package bboss.org.apache.velocity.runtime.log; /* * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one * or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file * distributed with this work for additional information * regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance * with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, * software distributed under the License is distributed on an * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the * specific language governing permissions and limitations * under the License. */ import java.util.List; import java.util.ArrayList; import java.util.Iterator; import bboss.org.apache.velocity.exception.VelocityException; import bboss.org.apache.velocity.runtime.RuntimeServices; import bboss.org.apache.velocity.runtime.RuntimeConstants; import bboss.org.apache.velocity.util.ClassUtils; /** * <p> * This class is responsible for instantiating the correct LogChute * </p> * * <p> * The approach is : * </p> * <ul> * <li> * First try to see if the user is passing in a living object * that is a LogChute, allowing the app to give its living * custom loggers. * </li> * <li> * Next, run through the (possible) list of classes specified * specified as loggers, taking the first one that appears to * work. This is how we support finding logkit, log4j or * jdk logging, whichever is in the classpath and found first, * as all three are listed as defaults. * </li> * <li> * Finally, we turn to the System.err stream and print log messages * to it if nothing else works. * </li> * * @author <a href="mailto:jvanzyl@apache.org">Jason van Zyl</a> * @author <a href="mailto:jon@latchkey.com">Jon S. Stevens</a> * @author <a href="mailto:geirm@optonline.net">Geir Magnusson Jr.</a> * @author <a href="mailto:nbubna@apache.org">Nathan Bubna</a> * @version $Id: LogManager.java 991708 2010-09-01 21:17:56Z nbubna $ */ public class LogManager { // Creates a new logging system or returns an existing one // specified by the application. private static LogChute createLogChute(RuntimeServices rsvc) throws Exception { Log log = rsvc.getLog(); /* If a LogChute or LogSystem instance was set as a configuration * value, use that. This is any class the user specifies. */ Object o = rsvc.getProperty(RuntimeConstants.RUNTIME_LOG_LOGSYSTEM); if (o != null) { // first check for a LogChute if (o instanceof LogChute) { try { ((LogChute)o).init(rsvc); return (LogChute)o; } catch (Exception e) { String msg = "Could not init runtime.log.logsystem " + o; log.error(msg, e); throw new VelocityException(msg, e); } } // then check for a LogSystem else if (o instanceof LogSystem) { // inform the user about the deprecation log.debug("LogSystem has been deprecated. Please use a LogChute implementation."); try { // wrap the LogSystem into a chute. LogChute chute = new LogChuteSystem((LogSystem)o); chute.init(rsvc); return chute; } catch (Exception e) { String msg = "Could not init runtime.log.logsystem " + o; log.error(msg, e); throw new VelocityException(msg, e); } } else { String msg = o.getClass().getName() + " object set as runtime.log.logsystem is not a valid log implementation."; log.error(msg); throw new VelocityException(msg); } } /* otherwise, see if a class was specified. You can put multiple * classes, and we use the first one we find. * * Note that the default value of this property contains the * AvalonLogChute, the Log4JLogChute, CommonsLogLogChute, * ServletLogChute, and the JdkLogChute for * convenience - so we use whichever we works first. */ List classes = new ArrayList(); Object obj = rsvc.getProperty( RuntimeConstants.RUNTIME_LOG_LOGSYSTEM_CLASS ); /* * we might have a list, or not - so check */ if ( obj instanceof List) { classes = (List) obj; } else if ( obj instanceof String) { classes.add( obj ); } /* * now run through the list, trying each. It's ok to * fail with a class not found, as we do this to also * search out a default simple file logger */ for( Iterator ii = classes.iterator(); ii.hasNext(); ) { String claz = (String) ii.next(); if (claz != null && claz.length() > 0 ) { log.debug("Trying to use logger class " + claz ); try { o = ClassUtils.getNewInstance( claz ); if (o instanceof LogChute) { ((LogChute)o).init(rsvc); log.debug("Using logger class " + claz); return (LogChute)o; } else if (o instanceof LogSystem) { // inform the user about the deprecation log.debug("LogSystem has been deprecated. Please use a LogChute implementation."); LogChute chute = new LogChuteSystem((LogSystem)o); chute.init(rsvc); return chute; } else { String msg = "The specified logger class " + claz + " does not implement the "+LogChute.class.getName()+" interface."; log.error(msg); // be extra informative if it appears to be a classloader issue // this should match all our provided LogChutes if (isProbablyProvidedLogChute(claz)) { // if it's likely to be ours, tip them off about classloader stuff log.error("This appears to be a ClassLoader issue. Check for multiple Velocity jars in your classpath."); } throw new VelocityException(msg); } } catch(NoClassDefFoundError ncdfe) { // note these errors for anyone debugging the app if (isProbablyProvidedLogChute(claz)) { log.debug("Target log system for " + claz + " is not available (" + ncdfe.toString() + "). Falling back to next log system..."); } else { log.debug("Couldn't find class " + claz + " or necessary supporting classes in classpath.", ncdfe); } } catch(UnsupportedOperationException uoe) { // note these errors for anyone debugging the app if (isProbablyProvidedLogChute(claz)) { log.debug("Target log system for " + claz + " is not supported (" + uoe.toString() + "). Falling back to next log system..."); } else { log.debug("Couldn't find necessary resources for "+claz, uoe); } } catch(Exception e) { String msg = "Failed to initialize an instance of " + claz + " with the current runtime configuration."; // log unexpected init exception at higher priority log.error(msg, e); throw new VelocityException(msg,e); } } } /* If the above failed, that means either the user specified a * logging class that we can't find, there weren't the necessary * dependencies in the classpath for it, or there were the same * problems for the default loggers, log4j and Java1.4+. * Since we really don't know and we want to be sure the user knows * that something went wrong with the logging, let's fall back to the * surefire SystemLogChute. No panicking or failing to log!! */ LogChute slc = new SystemLogChute(); slc.init(rsvc); log.debug("Using SystemLogChute."); return slc; } /** * Simply tells whether the specified classname probably is provided * by Velocity or is implemented by someone else. Not surefire, but * it'll probably always be right. In any case, this method shouldn't * be relied upon for anything important. */ private static boolean isProbablyProvidedLogChute(String claz) { if (claz == null) { return false; } else { return (claz.startsWith("bboss.org.apache.velocity.runtime.log") && claz.endsWith("LogChute")); } } /** * Update the Log instance with the appropriate LogChute and other * settings determined by the RuntimeServices. * @param log * @param rsvc * @throws Exception * @since 1.5 */ public static void updateLog(Log log, RuntimeServices rsvc) throws Exception { // create a new LogChute using the RuntimeServices LogChute newLogChute = createLogChute(rsvc); LogChute oldLogChute = log.getLogChute(); // pass the new LogChute to the log first, // (if the old was a HoldingLogChute, we don't want it // to accrue new messages during the transfer below) log.setLogChute(newLogChute); // If the old LogChute was the pre-Init logger, // dump its messages into the new system. if (oldLogChute instanceof HoldingLogChute) { HoldingLogChute hlc = (HoldingLogChute)oldLogChute; hlc.transferTo(newLogChute); } } }