1<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" 2 "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> 3 4<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> 5 <head> 6 <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" /> 7 <title>SLF4J Manual</title> 8 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" media="screen" href="css/site.css" /> 9 <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/prettify.css" /> 10 </head> 11 <body onload="prettyPrint(); decorate();"> 12 <script type="text/javascript">prefix='';</script> 13 <script type="text/javascript" src="js/prettify.js"></script> 14 <script type="text/javascript" src="js/jquery-min.js"></script> 15 <script type="text/javascript" src="js/decorator.js"></script> 16 <script type="text/javascript" src="templates/header.js"></script> 17 <div id="left"> 18 <script type="text/javascript" src="templates/left.js"></script> 19 </div> 20 <div id="content"> 21 22 23 <h2>SLF4J user manual</h2> 24 25 <p>The Simple Logging Facade for Java (SLF4J) serves as a simple 26 facade or abstraction for various logging frameworks, such as 27 java.util.logging, logback and log4j. SLF4J allows the end-user to 28 plug in the desired logging framework at <em>deployment</em> time. 29 Note that SLF4J-enabling your library/application implies the 30 addition of only a single mandatory dependency, namely 31 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em>.</p> 32 33 <p><span class="label">since 1.6.0</span> If no binding is found on the 34 class path, then SLF4J will default to a no-operation 35 implementation. 36 </p> 37 38 <p><span class="label">since 1.7.0</span> Printing methods in the 39 <a href="apidocs/org/slf4j/Logger.html"><code>Logger</code></a> 40 interface now offer variants accepting <a 41 href="http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/guide/language/varargs.html">varargs</a> 42 instead of <code>Object[]</code>. This change implies that SLF4J 43 requires JDK 1.5 or later. Under the hood the Java compiler 44 transforms the varargs part in methods into 45 <code>Object[]</code>. Thus, the Logger interface generated by the 46 compiler is indistinguishable in 1.7.x from its 1.6.x 47 counterpart. It follows that SLF4J version 1.7.x is totally 100% 48 no-ifs-or-buts compatible with SLF4J version 1.6.x. 49 </p> 50 51 <p><span class="label">since 1.7.5</span> Significant improvement 52 in logger retrieval times. Given the extent of the improvement, 53 users are highly encouraged to migrate to SLF4J 1.7.5 or later. 54 </p> 55 56 <p><span class="label">since 1.7.9</span> By setting the 57 <code>slf4j.detectLoggerNameMismatch</code> system property to 58 true, SLF4J can automatically <a 59 href="codes.html#loggerNameMismatch">spot incorrectly named 60 loggers</a>. 61 </p> 62 63 64 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="hello_world">Hello World</h3> 65 66 <p>As customary in programming tradition, here is an example 67 illustrating the simplest way to output "Hello world" using SLF4J. 68 It begins by getting a logger with the name "HelloWorld". This 69 logger is in turn used to log the message "Hello World". 70 </p> 71 72<pre class="prettyprint source">import org.slf4j.Logger; 73import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory; 74 75public class HelloWorld { 76 public static void main(String[] args) { 77 Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(HelloWorld.class); 78 logger.info("Hello World"); 79 } 80}</pre> 81 82 <p>To run this example, you first need to <a 83 href="download.html">download the slf4j distribution</a>, and 84 then to unpack it. Once that is done, add the file 85 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> to your class path.</p> 86 87 <p>Compiling and running <em>HelloWorld</em> will result in the 88 following output being printed on the console.</p> 89 90<pre>SLF4J: Failed to load class "org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder". 91SLF4J: Defaulting to no-operation (NOP) logger implementation 92SLF4J: See http://www.slf4j.org/codes.html#StaticLoggerBinder for further details.</pre> 93 94 <p>This warning is printed because no slf4j binding could be 95 found on your class path.