java.util.logging.Logger doesn't respect java.util.logging.Level?
In plain Java SE 6 environment:
Logger l = Logger.getLogger("nameless");
l.setLevel(Level.ALL);
l.fine("somemessage");
Nothing shows up in Eclipse console. l.info("") and above works just fine, but anything below fine just doesn't seem to work. What's could be wrong? TIA.
Solution 1:
Even though the Logger level is set to ALL, the ConsoleHandler (the default Handler on the logger) still has a default level of INFO. This comes from the default logging.properties in JAVA_HOME/jre/lib
Solution 2:
Instead of looping through all handlers and set the logging level, I prefer to set only the level of the console handler:
//get the top Logger
Logger topLogger = java.util.logging.Logger.getLogger("");
// Handler for console (reuse it if it already exists)
Handler consoleHandler = null;
//see if there is already a console handler
for (Handler handler : topLogger.getHandlers()) {
if (handler instanceof ConsoleHandler) {
//found the console handler
consoleHandler = handler;
break;
}
}
if (consoleHandler == null) {
//there was no console handler found, create a new one
consoleHandler = new ConsoleHandler();
topLogger.addHandler(consoleHandler);
}
//set the console handler to fine:
consoleHandler.setLevel(java.util.logging.Level.FINEST);
Solution 3:
An indivual at my workplace found the following to work:
public class Foo {
private final static Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(Foo.class.getName());
public static final void main(String[] args) {
ConsoleHandler ch = new ConsoleHandler();
ch.setLevel(Level.FINEST);
Foo.logger.addHandler(ch);
Foo.logger.setLevel(Level.FINEST);
Foo.logger.finest("test");
}
}
If you just set the root or the handler to finest (exclusively) then it didn't work. When I set both to FINEST
then it works. His explanation was:
Both the logger and its handlers have Log Levels… The order of filtering is Logger then Handlers. That means it checks to see if the log message passes the loggers filter first, then sends the message on to the individual handlers for filtering.
He further explained it using the following examples:
Logger myLogger
has a level ofFINEST
and a singleConsoleHandler myHandler
which has a level ofINFO
myLogger.fine("foo")
à message makes it past the logger’s filter, but gets stopper by the handler’s filter… Nothing output.myLogger.info("foo")
à passes both filters andfoo
is output.
Now…
Logger myLogger
has a level ofINFO
and a singleConsoleHandler myHandler
which has a level ofFINEST
myLogger.fine("foo")
à message gets stopped by the logger’s filter and never makes it to the handler... Nothing output.myLogger.info("foo")
à passes both filters andfoo
is output.
Now…
Logger myLogger
has a level ofFINEST
and a singleConsoleHandler myHandler
which has a level ofFINEST
myLogger.fine("foo")
à passes both filters and "foo
" is output.myLogger.info("foo")
à passes both filters andfoo
is output.
Solution 4:
You need to set the log level on both the handlers in the logger, and the logger itself. Logging is only performed at the "coarsest" of the two levels. Here is a logging class that does the job.
import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.io.StringWriter;
import java.time.Instant;
import java.time.ZoneId;
import java.time.ZonedDateTime;
import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;
import java.util.logging.ConsoleHandler;
import java.util.logging.Formatter;
import java.util.logging.Handler;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.LogRecord;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
public class Log {
private static final Logger logger = Logger.getGlobal();
private static Level logLevel = Level.INFO;
static {
// Remove all the default handlers (usually just one console handler)
Logger rootLogger = Logger.getLogger("");
Handler[] rootHandlers = rootLogger.getHandlers();
for (Handler handler : rootHandlers) {
rootLogger.removeHandler(handler);
}
// Add our own handler
ConsoleHandler handler = new ConsoleHandler();
handler.setLevel(logLevel);
handler.setFormatter(new LogFormatter());
logger.addHandler(handler);
logger.setLevel(logLevel);
}
public static class LogFormatter extends Formatter {
@Override
public String format(LogRecord record) {
String stackTrace = "";
Throwable thrown = record.getThrown();
if (thrown != null) {
StringWriter stacktraceWriter = new StringWriter();
try (PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(stacktraceWriter)) {
thrown.printStackTrace(writer);
}
stackTrace = stacktraceWriter.toString();
}
return ZonedDateTime.ofInstant(Instant.ofEpochMilli(record.getMillis()), ZoneId.of("UTC")).format(DateTimeFormatter.ISO_ZONED_DATE_TIME) + "\t" + record.getLevel()
+ "\t" + record.getMessage() + "\n" + stackTrace;
}
}
private static final String classname = Log.class.getName();
private static String callerRef() {
StackTraceElement[] stackTraceElements = Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace();
if (stackTraceElements.length < 4) {
return "";
} else {
int i = 1;
for (; i < stackTraceElements.length; i++) {
if (stackTraceElements[i].getClassName().equals(classname)) {
break;
}
}
for (; i < stackTraceElements.length; i++) {
if (!stackTraceElements[i].getClassName().equals(classname)) {
break;
}
}
if (i < stackTraceElements.length) {
return stackTraceElements[i].toString();
} else {
return "[in unknown method]";
}
}
}
public static void setLogLevel(Level newLogLevel) {
logLevel = newLogLevel;
for (Handler handler : logger.getHandlers()) {
handler.setLevel(newLogLevel);
}
Log.logger.setLevel(newLogLevel);
}
public static int getLevelNum() {
return logLevel.intValue();
}
public static int getLevelNum(Level level) {
return level.intValue();
}
public static void fine(String msg) {
logger.log(Level.FINE, msg);
}
public static void info(String msg) {
logger.log(Level.INFO, msg);
}
public static void warning(String msg) {
logger.log(Level.WARNING, msg + "\t " + callerRef());
}
public static void error(String msg) {
logger.log(Level.SEVERE, msg + "\t " + callerRef());
}
public static void exception(String msg, Throwable cause) {
logger.log(Level.SEVERE, msg + "\t " + callerRef(), cause);
}
}