Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
544 lines (417 loc) · 21.8 KB

logging.adoc

File metadata and controls

544 lines (417 loc) · 21.8 KB

Configuring Logging

This guide explains logging and how to configure it.

Internally, Quarkus uses JBoss Log Manager and the JBoss Logging facade. You can use the JBoss Logging facade inside your code as it’s already provided, or any of the supported Logging API listed in the next chapter as Quarkus will send them to JBoss Log Manager.

All the logging configuration will then be done inside your application.properties.

Supported Logging APIs

Applications and components may use any of the following APIs for logging, and the logs will be merged:

Internally Quarkus uses JBoss Logging; you can also use it inside your application so that no other dependencies should be added for your logs.

import org.jboss.logging.Logger;

import javax.ws.rs.GET;
import javax.ws.rs.Path;
import javax.ws.rs.Produces;
import javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType;

@Path("/hello")
public class ExampleResource {

    private static final Logger LOG = Logger.getLogger(ExampleResource.class);

    @GET
    @Produces(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN)
    public String hello() {
        LOG.info("Hello");
        return "hello";
    }
}
Note
If you use JBoss Logging but one of your libraries uses a different logging API, you may need to configure a Logging Adapter.

Logging with Panache

Instead of declaring a Logger field, you can use the simplified logging API:

package com.example;

import io.quarkus.logging.Log; // (1)

class MyService { // (2)
    public void doSomething() {
        Log.info("Simple!"); // (3)
    }
}
  1. The io.quarkus.logging.Log class mirrors the JBoss Logging API, except all methods are static.

  2. Note that the class doesn’t declare a logger field. This is because during application build, a private static final org.jboss.logging.Logger field is created automatically, in each class that uses the Log API. The fully qualified name of the class that calls the Log methods is used as a logger name. In this example, the logger name would be com.example.MyService.

  3. Finally, during application build, all calls to Log methods are rewritten to regular JBoss Logging calls on the logger field.

Warning
Only use the Log API in application classes, not in external dependencies. Log method calls that are not processed by Quarkus at build time will throw an exception.

Injecting a Logger

You can also inject a configured org.jboss.logging.Logger instance in your beans and resource classes.

import org.jboss.logging.Logger;

@ApplicationScoped
class SimpleBean {

   @Inject
   Logger log; (1)

   @LoggerName("foo")
   Logger fooLog; (2)

   public void ping() {
     log.info("Simple!");
     fooLog.info("Goes to _foo_ logger!");
   }
}
  1. The FQCN of the declaring class is used as a logger name, i.e. org.jboss.logging.Logger.getLogger(SimpleBean.class) will be used.

  2. In this case, the name foo is used as a logger name, i.e. org.jboss.logging.Logger.getLogger("foo") will be used.

Note
The logger instances are cached internally. Therefore, a logger injected e.g. into a @RequestScoped bean is shared for all bean instances to avoid possible performance penalty associated with logger instantiation.

What about Apache Log4j ?

Log4j is a logging implementation: it contains a logging backend and a logging facade. Quarkus uses the JBoss Log Manager backend, so you will need to include the log4j2-jboss-logmanager library to route Log4j logs to JBoss Log Manager.

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jboss.logmanager</groupId>
    <artifactId>log4j2-jboss-logmanager</artifactId> (1)
</dependency>
  1. This is the library needed for Log4j version 2; if you use the legacy Log4j version 1 you need to use log4j-jboss-logmanager instead.

build.gradle
implementation("org.jboss.logmanager:log4j2-jboss-logmanager") (1)
  1. This is the library needed for Log4j version 2; if you use the legacy Log4j version 1 you need to use log4j-jboss-logmanager instead.

You can then use the Log4j API inside your application.

Warning
Do not include any Log4j dependencies. The log4j2-jboss-logmanager library includes what’s needed to use Log4j as a logging facade.

Logging levels

These are the log levels used by Quarkus:

OFF

Special level to turn off logging.

FATAL

A critical service failure/complete inability to service requests of any kind.

ERROR

A significant disruption in a request or the inability to service a request.

WARN

A non-critical service error or problem that may not require immediate correction.