</p> 96 97 <p>The warning will disappear as soon as you add a <a 98 href="#swapping">binding</a> to your class path. Assuming you add 99 <em>slf4j-simple-${project.version}.jar</em> so that your class 100 path contains:</p> 101 102 <ul> 103 <li>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</li> 104 <li>slf4j-simple-${project.version}.jar</li> 105 </ul> 106 107 <p>Compiling and running <em>HelloWorld</em> will now result in 108 the following output on the console.</p> 109 110 <pre class="output">0 [main] INFO HelloWorld - Hello World</pre> 111 112 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="typical_usage">Typical usage 113 pattern</h3> 114 115 <p>The sample code below illustrates the typical usage pattern 116 for SLF4J. Note the use of {}-placeholders on line 15. See the 117 question <a href="faq.html#logging_performance">"What is the 118 fastest way of logging?"</a> in the FAQ for more details. 119 </p> 120 121 <p></p> 122 123 <pre class="prettyprint source"> 1: <b>import org.slf4j.Logger;</b> 124 2: <b>import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;</b> 125 3: 126 4: public class Wombat { 127 5: 128 6: <b>final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(Wombat.class);</b> 129 7: Integer t; 130 8: Integer oldT; 131 9: 13210: public void setTemperature(Integer temperature) { 13311: 13412: oldT = t; 13513: t = temperature; 13614: 13715: <b>logger.debug("Temperature set to {}. Old temperature was {}.", t, oldT);</b> 13816: 13917: if(temperature.intValue() > 50) { 14018: <b>logger.info("Temperature has risen above 50 degrees.");</b> 14119: } 14220: } 14321: } </pre> 144 145 146 147 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="swapping">Binding with a logging 148 framework at deployment time</h3> 149 150 <p>As mentioned previously, SLF4J supports various logging 151 frameworks. The SLF4J distribution ships with several jar files 152 referred to as "SLF4J bindings", with each binding corresponding 153 to a supported framework. </p> 154 155 <dl> 156 157 <dt><em>slf4j-log4j12-${project.version}.jar</em> 158 </dt> 159 <dd>Binding for <a 160 href="http://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/index.html">log4j 161 version 1.2</a>, a widely used logging framework. You also 162 need to place <em>log4j.jar</em> on your class path.<p/></dd> 163 164 <dt><em>slf4j-jdk14-${project.version}.jar</em> </dt> 165 <dd>Binding for java.util.logging, also referred to as JDK 1.4 166 logging <p/></dd> 167 168 <dt><em>slf4j-nop-${project.version}.jar</em></dt> 169 <dd>Binding for <a 170 href="http://www.slf4j.org/api/org/slf4j/helpers/NOPLogger.html">NOP</a>, 171 silently discarding all logging.<p/></dd> 172 173 <dt><em>slf4j-simple-${project.version}.jar</em></dt> 174 <dd>Binding for <a 175 href="http://www.slf4j.org/apidocs/org/slf4j/impl/SimpleLogger.html">Simple 176 </a> implementation, which outputs all events to 177 System.err. Only messages of level INFO and higher are 178 printed. This binding may be useful in the context of small 179 applications.<p/></dd> 180 181 <dt><em>slf4j-jcl-${project.version}.jar</em></dt> 182 183 <dd>Binding for <a 184 href="http://commons.apache.org/logging/">Jakarta Commons 185 Logging</a>. This binding will delegate all SLF4J logging to 186 JCL.<p/> 187 </dd> 188 189 <dt><em>logback-classic-${logback.version}.jar (requires logback-core-${logback.version}.jar)</em></dt> 190 191 <dd><span class="label notice">Native implementation</span> There are also 192 SLF4J bindings external to the SLF4J project, e.g. <a 193 href="http://logback.qos.ch/">logback</a> which implements 194 SLF4J natively. Logback's 195 <a href="http://logback.qos.ch/apidocs/ch/qos/logback/classic/Logger.html"> 196 <code>ch.qos.logback.classic.Logger</code></a> class is a 197 direct implementation of SLF4J's <a 198 href="http://www.slf4j.org/apidocs/org/slf4j/Logger.html"> 199 <code>org.slf4j.Logger</code></a> interface. Thus, using SLF4J 200 in conjunction with logback involves strictly zero memory and 201 computational overhead. 