogger(Logger logger) { > this.logger = logger; > } > > @Override > public void traceEntry(String message, Object... args) { > this.logger.traceEntry(message, args); > } > > If I combine this with a pattern that includes the line and the method > name, for example: > <PatternLayout pattern="%d{yyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS} %-5level %class{36} %L > %M - %msg%xEx%n"/> > > I get as result the line and method name on the wrapper, what makes sense, > but is not what I want to. I want the ones from the class that calls the > wrapper. > > Any way to configure/specify this in any way? > > I would be also happy if I can just extend a Logger and implement my > interface on it, but what logger should I extend? How can I create an > instance of this custom logger afterwards? > > Thanks in advance, > Juan > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: log4j-user-unsubscr...@logging.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: log4j-user-h...@logging.apache.org > > -- Matt Sicker <boa...@gmail.com>