Hi Romain,

I had also tried on an ejb-deployment but again I think I got the property
name wrong. What name would one use for the property to set the
FaultListener?

Thanks

On 20 March 2017 at 19:30, Romain Manni-Bucau <rmannibu...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi
>
> don't know if that's gmail formatting but the sample you shared doesnt
> follow the doc page format.
>
> Also if your class is in a webapp and not tomee/lib you cant set it on the
> bus and you need to use openejb-jar.xml to set it either on a
> pojo-deployment or ejb-deployment (depending if it is an EJB or Pojo
> webservice).
>
>
>
>
> Romain Manni-Bucau
> @rmannibucau <https://twitter.com/rmannibucau> |  Blog
> <https://blog-rmannibucau.rhcloud.com> | Old Blog
> <http://rmannibucau.wordpress.com> | Github <https://github.com/
> rmannibucau> |
> LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/in/rmannibucau> | JavaEE Factory
> <https://javaeefactory-rmannibucau.rhcloud.com>
>
> 2017-03-20 17:14 GMT+01:00 Paul Carter-Brown <
> paul.carter-br...@smilecoms.com>:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > Currently, my log files are full of warnings from org.apache.cxf.phase.
> > PhaseInterceptorChain.doDefaultLogging whenever my JAX-WS services
> return
> > with a SOAP Fault (even though its an application level fault defined in
> > the WSDL). This means I get stack traces and dirty logs whenever a SOAP
> > service is called and maybe response with a fault such as "Account does
> not
> > exist" etc.
> >
> > To get rid of this I am trying to register my own FaultListener (
> > https://cxf.apache.org/javadoc/latest/org/apache/cxf/
> > logging/FaultListener.html)
> >
> > I followed this : http://tomee.apache.org/developer/configuration/cxf.
> html
> > by
> > adding a line like this to system.properties:
> >
> > org.apache.openejb.cxf.bus.org.apache.cxf.logging.
> > FaultListener=com.smilecoms.commons.base.FaultListener
> >
> > Unfortunately, my listener is not being used. It has been packaged in a
> jar
> > and placed in tomee/lib
> >
> >
> > Here is the basic listener that should suppress CXF from doing any fault
> > logging itself. I never see the constructor for my FaultListener being
> > called in my logs and CXF continues to log the stack traces for my
> faults.
> >
> >
> > package com.smilecoms.commons.base;
> >
> > import org.apache.cxf.message.Message;
> > import org.slf4j.Logger;
> > import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;
> >
> > public class FaultListener implements org.apache.cxf.logging.
> FaultListener
> > {
> >
> >     private static final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(
> > FaultListener.class);
> >
> >     public FaultListener() {
> >         log.error("Constructor called");
> >     }
> >
> >     @Override
> >     public boolean faultOccurred(Exception e, String string, Message
> msg) {
> >         log.warn("FaultListener for exception: [{}] [{}] [{}]", new
> > Object[]{e.toString(), string, msg});
> >         return false;
> >     }
> > }
> >
> >
> > What am I doing wrong? What is the correct way to configure the
> > FaultListener property in TomEE.
> >
> > P.S. Running TomEE 7.0.3 Plume
> >
> >
> > Thanks
> > Paul
> >
> > --
> >
> >
> > This email is subject to the disclaimer of Smile Communications at
> > http://www.smilecoms.com/home/email-disclaimer/ <
> http://www.smilecoms.com/
> > disclaimer>
> >
> >
>



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