202 203 </dd> 204 </dl> 205 206 <p> 207 </p> 208 209 210 <p>To switch logging frameworks, just replace slf4j bindings on 211 your class path. For example, to switch from java.util.logging 212 to log4j, just replace slf4j-jdk14-${project.version}.jar with 213 slf4j-log4j12-${project.version}.jar. 214 </p> 215 216 <p>SLF4J does not rely on any special class loader machinery. In 217 fact, each SLF4J binding is hardwired <em>at compile time</em> 218 to use one and only one specific logging framework. For 219 example, the slf4j-log4j12-${project.version}.jar binding is 220 bound at compile time to use log4j. In your code, in addition 221 to <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em>, you simply drop 222 <b>one and only one</b> binding of your choice onto the 223 appropriate class path location. Do not place more than one 224 binding on your class path. Here is a graphical illustration of 225 the general idea. 226 </p> 227 228 <p><a href="images/concrete-bindings.png"> 229 <img border="1" src="images/concrete-bindings.png" alt="click to enlarge" width="800"/> 230 </a></p> 231 232 <p>The SLF4J interfaces and their various adapters are extremely 233 simple. Most developers familiar with the Java language should 234 be able to read and fully understand the code in less than one 235 hour. No knowledge of class loaders is necessary as SLF4J does 236 not make use nor does it directly access any class loaders. As a 237 consequence, SLF4J suffers from none of the class loader 238 problems or memory leaks observed with Jakarta Commons Logging 239 (JCL). 240 </p> 241 242 <p>Given the simplicity of the SLF4J interfaces and its 243 deployment model, developers of new logging frameworks should 244 find it very easy to write SLF4J bindings. 245 </p> 246 247 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="libraries">Libraries</h3> 248 249 <p>Authors of widely-distributed components and libraries may 250 code against the SLF4J interface in order to avoid imposing an 251 logging framework on their end-user. Thus, the end-user may 252 choose the desired logging framework at deployment time by 253 inserting the corresponding slf4j binding on the classpath, 254 which may be changed later by replacing an existing binding with 255 another on the class path and restarting the application. This 256 approach has proven to be simple and very robust. 257 </p> 258 259 <p><b>As of SLF4J version 1.6.0</b>, if no binding is found on 260 the class path, then slf4j-api will default to a no-operation 261 implementation discarding all log requests. Thus, instead of 262 throwing a <code>NoClassDefFoundError</code> because the 263 <code>org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder</code> class is missing, 264 SLF4J version 1.6.0 and later will emit a single warning message 265 about the absence of a binding and proceed to discard all log 266 requests without further protest. For example, let Wombat be 267 some biology-related framework depending on SLF4J for 268 logging. In order to avoid imposing a logging framework on the 269 end-user, Wombat's distribution includes <em>slf4j-api.jar</em> 270 but no binding. Even in the absence of any SLF4J binding on the 271 class path, Wombat's distribution will still work 272 out-of-the-box, and without requiring the end-user to download a 273 binding from SLF4J's web-site. Only when the end-user decides to 274 enable logging will she need to install the SLF4J binding 275 corresponding to the logging framework chosen by her. 276 </p> 277 278 <p><span class="label">Basic rule</span> <b>Embedded components 279 such as libraries or frameworks should not declare a dependency 280 on any SLF4J binding but only depend on slf4j-api</b>. When a 281 library declares a transitive dependency on a specific binding, 282 that binding is imposed on the end-user negating the purpose of 283 SLF4J. Note that declaring a non-transitive dependency on a 284 binding, for example for testing, does not affect the 285 end-user.</p> 286 287 <p>SLF4J usage in embedded components is also discussed in the 288 FAQ in relation with <a 289 href="faq.html#configure_logging">logging configuration</a>, <a 290 href="faq.html#optional_dependency">dependency reduction</a> and 291 <a href="faq.html#optional_dependency">testing</a>.</p> 292 293 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="projectDep">Declaring project 294 dependencies for logging</h3> 295 296 <p>Given Maven's transitive dependency rules, for "regular" 297 projects (not libraries or frameworks) declaring logging 298 dependencies can be accomplished with a single dependency 299 declaration. 