INFO

Service lifecycle events or important related very-low-frequency information.

DEBUG

Messages that convey extra information regarding lifecycle or non-request-bound events which may be helpful for debugging.

TRACE

Messages that convey extra per-request debugging information that may be very high frequency.

ALL

Special level for all messages including custom levels.

In addition, the following levels may be configured for applications and libraries using java.util.logging:

SEVERE

Same as ERROR.

WARNING

Same as WARN.

CONFIG

Service configuration information.

FINE

Same as DEBUG.

FINER

Same as TRACE.

FINEST

Event more debugging information than TRACE, maybe with even higher frequency.

Runtime configuration

Run time logging is configured in the application.properties file, for example, to set the default log level to INFO logging and include Hibernate DEBUG logs:

quarkus.log.level=INFO
quarkus.log.category."org.hibernate".level=DEBUG

Setting a log level below DEBUG requires the minimum log level to be adjusted, either globally via the quarkus.log.min-level property or per-category as shown in the example above, as well as adjusting the log level itself.

Minimum logging level sets a floor level that Quarkus will be needed to potentially generate, opening the door to optimization opportunities. As an example, in native execution the minimum level enables lower level checks (e.g. isTraceEnabled) to be folded to false, resulting in dead code elimination for code that will never to be executed.

All possible properties are listed in the logging configuration reference.

Note
If you are adding these properties via command line make sure " is escaped. For example -Dquarkus.log.category.\"org.hibernate\".level=TRACE.

Logging categories

Logging is done on a per-category basis. Each category can be independently configured. A configuration which applies to a category will also apply to all sub-categories of that category, unless there is a more specific matching sub-category configuration. For every category the same settings that are configured on ( console / file / syslog ) apply. These can also be overridden by attaching a one or more named handlers to a category. See example in Named handlers attached to a category

Property Name Default Description

quarkus.log.category."<category-name>".level

INFO [1]

The level to use to configure the category named <category-name>. The quotes are necessary.

quarkus.log.category."<category-name>".min-level

DEBUG

The minimum logging level to use to configure the category named <category-name>. The quotes are necessary.

quarkus.log.category."<category-name>".use-parent-handlers

true

Specify whether this logger should send its output to its parent logger.

quarkus.log.category."<category-name>".handlers=[<handler>]

empty [2]

The names of the handlers that you want to attach to a specific category.

Note
The quotes shown in the property name are required as categories normally contain '.' which must be escaped. An example is shown in File TRACE Logging Configuration.

Root logger configuration

The root logger category is handled separately, and is configured via the following properties:

Property Name Default Description

quarkus.log.level

INFO

The default log level for every log category.

quarkus.log.min-level

DEBUG

The default minimum log level for every log category.

If no level configuration exists for a given logger category, the enclosing (parent) category is examined. If no categories are configured which enclose the category in question, then the root logger configuration is used.

Logging Format

By default, Quarkus uses a pattern-based logging formatter that generates human-readable text logs.

You can configure the format for each log handler via a dedicated property. For the console handler, the property is quarkus.log.console.format.

The logging format string supports the following symbols:

Symbol Summary Description

%%

%

Renders a simple % character.

%c

Category

Renders the category name.

%C

Source class

Renders the source class name.[3]

%d{xxx}

Date

Renders a date with the given date format string, which uses the syntax defined by java.text.SimpleDateFormat.

%e

Exception

Renders the thrown exception, if any.

%F

Source file

Renders the source file name.[3]

%h

Host name

Renders the system simple host name.

%H

Qualified host name

Renders the system’s fully qualified host name, which may be the same as the simple host name, depending on OS configuration.

%i

Process ID

Render the current process PID.

%l

Source location

Renders the source location information, which includes source file name, line number, class name, and method name.[3]

%L

Source line

Renders the source line number.[3]

%m

Full Message

Renders the log message plus exception (if any).

%M

Source method

Renders the source method name.[3]

%n

Newline

Renders the platform-specific line separator string.

%N

Process name

Render the name of the current process.

%p

Level

Render the log level of the message.

%r

Relative time

Render the time in milliseconds since the start of the application log.

%s

Simple message

Renders just the log message, with no exception trace.

