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log/README.md

The OSGi Service Compendium specification defines a general purpose Log Service for the OSGi Platform. It is a very simple specification that doesn't provide all the functionality commonly available in enterprise-level logging tools, but its extensible service model can be used to build fairly sophisticated logging solutions.

The Log Service specification defines the following entities:

  • org.osgi.service.log.Logger - (since 1.4) interface that allows a bundle to log information, including a message, a level, an exception, and a ServiceReference object. The formatting style using {} placeholders follows the slf4j approach. A derivative of Logger called FormatterLogger uses the java.util.Formatter syntax.
  • org.osgi.service.log.LoggerFactory - (since 1.4) service interface that allows a bundle to obtain a Logger. A Logger is named and associated with a Bundle object.
  • org.osgi.service.log.admin.LoggerContext - (since 1.4) interface that allows the configuration of effective logging levels for a Bundle. The configuration can be set in Configuration Admin and via method calls.
  • org.osgi.service.log.admin.LoggerAdmin - (since 1.4) interface for managing the configuration of log levels.
  • org.osgi.service.log.LogService - legacy service interface that allows a bundle to log information, including a message, a level, an exception, a ServiceReference object, and a Bundle object. The methods of this service are deprecated and it is recommended to use LoggerFactory and Loggers instead.
  • org.osgi.service.log.LogReaderService - service interface that allows access to a list of recent LogEntry objects, and allows the registration of a LogListener object that receives LogEntry objects as they are created.
  • org.osgi.service.log.LogEntry - interface defining a log entry.
  • org.osgi.service.log.LogListener - interface defining a listener for log entries, which is notified about new log entries.

Accessing Loggers

Loggers are obtained through the LoggerFactory service:

:::java
public class Activator implements BundleActivator
{
    private volatile LoggerFactory loggerFactory;
    
    public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception 
    {	
        ServiceReference ref = context.getServiceReference(LoggerFactory.class.getName());
        if (ref != null)
        {
            loggerFactory = (LoggerFactory) context.getService(ref);
        }
    }

    //..

Elsewhere in the bundle you can then use the LoggerFactory to get a Logger for any class:

:::java
Logger logger = loggerFactory.getLogger(Foo.class);

Declarative Services (since 1.4) has a convenient integration which allows a component to obtain a logger specific to it‘s class with little effort by using a reference who’s service type is LoggerFactory while the injection type is either Logger or FormatterLogger:

:::java
@Reference(service = LoggerFactory.class)
private Logger logger;

The Logger interface defines 6 levels of logging to coincide with most other log APIs:

  • AUDIT
  • ERROR
  • WARN
  • INFO
  • DEBUG
  • TRACE

Each level has methods on the Logger interface appropriate to that level such as .info(...) and .isInfoEnabled().

Configuring Log Levels

Since 1.4 the Log Service Specification provides the ability to manage the log levels both programatically and through Configuration Admin.

Programatic configuration is achieved through the LoggerAdmin service:

:::java
ServiceReference ref = context.getServiceReference(
    LoggerAdmin.class.getName());

if (ref != null)
{
    LoggerAdmin loggerAdmin = (LoggerAdmin) context.getService(ref);

    // get the ROOT logger context
    LoggerContext rootContext = loggerAdmin.getLoggerContext(null);
    
    Map<String, LogLevel> levels = rootContext.getLogLevels();
    // adjust the levels
    rootContext.setLogLevels(levels);
    
    // get the levels for a bundle (felix scr in this case)
    LoggerContext scrContext = loggerAdmin.getLoggerContext(
        "org.apache.felix.scr");
    
    // set all of scr to DEBUG mode
    scrContext.setLogLevels(
        Collections.singletonMap(
            Logger.ROOT_LOGGER_NAME, LogLevel.DEBUG));
}

Likewise logging configuration can be handled through Configuration Admin. Following the previous example of configuring Felix SCR for DEBUG mode:

  • create a configuration object whose PID is org.osgi.service.log.admin|org.apache.felix.scr
  • set the property ROOT in the configuration to DEBUG e.g. ROOT=DEBUG

Accessing the log service (legacy)

To access a LogService instance it is necessary to look it up in the OSGi service registry as demonstrated in the following code snippet:

:::java
public class Activator implements BundleActivator
{
    public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception 
    {	
        ServiceReference ref = context.getServiceReference(LogService.class.getName());
        if (ref != null)
        {
            LogService log = (LogService) context.getService(ref);

            // Use the log...
        }
    }

    //..

It is possible, and advisable, to use more sophisticated service acquisition mechanisms like a Service Tracker, Declarative Services or iPOJO.

Using the log service (legacy)

The LogService interface provides four methods for logging:

:::java
public interface LogService
{
    //..

    // Log a message specifying a log level
    public log(int level, java.lang.String message)  

    // Log an exception
    public log(int level, java.lang.String message, java.lang.Throwable exception)  

    // Log a message specifying the ServiceReference that generated it
    public log(ServiceReference sr, int level, java.lang.String message)  

    // Log a message specifying the ServiceReference and exception
    public log(ServiceReference sr, int level, java.lang.String message, java.lang.Throwable exception)  
}	

Log levels are defined in the same interface:

  • LogService.LOG_DEBUG
  • LogService.LOG_INFO
  • LogService.LOG_WARNING
  • LogService.LOG_ERROR

Retrieving log entries

The LogReaderService provides a getLog() method to retrieve an Enumeration of the latest log entries. The following code snippets demonstrates how to retrieve it from the service registry and use it:

:::java
ServiceReference ref = context.getServiceReference(LogReaderService.class.getName());
if (ref != null)
{
    LogReaderService reader = (LogReaderService) context.getService(ref);	
    Enumeration<LogEntry> latestLogs = reader.getLog();
}

Creating and registering a LogListener

The Log Service specification doesn‘t define any particular entity to store, display, or write log entries; it’s up to the developer to implement this functionality or to choose an available implementation capable of doing that. To create such a bundle, the first step is to create an implementation of the LogListener interface. The following code shows a simple implementation that echoes the log message:

:::java
public class LogWriter implements LogListener
{
    // Invoked by the log service implementation for each log entry
    public void logged(LogEntry entry) 
    {
        System.out.println(entry.getMessage());
    }
}

The only method to implement is logged() method, which is called every time a log entry is created in the associated logging service. A LogListener implementation must be registered with the LogReaderService so it can start receiving log entries, as demonstrated in the following code snippet:

:::java
ServiceReference ref = context.getServiceReference(LogReaderService.class.getName());
if (ref != null)
{
    LogReaderService reader = (LogReaderService) context.getService(ref);
    reader.addLogListener(new LogWriter());
}

Setup of Apache Felix Log Service

The Apache Felix Log Service bundle doesn't have any specific dependency on Felix, so it can run on any OSGi container. For its configuration, it will use the following optional system properties:

PropertyDefaultDescription
org.apache.felix.log.maxSize100The maximum size of the log history. A value of -1 means the log has no maximum size; a value of 0 means that no historical information is maintained
org.apache.felix.log.storeDebugfalseDetermines whether or not debug messages will be stored in the history
org.osgi.service.log.admin.loglevelWARNThe default log level of the root Logger Context