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Log4perl Mike Schilli, Yahoo! OSCON, 07/24/2008
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Logging – why? Debug during development Go back in time and figure out what happened. Measure performance Trace activity on live systems
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Why Log4perl and not one of the 20 Logging modules on CPAN? No CPAN dependencies Easy to use, but scales with complexity Unique Features
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Log::Log4perl Availability cpan> install Log::Log4perl (Only requires core modules) Included in major Linux distros sudo apt-get install liblog-log4perl Requires Perl 5.00503 or better Windows: ppm package available in ActiveState archives or from log4perl.com
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Use Log4perl as a Remote Control to your System.
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Log::Log4perl Remote Controls Loggers Layouts Appenders Levels
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Log::Log4perl Remote Controls Loggers Layouts Appenders Locate it in the system Format it Write it out Levels Log/Suppress Priority/Level
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Log::Log4perl Remote Controls Loggers Layouts Appenders DEBUG “Starting up”; ERROR “Cannot open $file”; “Starting up” => 2007-06-21 07:30:33 Foo.pm-123 Starting up Database Log File … Levels Turn logging on in main or Net::Amazon
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Sounds complicated? Actually, it’s easy …
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Easy Log4perl #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); DEBUG “Starting up”;
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Don’t like macros? Use get_logger() #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger); my $logger = get_logger(); $logger->debug(“Starting up”);
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Like it clean? Use Moose! package Ferrari; use Moose; with “MooseX::Log::Log4perl”; sub drive { my($self) = @_; $self->log->debug(“Wroom!!”); }
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Easy Log4perl #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); DEBUG “Starting up”;
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Easy Log4perl $./hello $
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Easy Log4perl #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init( $DEBUG ); DEBUG “Starting up”;
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Easy Log4perl $./hello 2008/07/08 18:37:12 Starting up $
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Easy Log4perl #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init( $DEBUG ); DEBUG “Starting up”; # … something happens ERROR “Horrible error!”;
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Easy Log4perl $./hello 2008/07/08 18:37:12 Starting up 2008/07/08 18:37:12 Horrible error! $
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Easy Log4perl #!/usr/bin/perl –w use strict; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init( $ERROR ); DEBUG “Starting up”; ERROR “Horrible error!”;
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Easy Log4perl $./hello 2008/07/08 18:37:12 Horrible error! $
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Remote Control #1: Levels
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You get the concept: Log Level Configured Message Priority FATAL ERROR WARNING INFO DEBUG TRACE FATAL ERROR WARNING INFO DEBUG TRACE
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Chatty configuration Log Level Configured Message Priority FATAL ERROR WARNING INFO DEBUG TRACE
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Silent configuration ERROR Log Level Configured Message Priority FATAL ERROR WARNING INFO DEBUG TRACE
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Log Levels Choose them wisely –TRACE(“$bytes bytes transferred”); –DEBUG(“HTTP get OK”); –INFO(“Starting up”); –WARN(“HTTP get failed, retrying”); –ERROR(“Out of retries!”); –FATAL(“Panic! Shutting down.”);
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Remote Control #2: Layouts
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Location-Awareness Log4perl’s Loggers are aware of their location: package Foo; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); sub foo { DEBUG “Starting up”; }
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Location-Awareness package Foo; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); sub foo { DEBUG “Starting up”; } $./hello 2008/07/13 19:32:39 Starting up
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Location-Awareness package Foo; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); sub foo { DEBUG “Starting up”; } $./hello 637 Foo::foo./Foo.pm-4> Starting up
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Location-Awareness package main; use Log::Log4perl (:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init({ level => $DEBUG, layout => “%r %M %F-%L> %m%n”, }); Foo::foo(); # unchanged! $./hello 637 Foo::foo./Foo.pm-4> Starting up
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Configuration Files If this becomes unwieldy : Log::Log4perl->easy_init({ level => $DEBUG, layout => “%r %M %F-%L>%m%n”, });
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Configuration Files #l4p.conf l4p.logger = DEBUG, Screen l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.Screen.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Log::Log4perl->init( “l4p.conf” );
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Advantages of Config Files Can be edited –indepentently of the script –while the script runs –by people without access to the code
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Remote Control #3: Categories (Loggers)
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Turn on Logging Everywhere Script Modules l4p.logger = DEBUG, Screen