%t

Thread name

Render the thread name.

%t{id}

Thread ID

Render the thread ID.

%z{<zone name>}

Time zone

Set the time zone of the output to <zone name>.

%X{<MDC property name>}

Mapped Diagnostics Context Value

Renders the value from Mapped Diagnostics Context

%X

Mapped Diagnostics Context Values

Renders all the values from Mapped Diagnostics Context in format {property.key=property.value}

%x

Nested Diagnostics context values

Renders all the values from Nested Diagnostics Context in format {value1.value2}

Alternative Console Logging Formats

It is possible to change the output format of the console log. This can be useful in environments where the output of the Quarkus application is captured by a service which can, for example, process and store the log information for later analysis.

JSON Logging Format

In order to configure the JSON logging format, the quarkus-logging-json extension may be employed. Add this extension to your build file as the following snippet illustrates:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
    <artifactId>quarkus-logging-json</artifactId>
</dependency>
build.gradle
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-logging-json")

The presence of this extension will, by default, replace the output format configuration from the console configuration. This means that the format string and the color settings (if any) will be ignored. The other console configuration items (including those controlling asynchronous logging and the log level) will continue to be applied.

For some, it will make sense to use logging that is humanly readable (unstructured) in dev mode and JSON logging (structured) in production mode. This can be achieved using different profiles, as shown in the following configuration.

Disable JSON logging in application.properties for dev and test mode
%dev.quarkus.log.console.json=false
%test.quarkus.log.console.json=false
Configuration

The JSON logging extension can be configured in various ways. The following properties are supported:

Warning
Enabling pretty printing might cause certain processors and JSON parsers to fail.
Note
Printing the details can be expensive as the values are retrieved from the caller. The details include the source class name, source file name, source method name and source line number.

Log Handlers

A log handler is a logging component responsible for the emission of log events to a recipient. Quarkus comes with three different log handlers: console, file and syslog.

Console log handler

The console log handler is enabled by default. It outputs all log events to the console of your application (typically to the system’s stdout).

For details of its configuration options, see the Console Logging configuration reference.

File log handler

The file log handler is disabled by default. It outputs all log events to a file on the application’s host. It supports log file rotation.

For details of its configuration options, see the File Logging configuration reference.

Syslog log handler

Syslog is a protocol for sending log messages on Unix-like systems using a protocol defined by RFC 5424.

The syslog handler sends all log events to a syslog server (by default, the syslog server that is local to the application). It is disabled by default.

For details of its configuration options, see the Syslog Logging configuration reference.

Note

Although the root logger’s handlers are usually configured directly via quarkus.log.console, quarkus.log.file and quarkus.log.syslog, it can nonetheless have additional named handlers attached to it using the quarkus.log.handlers property.

quarkus.http.auth.policy.user-policy.roles-allowed=user
quarkus.http.auth.permission.roles.paths=/api/*
quarkus.http.auth.permission.roles.policy=user-policy

quarkus.http.auth.permission.public.paths=/api/noauth/*
quarkus.http.auth.permission.public.policy=permit

Examples

Console DEBUG Logging except for Quarkus logs (INFO), No color, Shortened Time, Shortened Category Prefixes
quarkus.log.console.format=%d{HH:mm:ss} %-5p [%c{2.}] (%t) %s%e%n
quarkus.log.console.level=DEBUG
quarkus.log.console.color=false