300 </p> 301 302 <p><span class="label notice">logback-classic</span> If you wish 303 to use logback-classic as the underlying logging framework, all 304 you need to do is to declare "ch.qos.logback:logback-classic" as 305 a dependency in your <em>pom.xml</em> file as shown below. In 306 addition to <em>logback-classic-${logback.version}.jar</em>, 307 this will pull <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> as well 308 as <em>logback-core-${logback.version}.jar</em> into your 309 project. Note that explicitly declaring a dependency on 310 <em>logback-core-${logback.version}</em> or 311 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> is not wrong and may 312 be necessary to impose the correct version of said artifacts by 313 virtue of Maven's "nearest definition" dependency mediation 314 rule. 315 </p> 316 317<pre class="prettyprint source"><dependency> 318 <groupId>ch.qos.logback</groupId> 319 <artifactId>logback-classic</artifactId> 320 <version>${logback.version}</version> 321</dependency></pre> 322 323 <p/> 324 325 <p><span class="label notice">log4j</span> If you wish to use 326 log4j as the underlying logging framework, all you need to do is 327 to declare "org.slf4j:slf4j-log4j12" as a dependency in your 328 <em>pom.xml</em> file as shown below. In addition to 329 <em>slf4j-log4j12-${project.version}.jar</em>, this will pull 330 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> as well as 331 <em>log4j-${log4j.version}.jar</em> into your project. Note 332 that explicitly declaring a dependency on 333 <em>log4j-${log4j.version}.jar</em> or 334 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> is not wrong and may 335 be necessary to impose the correct version of said artifacts by 336 virtue of Maven's "nearest definition" dependency mediation 337 rule.</p> 338 339<pre class="prettyprint source"><dependency> 340 <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId> 341 <artifactId>slf4j-log4j12</artifactId> 342 <version>${project.version}</version> 343</dependency></pre> 344 345 <p/> 346 347 <p><span class="label notice">java.util.logging</span> If you 348 wish to use java.util.logging as the underlying logging 349 framework, all you need to do is to declare 350 "org.slf4j:slf4j-jdk14" as a dependency in your <em>pom.xml</em> 351 file as shown below. In addition to 352 <em>slf4j-jdk14-${project.version}.jar</em>, this will pull 353 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> into your project. 354 Note that explicitly declaring a dependency on 355 <em>slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar</em> is not wrong and may 356 be necessary to impose the correct version of said artifact by 357 virtue of Maven's "nearest definition" dependency mediation 358 rule.</p> 359 360<pre class="prettyprint source"><dependency> 361 <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId> 362 <artifactId>slf4j-jdk14</artifactId> 363 <version>${project.version}</version> 364</dependency></pre> 365 366 367 368 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="compatibility">Binary 369 compatibility</h3> 370 371 <p>An SLF4J binding designates an artifact such as 372 <em>slf4j-jdk14.jar</em> or <em>slf4j-log4j12.jar</em> used to 373 <em>bind</em> slf4j to an underlying logging framework, say, 374 java.util.logging and respectively log4j. 375 </p> 376 377 <p class="highlight">From the client's perspective all versions 378 of slf4j-api are compatible. Client code compiled with 379 slf4j-api-N.jar will run perfectly fine with slf4j-api-M.jar for 380 any N and M. You only need to ensure that the version of your 381 binding matches that of the slf4j-api.jar. You do not have to 382 worry about the version of slf4j-api.jar used by a given 383 dependency in your project. </p> 384 385 386 <p>Mixing different versions of <em>slf4j-api.jar</em> and SLF4J 387 binding can cause problems. For example, if you are using 388 slf4j-api-${project.version}.jar, then you should also use 389 slf4j-simple-${project.version}.jar, using 390 slf4j-simple-1.5.5.jar will not work.</p> 391 392 393 <p>However, from the client's perspective all versions of 394 slf4j-api are compatible. Client code compiled with 395 <em>slf4j-api-N.jar</em> will run perfectly fine with 396 <em>slf4j-api-M.jar</em> for any N and M. You only need to 397 ensure that the version of your binding matches that of the 398 slf4j-api.jar. You do not have to worry about the version of 399 slf4j-api.jar used by a given dependency in your project. You 400 can always use any version of <em>slf4j-api.jar</em>, and as 401 long as the version of <em>slf4j-api.jar</em> and its binding 402 match, you should be fine. 403 </p> 404 405 <p>At initialization time, if SLF4J suspects that there may be 406 an slf4j-api vs. binding version mismatch problem, it will emit 407 a warning about the suspected mismatch. 