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Using Categories l4p.logger.Net.Amazon = \ DEBUG, Screen Net::Amazon Script Modules
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Using Categories l4p.logger.main = \ DEBUG, Screen main Net::Amazon Script Modules
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Using Categories l4p.logger.main = DEBUG, Screen l4p.logger.Net.Amazon = \ DEBUG, Screen Modules Script Net::Amazon main
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Categories #l4p.conf l4p.logger.main = DEBUG, Screen l4p.logger.Net.Amazon = DEBUG, Screen l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.Screen.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Amazon main
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Category Inheritance #l4p.conf l4p.logger.Net = DEBUG, Screen l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.Screen.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Google Net::Amazon main
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Remote Control #5: Appenders
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Root Logger #l4p.conf l4p.logger = DEBUG, Screen l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.Screen.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Google Net::Amazon main
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Multiple Appenders #l4p.conf l4p.logger.main = DEBUG, Screen l4p.logger.Net.Amazon = DEBUG, File l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = SimpleLayout l4p.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File l4p.appender.File.filename = /var/log/myapp.log l4p.appender.File.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.File.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Amazon main Screen File
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Multiple Appenders (different log levels) #l4p.conf l4p.logger.main = DEBUG, Screen l4p.logger.Net.Amazon = ERROR, File l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = SimpleLayout l4p.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File l4p.appender.File.filename = /var/log/myapp.log l4p.appender.File.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.File.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Amazon main Screen File
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Multiple Appenders #l4p.conf l4p.logger.main = DEBUG, Screen, File l4p.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen l4p.appender.Screen.Layout = SimpleLayout l4p.appender.File = Log::Log4perl::Appender::File l4p.appender.File.filename = /var/log/myapp.log l4p.appender.File.Layout = PatternLayout l4p.appender.File.Layout.ConversionPattern = \ %r %M %F-%L> %m%n Net::Amazon main Screen File
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Log4perl Flow Application sends a log message (Category, Priority) Log4perl Configuration decides go/no go, based on Category and Priority Appender Layout ?
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Log4perl and Log4j Log::Log4perl ports Log4j to Perl Log4j: de facto Java logging standard, by Ceki Gülcü –Latest development: ‘logback’ http://logging.apache.org/log4j Log::Log4perl adds perlisms demanded by users
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Log4perl History 0.01 release 2002 Current release 1.17 (07/2008) Authors: Mike Schilli, Kevin Goess Used by major banks, target.com, fedex.com, Yahoo!, Google, … Several CPAN modules support it (e.g. Catalyst, Net::Amazon, …) Every major Linux distro has it (Ubuntu, Suse, Fedora …)
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Log4perl Release History
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Design Goals Easy to use in small scripts Scales easily with growing architecture Log4perl-enabled CPAN modules can be used with and without Log4perl initialization Optimized for Speed Open Architecture, extensible
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Combine Remote Controls Write code once, and L4p-enabled scripts/modules can be used –with any logging configuration you desire –by changing loggers, appenders and layouts independently –similar to dtrace probes No need to change your source code to change the logging behavior
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Init and Watch Log::Log4perl->init(“l4p.conf”); Log::Log4perl->init(\$conf_string); Log::Log4perl->init_and_watch(“l4p.conf”, 30); Log::Log4perl->init_and_watch(“l4p.conf”, ‘HUP’ );
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Demo
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Appenders Appenders are output sinks Get called if a message passes category and level hurdles
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Appenders Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen Log::Log4perl::Appender::File Log::Log4perl::Appender::Socket Log::Log4perl::Appender::DBI Log::Log4perl::Appender::Synchronized Log::Log4perl::Appender::RRDs Log::Dispatch provides even more:
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Log::Dispatch Appenders Log::Dispatch::ApacheLog Log::Dispatch::DBI, Log::Dispatch::Email, Log::Dispatch::Email::MIMELite Log::Dispatch::File Log::Dispatch::FileRotate Log::Dispatch::Screen Log::Dispatch::Syslog, Log::Dispatch::Tk
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Example: Rotating Log File Appender Keep 5 days of logfiles, then delete: log4perl.category = WARN, Logfile log4perl.appender.Logfile = Log::Dispatch::FileRotate log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = test.log log4perl.appender.Logfile.max = 5 log4perl.appender.Logfile.DatePattern = yyyy-MM-dd log4perl.appender.Logfile.TZ = PST log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = \ Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
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Rotating Files Rotating File Appender: –Log::Dispatch::FileRotate –Single request pays for rotation –Rotation runs as particular user External Rotators (e.g. newsyslog ): – recreate flag makes sure file appender adjusts –recreate_check_interval saves on stat() calls
