Michael Schilli > Log-Log4perl-1.14 > Log::Log4perl::Appender

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Source   Latest Release: Log-Log4perl-1.26

NAME ^

Log::Log4perl::Appender - Log appender class

SYNOPSIS ^

  use Log::Log4perl;

      # Define a logger
  my $logger = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("abc.def.ghi");

      # Define a layout
  my $layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout->new(
                   "%d (%F:%L)> %m");

      # Define an appender
  my $appender = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new(
                   "Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen",
                   name => 'dumpy');

      # Set the appender's layout
  $appender->layout($layout);
  $logger->add_appender($appender);

DESCRIPTION ^

This class is a wrapper around the Log::Log4perl::Appender appender set.

It also supports the <Log::Dispatch::*> collections of appenders. The module hides the idiosyncrasies of Log::Dispatch (e.g. every dispatcher gotta have a name, but there's no accessor to retrieve it) from Log::Log4perl and yet re-uses the extremely useful variety of dispatchers already created and tested in Log::Dispatch.

FUNCTIONS ^

Log::Log4perl::Appender->new($dispatcher_class_name, ...);

The constructor new() takes the name of the appender class to be created as a string (!) argument, optionally followed by a number of appender-specific parameters, for example:

      # Define an appender
  my $appender = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new(
      "Log::Log4perl::Appender::File"
      filename => 'out.log');

In case of Log::Dispatch appenders, if no name parameter is specified, the appender object will create a unique one (format appNNN), which can be retrieved later via the name() method:

  print "The appender's name is ", $appender->name(), "\n";

Other parameters are specific to the appender class being used. In the case above, the filename parameter specifies the name of the Log::Log4perl::Appender::File dispatcher used.

However, if, for instance, you're using a Log::Dispatch::Email dispatcher to send you email, you'll have to specify from and to email addresses. Every dispatcher is different. Please check the Log::Dispatch::* documentation for the appender used for details on specific requirements.

The new() method will just pass these parameters on to a newly created Log::Dispatch::* object of the specified type.

When it comes to logging, the Log::Log4perl::Appender will transparently relay all messages to the Log::Dispatch::* object it carries in its womb.

$appender->layout($layout);

The layout() method sets the log layout used by the appender to the format specified by the Log::Log4perl::Layout::* object which is passed to it as a reference. Currently there's two layouts available:

    Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
    Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout

Please check the Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout and Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout manual pages for details.

Supported Appenders ^

Here's the list of appender modules currently available via Log::Dispatch, if not noted otherwise, written by Dave Rolsky:

       Log::Dispatch::ApacheLog
       Log::Dispatch::DBI (by Tatsuhiko Miyagawa)
       Log::Dispatch::Email,
       Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSend,
       Log::Dispatch::Email::MailSendmail,
       Log::Dispatch::Email::MIMELite
       Log::Dispatch::File
       Log::Dispatch::FileRotate (by Mark Pfeiffer)
       Log::Dispatch::Handle
       Log::Dispatch::Screen
       Log::Dispatch::Syslog
       Log::Dispatch::Tk (by Dominique Dumont)

Log4perl doesn't care which ones you use, they're all handled in the same way via the Log::Log4perl::Appender interface. Please check the well-written manual pages of the Log::Dispatch hierarchy on how to use each one of them.

Parameters passed on to the appender's log() method ^

When calling the appender's log()-Funktion, Log::Log4perl will submit a list of key/value pairs. Entries to the following keys are guaranteed to be present:

message

Text of the rendered message

log4p_category

Name of the category of the logger that triggered the event.

log4p_level

Log::Log4perl level of the event

Pitfalls ^

Since the Log::Dispatch::File appender truncates log files by default, and most of the time this is not what you want, we've instructed Log::Log4perl to change this behaviour by slipping it the mode => append parameter behind the scenes. So, effectively with Log::Log4perl 0.23, a configuration like

    log4perl.category = INFO, FileAppndr
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr          = Log::Dispatch::File
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr.filename = test.log
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr.layout   = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout

will always append to an existing logfile test.log while if you specifically request clobbering like in

    log4perl.category = INFO, FileAppndr
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr          = Log::Dispatch::File
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr.filename = test.log
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr.mode     = write
    log4perl.appender.FileAppndr.layout   = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout

it will overwrite an existing log file test.log and start from scratch.

Appenders Expecting Message Chunks ^

Instead of simple strings, certain appenders are expecting multiple fields as log messages. If a statement like

    $logger->debug($ip, $user, "signed in");

causes an off-the-shelf Log::Log4perl::Screen appender to fire, the appender will just concatenate the three message chunks passed to it in order to form a single string. The chunks will be separated by a string defined in $Log::Log4perl::JOIN_MSG_ARRAY_CHAR (defaults to the empty string "").

However, different appenders might choose to interpret the message above differently: An appender like Log::Log4perl::Appender::DBI might take the three arguments passed to the logger and put them in three separate rows into the DB.

The warp_message appender option is used to specify the desired behaviour. If no setting for the appender property

    # *** Not defined ***
    # log4perl.appender.SomeApp.warp_message

is defined in the Log4perl configuration file, the appender referenced by SomeApp will fall back to the standard behaviour and join all message chunks together, separating them by $Log::Log4perl::JOIN_MSG_ARRAY_CHAR.

If, on the other hand, it is set to a false value, like in

    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.layout=NoopLayout
    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.warp_message = 0

then the message chunks are passed unmodified to the appender as an array reference. Please note that you need to set the appender's layout to Log::Log4perl::Layout::NoopLayout which just leaves the messages chunks alone instead of formatting them or replacing conversion specifiers.

Please note that the standard appenders in the Log::Dispatch hierarchy will choke on a bunch of messages passed to them as an array reference. You can't use warp_message = 0 (or the function name syntax defined below) on them. Only special appenders like Log::Log4perl::Appender::DBI can deal with this.

If (and now we're getting fancy) an appender expects message chunks, but we would like to pre-inspect and probably modify them before they're actually passed to the appender's log method, an inspection subroutine can be defined with the appender's warp_message property:

    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.layout=NoopLayout
    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.warp_message = sub { \
                                           $#_ = 2 if @_ > 3; \
                                           return @_; }

The inspection subroutine defined by the warp_message property will receive the list of message chunks, like they were passed to the logger and is expected to return a corrected list. The example above simply limits the argument list to a maximum of three by cutting off excess elements and returning the shortened list.

Also, the warp function can be specified by name like in

    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.layout=NoopLayout
    log4perl.appender.SomeApp.warp_message = main::filter_my_message

In this example, filter_my_message is a function in the main package, defined like this:

    my $COUNTER = 0;

    sub filter_my_message {
        my @chunks = @_;
        unshift @chunks, ++$COUNTER;
        return @chunks;
    }

The subroutine above will add an ever increasing counter as an additional first field to every message passed to the SomeApp appender -- but not to any other appender in the system.

SEE ALSO ^

Log::Dispatch

AUTHOR ^

Mike Schilli, <log4perl@perlmeister.com>