quarkus.log.category."io.quarkus".level=INFO
Note
If you are adding these properties via command line make sure " is escaped. For example -Dquarkus.log.category.\"io.quarkus\".level=DEBUG.
File TRACE Logging Configuration
quarkus.log.file.enable=true
# Send output to a trace.log file under the /tmp directory
quarkus.log.file.path=/tmp/trace.log
quarkus.log.file.level=TRACE
quarkus.log.file.format=%d{HH:mm:ss} %-5p [%c{2.}] (%t) %s%e%n
# Set 2 categories (io.quarkus.smallrye.jwt, io.undertow.request.security) to TRACE level
quarkus.log.min-level=TRACE
quarkus.log.category."io.quarkus.smallrye.jwt".level=TRACE
quarkus.log.category."io.undertow.request.security".level=TRACE
Note
As we don’t change the root logger, console log will only contain INFO or higher order logs.
Named handlers attached to a category
# Send output to a trace.log file under the /tmp directory
quarkus.log.file.path=/tmp/trace.log
quarkus.log.console.format=%d{HH:mm:ss} %-5p [%c{2.}] (%t) %s%e%n
# Configure a named handler that logs to console
quarkus.log.handler.console."STRUCTURED_LOGGING".format=%e%n
# Configure a named handler that logs to file
quarkus.log.handler.file."STRUCTURED_LOGGING_FILE".enable=true
quarkus.log.handler.file."STRUCTURED_LOGGING_FILE".format=%e%n
# Configure the category and link the two named handlers to it
quarkus.log.category."io.quarkus.category".level=INFO
quarkus.log.category."io.quarkus.category".handlers=STRUCTURED_LOGGING,STRUCTURED_LOGGING_FILE
Named handlers attached to the root logger
# configure a named file handler that sends the output to 'quarkus.log'
quarkus.log.handler.file.CONSOLE_MIRROR.enable=true
quarkus.log.handler.file.CONSOLE_MIRROR.path=quarkus.log
# attach the handler to the root logger
quarkus.log.handlers=CONSOLE_MIRROR

Centralized Log Management

If you want to send your logs to a centralized tool like Graylog, Logstash or Fluentd, you can follow the Centralized log management guide.

How to Configure Logging for @QuarkusTest

If you want to configure logging for your @QuarkusTest, don’t forget to set up the maven-surefire-plugin accordingly. In particular, you need to set the appropriate LogManager using the java.util.logging.manager system property.

Example Configuration
<build>
  <plugins>
    <plugin>
      <artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
      <version>${surefire-plugin.version}</version>
      <configuration>
        <systemPropertyVariables>
          <java.util.logging.manager>org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager</java.util.logging.manager> (1)
          <quarkus.log.level>DEBUG</quarkus.log.level>  (2)
          <maven.home>${maven.home}</maven.home>
        </systemPropertyVariables>
      </configuration>
    </plugin>
  </plugins>
</build>
  1. Make sure the org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager is used.

  2. Enable debug logging for all logging categories.

If you are using Gradle, add this to your build.gradle:

test {
	systemProperty "java.util.logging.manager", "org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager"
}

Logging Adapters

Quarkus relies on the JBoss Logging library for all the logging requirements.

If you are using libraries that have dependencies on other logging libraries such as Apache Commons Logging, Log4j or SLF4J, you need to exclude them from the dependencies and use one of the adapters provided by JBoss Logging.

This is especially important when building native executables as you could encounter issues similar to the following when compiling the native executable:

Caused by java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl

This is due to the logging implementation not being included in the native executable. Using the JBoss Logging adapters will solve this problem.

These adapters are available for most of the common Open Source logging components.

Apache Commons Logging:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jboss.logging</groupId>
    <artifactId>commons-logging-jboss-logging</artifactId>
</dependency>
build.gradle
implementation("org.jboss.logging:commons-logging-jboss-logging")

Log4j:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jboss.logmanager</groupId>
    <artifactId>log4j-jboss-logmanager</artifactId>
</dependency>
build.gradle
implementation("org.jboss.logmanager:log4j-jboss-logmanager")

Log4j 2:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jboss.logmanager</groupId>
    <artifactId>log4j2-jboss-logmanager</artifactId>
</dependency>
build.gradle
implementation("org.jboss.logmanager:log4j2-jboss-logmanager")

And SLF4J:

pom.xml
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.jboss.slf4j</groupId>
    <artifactId>slf4j-jboss-logmanager</artifactId>
</dependency>
build.gradle
implementation("org.jboss.slf4j:slf4j-jboss-logmanager")
Note
This is not needed for libraries that are dependencies of a Quarkus extension as the extension will take care of this for you.

1. Some extensions may define customized default log levels for certain categories, in order to reduce log noise by default. Setting the log level in configuration will override any extension-defined log levels.
2. By default, the configured category gets the same handlers attached as the one on the root logger.
3. Format sequences which examine caller information may affect performance