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Layouts SimpleLayout $log->debug(“Sending Mail”); DEBUG – Sending Mail log4perl.appender.Screen = \ Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout
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Layouts PatternLayout $log->debug(“Sending Mail”); 2004/10/17 18:47:25 l4ptest.pl:25> Sending Mail log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = \ Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout.ConversionPattern = \ %d %F{1}:%L> %m %n
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Layouts PatternLayout %T stack trace %c Category of the logging event. %C Fully qualified package (or class) name of the caller %d Current date in yyyy/MM/dd hh:mm:ss format %F File where the logging event occurred %H Hostname %l calling method + file + line %L Line number within the file where the log statement was issued %m The message to be logged %M Method or function where the logging request was issued %n Newline (OS-independent) %p Priority of the logging event %P pid of the current process %r Number of milliseconds elapsed from program start %x The elements of the NDC stack %X{key} The entry 'key' of the MDC % A literal percent (%) sign
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Layouts Still not enough? Write your own: log4perl.PatternLayout.cspec.U = sub { return "UID $<" } … log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout = \ Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout.ConversionPattern = \ %d %U> %m %n
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Speed
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Benchmarks 1M/sec suppressed calls 50k/sec logged messages (memory appender) No degradation with subcategories
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Avoid Wasting Cycles for (@super_long_array) { $logger->debug("Element: $_\n"); } if($logger->is_debug()) { for (@super_long_array) { $logger->debug("Element: $_\n"); }
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Dirty Tricks
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Resurrect in a Single File The :resurrect target uncomments lines starting with ###l4p : use Log4perl qw(:easy :resurrect); sub foo { # … ###l4p DEBUG “foo was here”; }
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Resurrect L4p in all Modules The Log::Log4perl::Resurrector touches all subsequently loaded modules (experimental!): use Log4perl qw(:easy); use Log::Log4perl::Resurrector; use Foo::Bar; # Deploy a module without requiring L4p at all! package Foo::Bar; ###l4p use Log4perl qw(:easy); sub foo { ###l4p DEBUG “This will be resurrected!”; }
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The Future
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Wouldn’t it be nice … … if all modules on CPAN had a standard logging interface?
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Log4perl-enable a CPAN Module package Foo; sub foo { # … do something } 1;
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Log4perl-enable a CPAN Module package Foo; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); sub foo { # … do something DEBUG “Fooing $bar”; } 1;
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… and voila, your CPAN module has a built-in remote.
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Be Open Let other people debug your module in a standard way.
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Q & A
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Thank You! Log::Log4perl Project Page (includes slides of this talk): http:/log4perl.com Email me: Mike Schilli mschilli@yahoo-inc.com
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Don’t forget to submit a Review! Go to the OSCON schedule, click on this talk and then ‘rate this talk’ Thanks!
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Bonus Slides
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Advanced Trickery
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Infiltrating LWP Ever wondered what LWP is doing behind the scenes? use LWP::UserAgent; use HTTP::Request::Common; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG); Log::Log4perl->infiltrate_lwp(); my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new(); my $resp = $ua->request(GET "http://www.yahoo.com");
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Infiltrating LWP Getting LWP to use Log4perl for logging: 2004/10/20 18:36:43 () 2004/10/20 18:36:43 GET http://www.yahoo.com 2004/10/20 18:36:43 Not proxied 2004/10/20 18:36:43 () 2004/10/20 18:36:43 read 634 bytes 2004/10/20 18:36:43 read 4096 bytes … 2004/10/20 18:36:43 read 2488 bytes 2004/10/20 18:36:43 Simple response: OK
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Pitfalls Beginner’s Pitfalls
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Appender Additivity: –Once a lower level logger decides to fire, it will forward the message to its appenders. –It will also forward the message unconditionally to all of its parent logger’s appenders.
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Beginner’s Pitfalls Appender Additivity (with dupes) package Net::Amazon; DEBUG(“Debugging!”); log4perl.category = FATAL, Screen log4perl.category.Net.Amazon = DEBUG, Screen log4perl.appender.Screen = \ Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout DEBUG - Debugging!
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Appender Additivity Net::Amazon Net root DEBUG FATAL Screen Appender File Appender
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Beginner’s Pitfalls Appender Additivity (no dupes) package Net::Amazon; DEBUG(“Debugging!”); Q log4perl.category = ERROR, Screen log4perl.category.Net.Amazon = DEBUG, Screen log4perl.additivity.Net.Amazon = 0 log4perl.appender.Screen = \ Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = SimpleLayout DEBUG – Debugging!