408 </p> 409 410 411 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="consolidate">Consolidate logging via 412 SLF4J</h3> 413 414 <p>Often times, a given project will depend on various 415 components which rely on logging APIs other than SLF4J. It is 416 common to find projects depending on a combination of JCL, 417 java.util.logging, log4j and SLF4J. It then becomes desirable to 418 consolidate logging through a single channel. SLF4J caters for 419 this common use-case by providing bridging modules for JCL, 420 java.util.logging and log4j. For more details, please refer to 421 the page on <a href="legacy.html"><b>Bridging legacy 422 APIs</b></a>. 423 </p> 424 425 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="mdc">Mapped Diagnostic Context (MDC) support</h3> 426 427 <p>"Mapped Diagnostic Context" is essentially a map maintained 428 by the logging framework where the application code provides 429 key-value pairs which can then be inserted by the logging 430 framework in log messages. MDC data can also be highly helpful 431 in filtering messages or triggering certain actions.</p> 432 433 <p>SLF4J supports MDC, or mapped diagnostic context. If the 434 underlying logging framework offers MDC functionality, then 435 SLF4J will delegate to the underlying framework's MDC. Note that 436 at this time, only log4j and logback offer MDC functionality. If 437 the underlying framework does not offer MDC, for example 438 java.util.logging, then SLF4J will still store MDC data but the 439 information therein will need to be retrieved by custom user 440 code.</p> 441 442 <p>Thus, as a SLF4J user, you can take advantage of MDC 443 information in the presence of log4j or logback, but without 444 forcing these logging frameworks upon your users as 445 dependencies. 446 </p> 447 448 <p>For more information on MDC please see the <a 449 href="http://logback.qos.ch/manual/mdc.html">chapter on MDC</a> 450 in the logback manual. 451 </p> 452 453 454 455 <h3 class="doAnchor" name="summary">Executive summary</h3> 456 457 <table class="bodyTable striped" cellspacing="4" cellpadding="4"> 458 <tr> 459 <th align="left">Advantage</th> 460 <th align="left">Description</th> 461 </tr> 462 463 <tr> 464 465 <td>Select your logging framework at deployment time</td> 466 467 <td>The desired logging framework can be plugged in at 468 deployment time by inserting the appropriate jar file 469 (binding) on your class path. 470 </td> 471 </tr> 472 473 474 <tr> 475 <td>Fail-fast operation</td> 476 477 <td>Due to the way that classes are loaded by the JVM, the 478 framework binding will be verified automatically very early 479 on. If SLF4J cannot find a binding on the class path it 480 will emit a single warning message and default to 481 no-operation implementation. 482 </td> 483 </tr> 484 485 486 <tr> 487 <td>Bindings for popular logging frameworks 488 </td> 489 490 <td>SLF4J supports popular logging frameworks, namely log4j, 491 java.util.logging, Simple logging and NOP. The <a 492 href="http://logback.qos.ch">logback</a> project supports 493 SLF4J natively. </td> 494 495 </tr> 496 497 <tr> 498 <td>Bridging legacy logging APIs</td> 499 500 <td> 501 <p>The implementation of JCL over SLF4J, i.e 502 <em>jcl-over-slf4j.jar</em>, will allow your project to 503 migrate to SLF4J piecemeal, without breaking compatibility 504 with existing software using JCL. Similarly, 505 log4j-over-slf4j.jar and jul-to-slf4j modules will allow 506 you to redirect log4j and respectively java.util.logging 507 calls to SLF4J. See the page on <a 508 href="legacy.html">Bridging legacy APIs</a> for more 509 details. 510 </p> 511 </td> 512 </tr> 513 514 <tr> 515 <td>Migrate your source code</td> 516 <td>The <a href="migrator.html">slf4j-migrator</a> utility 517 can help you migrate your source to use SLF4J. 518 </td> 519 </tr> 520 521 522 523 <tr> 524 <td>Support for parameterized log messages</td> 525 526 <td>All SLF4J bindings support parameterized log messages 527 with significantly <a 528 href="faq.html#logging_performance">improved performance</a> 529 results.</td> 530 </tr> 531 532 533 </table> 534 535 <script src="templates/footer.js" type="text/javascript"></script> 536 537</div> 538</body> 539</html> 540