How to send java.util.logging to log4j?

JavaLoggingLog4jApache CommonsSlf4j

Java Problem Overview


I have an existing application which does all of its logging against log4j. We use a number of other libraries that either also use log4j, or log against Commons Logging, which ends up using log4j under the covers in our environment. One of our dependencies even logs against slf4j, which also works fine since it eventually delegates to log4j as well.

Now, I'd like to add ehcache to this application for some caching needs. Previous versions of ehcache used commons-logging, which would have worked perfectly in this scenario, but as of version 1.6-beta1 they have removed the dependency on commons-logging and replaced it with java.util.logging instead.

Not really being familiar with the built-in JDK logging available with java.util.logging, is there an easy way to have any log messages sent to JUL logged against log4j, so I can use my existing configuration and set up for any logging coming from ehcache?

Looking at the javadocs for JUL, it looks like I could set up a bunch of environment variables to change which LogManager implementation is used, and perhaps use that to wrap log4j Loggers in the JUL Logger class. Is this the correct approach?

Kind of ironic that a library's use of built-in JDK logging would cause such a headache when (most of) the rest of the world is using 3rd party libraries instead.

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

One approach I have used successfully is to use slf4j as my primary logging API. I then have slf4j bind to log4j. 3rd party dependencies using other frameworks (like JUL) can be bridged to slf4j.

Solution 2 - Java

We use SLF4J on our current project and it's worked very well for us. SLF4J is written by Ceki Gülcü, the creator of Log4J, and he's done a really great job. In our code we use the SLF4J logging APIs directly, and we configure SLF4J so that calls from the Jakarta Commons Logging (JCL), java.util.logging (JUL), and Log4J APIs are all bridged to the SLF4J APIs. We need to do that because like you we use third party (open source) libraries that have chosen different logging APIs.

On the bottom of SLF4J, you configure it to use a particular logger implementation. It comes with an internal, or "simple" logger, and you can override this with Log4J, JUL, or Logback. Configuration is all done simply by dropping in different jar files in your classpath.

Originally, we used the Logback implementation, also written by Ceki Gülcü. This is very powerful. However, we then decided to deploy our application to the Glassfish Java EE application server, whose log viewer expects JUL-formatted messages. So today I switched from Logback to JUL, and in just a few minutes I replaced two Logback jars with an SLF4J jar that connects it to the JUL implementation.

So like @overthink, I would heartily recommend using SLF4J in your setup.

Solution 3 - Java

There is a simpler alternative than SLF4J to bridge JUL with log4j, see http://people.apache.org/~psmith/logging.apache.org/sandbox/jul-log4j-bridge/examples.html

You just have to put the jul-log4j-bridge on the classpath and add a system property:

-Djava.util.logging.manager=org.apache.logging.julbridge.JULBridgeLogManager

jul-log4j-bridge is not in Maven Central and can be fetched from this repository:

<repository>
  <id>psmith</id>
  <url>http://people.apache.org/~psmith/logging.apache.org/repo</url>
  <releases>
    <enabled>false</enabled>
  </releases>
</repository>

and then used with:

<dependency>
  <groupId>org.apache.logging</groupId>
  <artifactId>apache-jul-log4j-bridge</artifactId>
  <version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
  <scope>test</scope>
  <exclusions>
    <exclusion>
      <groupId>log4j</groupId>
      <artifactId>apache-log4j-component</artifactId>
    </exclusion>
  </exclusions>
</dependency>

It's also possible to rebuild it from sources with the following steps:

  1. svn co http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/logging/sandbox/jul-to-log4j-bridge/
  2. edit pom.xml, replace the dependency on log4j:log4j:1.2.15 with log4j:apache-log4j-extras:1.2.17 and remove the dependency on apache-log4j-component
  3. mvn package

Solution 4 - Java

OCTOBER 2014

Since version 2.1 of log4j exists the component log4j-jul, which allows exactly this. Still, in case you are using log4j 1, it has to be possible to upgrade to log4j2 in order to use this approach.

JDK Logging Adapter

Class LogManager

Migrate from log4j 1.x to log4j 2

Solution 5 - Java

The slf4j site I believe has a bridge for passing java.util.logging events via slf4j (and hence to log4j).

Yes, the SLF4J download contains jul-to-slf4j which I believe does just that. It contains a JUL handler to pass records to SLF4J.

Solution 6 - Java

@Yishai - Thanks for posting the link to my wiki. The example there redirects JUL to Log4J and I've had it running in a production system for a few years. JBoss 5.x already redirects JUL to Log4J, so I took it out when we upgraded. I have a newer one that redirects to SLF4J, which I use on a few things now. I'll post that when I get a chance.

However, SLF4J already has it:

http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.slf4j/jul-to-slf4j

Solution 7 - Java

you should manually add blew at startup

SLF4JBridgeHandler.removeHandlersForRootLogger()
SLF4JBridgeHandler.install()

demo -> https://gist.github.com/jiahut/654ecc75a13b0a1d8f3b4d5d2d69dc6d

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
Questionmatt bView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavaoverthinkView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavaJim FerransView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavaEmmanuel BourgView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavaAdrianRMView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - JavaaraqnidView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - JavaJoshua DavisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - JavajiahutView Answer on Stackoverflow