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Write Your Own Appender (1) package ColorScreenAppender; our @ISA = qw(Log::Log4perl::Appender); use Term::ANSIColor; sub new { my($class, %options) = @_; my $self = {%options, …}; bless $self, $class; } sub log { my($self, %params) = @_; print colored($params{message}, $self->{color}); }
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Write Your Own Appender (2) log4perl.logger = INFO, ColorApp log4perl.appender.ColorApp=ColorScreenAppender log4perl.appender.ColorApp.color = red log4perl.appender.ColorApp.layout = SimpleLayout
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Filters Last minute chance for Appenders to block More expensive than Level/Category blocking Text/Level Match comes with L4p Write your own custom filters
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Filters log4perl.category = INFO, Screen log4perl.filter.MyFilter = \ Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch log4perl.filter.M1.StringToMatch = let this through log4perl.appender.Screen = \ Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen log4perl.appender.Screen.Filter = MyFilter log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = \ Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
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Filters log4perl.filter.M1 = Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch log4perl.filter.M1.StringToMatch = let this through log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true log4perl.filter.M1 = Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch log4perl.filter.M1.LevelToMatch = INFO log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true
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Best Practices Don’t provide program name, function name in the message. Use Layouts instead. Log plenty. Don’t worry about space, use rotating log files for chatty output.
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What you should log Program starting up, shutting down Function parameters Milestones in request processing Start/end of lenghty operations (e.g. DB access) result of called function (logged in calling function)
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What you shouldn’t log Function/method names (although you want parameters) Date Process ID … everything else provided by the layout
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Error Handling use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); do_something or LOGDIE “Horrible error!”; LOGCARP, LOGCLUCK, LOGCONFESS etc. also available.
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Best Practices Rolling out new L4p-enabled Modules package My::Module; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); sub new { # … } sub foo { DEBUG “I’m here”; # … } sub bar { INFO “Now I’m here”; # … } # Use w/o Log4perl use My::Module; $o = My::Module->new(); $o->foo(); # Log4perl enabled use My::Module; use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init($DEBUG); $o = My::Module->new(); $o->foo();
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Gotchas Avoid ‘append’ on NFS (creating lots of ‘read’ traffic) Don’t put expensive operations into the logger call which are executed before the logger decides Permission issues with rotating file appenders
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mod_perl Init() in startup handler Current limitation: One init(). Use init_once() if you’re not sure who inits first.
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Combat overlapping Messages Either live with it or –Use the Synchronized appender –Use Appender.File.syswrite=1
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Driving Log::Log4perl further Bug Fixes: Submit to log4perl-devel@sourceforge.netlog4perl-devel@sourceforge.net New Features: Propose features or send patches New Appenders: Release separately as a module in the Log::Log4perl::Appender::xx namespace on CPAN … or contact me: mschilli@yahoo-inc.com
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Easy Mode Init with Files use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy); Log::Log4perl->easy_init({ level => $DEBUG, file => “>file.log”, category => “Bar::Twix”, });
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Multiline Layout Instead of 2007/04/04 23:59:01 This is a message with multiple lines get this: 2007/04/04 23:59:01 This is 2007/04/04 23:59:01 a message with 2007/04/04 23:59:01 multiple lines with PatternLayout::Multiline: log4perl.appender.Logfile. layout = \ Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout::Multiline log4perl.appender.Logfile.layout.ConversionPattern = %d %m %n
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Perl Hooks Add parameters known at init() time log4perl.appender.Logfile.filename = sub { \ “mylog.$$.log” }
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Loggers Have a – category (e.g. “Net::Amazon” ) – priority (e.g. $DEBUG ) Take a message (e.g. “Starting” )
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Loggers Pass on their message if –logging has been configured for their category ( “Net::Amazon”) or a parent category ( “Net”, “” ) –and (!) the message priority (e.g. $DEBUG ) is greater or equal than the configured log level (e.g. $DEBUG ) for the category
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Limit Throughput: Levels and Categories Categories determine which parts of the system are addressed. my $log = get_logger(“Net::Amazon”); or simply package Net::Amazon; DEBUG “…”; Levels indicate the message priority. $log->debug(“Request sent ($bytes bytes)”;
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Displaying Logs with Chainsaw Log4j features an XML layout and a socket appender XML output is displayed in a nice GUI called Chainsaw Log::Log4perl also features an XML layout and a socket appender … XML output is also displayed in a nice GUI called Chainsaw!
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Displaying Logs with Chainsaw Java / log4j Program Log::Log4perl enabled Perl Script Log::Log4perl::Layout::XML Log::Log4perl::Appender::Socket
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Displaying Logs with Chainsaw
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