######################################################################
Log::Log4perl 0.22
######################################################################
NAME
Log::Log4perl - Log4j implementation for Perl
SYNOPSIS
Log::Log4perl::init('/etc/log4perl.conf');
--or--
Log::Log4perl::init_and_watch('/etc/log4perl.conf',10);
--then--
$logger = Log::Log4perl->get_logger('house.bedrm.desk.topdrwr');
$logger->debug('this is a debug message');
$logger->info('this is an info message');
$logger->warn('etc');
$logger->error('..');
$logger->fatal('..');
#####/etc/log4perl.conf###################
log4j.category.house = WARN, FileAppndr1
log4j.category.house.bedroom.desk = DEBUG, FileAppndr1
log4j.appender.FileAppndr1 = Log::Dispatch::File
log4j.appender.FileAppndr1.filename = desk.log
log4j.appender.FileAppndr1.layout = \
Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
###########################################
DESCRIPTION
"Log::Log4perl" implements the widely popular "Log4j" logging package
([1]) in pure Perl.
*** WARNING: ALPHA SOFTWARE ***
A WORD OF CAUTION: THIS LIBRARY IS STILL UNDER CONSTRUCTION -- ON
http://log4perl.sourceforge.net YOU'LL GET THE LATEST SCOOP. THE API HAS
REACHED A MATURE STATE, WE WILL NOT CHANGE IT UNLESS FOR A GOOD REASON.
Logging beats a debugger when you want to know what's going on in your
code during runtime. However, traditional logging packages are too
static and generate a flood of log messages in your log files that won't
help you.
"Log::Log4perl" is different. It allows you to control the amount of
logging messages generated at three different levels:
* At a central location in your system (either in a configuration file
or in the startup code) you specify *which components* (classes,
functions) of your system should generate logs.
* You specify how detailed the logging of these components should be
by specifying logging *levels*.
* You also specify which so-called *appenders* you want to feed your
log messages to ("Print it to the screen and also append it to
/tmp/my.log") and which format ("Write the date first, then the file
name and line number, and then the log message") they should be in.
This is a very powerful and flexible mechanism. You can turn on and off
your logs at any time, specify the level of detail and make that
dependent on the subsystem that's currently executed.
Let me give you an example: You might find out that your system has a
problem in the "MySystem::Helpers::ScanDir" component. Turning on
detailed debugging logs all over the system would generate a flood of
useless log messages and bog your system down beyond recognition. With
"Log::Log4perl", however, you can tell the system: "Continue to log only
severe errors in the log file. Open a second log file, turn on full
debug logs in the "MySystem::Helpers::ScanDir" component and dump all
messages originating from there into the new log file". And all this is
possible by just changing the parameters in a configuration file, which
your system can re-read even while it's running!
How to use it
The "Log::Log4perl" package can be initialized in two ways: Either via
Perl commands or via a "lib4j"-style configuration file.
Initialize via a configuration file
This is the easiest way to prepare your system for using
"Log::Log4perl". Use a configuration file like this:
############################################################
# A simple root logger with a Log::Dispatch file appender
# in Perl.
# Mike Schilli 2002 m@perlmeister.com
############################################################
log4j.rootLogger=error, LOGFILE
log4j.appender.LOGFILE=Log::Dispatch::File
log4j.appender.LOGFILE.filename=/var/log/myerrs.log
log4j.appender.LOGFILE.mode=append
log4j.appender.LOGFILE.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.LOGFILE.layout.ConversionPattern=[%r] %F %L %c - %m%n
These lines define your standard logger that's appending severe errors
to "/var/log/myerrs.log", using the format
[millisecs] source-filename line-number class - message newline
Check "Configuration files" for more details on how to control your
loggers using a configuration file.
Assuming that this file is saved as "log.conf", you need to read it in
in the startup section of your code, using the following commands:
use Log::Log4perl;
Log::Log4perl->init("log.conf");
After that's done *somewhere* in the code, you can retrieve logger
objects *anywhere* in the code. Note that there's no need to carry any
logger references around with your functions and methods. You can get a
logger anytime via a singleton mechanism:
package My::MegaPackage;
sub some_method {
my($param) = @_;
use Log::Log4perl;
my $log = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My::MegaPackage");
$log->debug("Debug message");
$log->info("Info message");
$log->error("Error message");
...
}
With the configuration file above, "Log::Log4perl" will write "Error
message" to the specified log file, but won't do anything for the
"debug()" and "info()" calls, because the log level has been set to
"ERROR" for all components in the first line of configuration file shown
above.
Why "Log::Log4perl->get_logger" and not "Log::Log4perl->new"? We don't
want to create a new object every time. Usually in OO-Programming, you
create an object once and use the reference to it to call its methods.
However, this requires that you pass around the object to all functions
and the last thing we want is pollute each and every function/method
we're using with a handle to the "Logger":
sub function { # Brrrr!!
my($logger, $some, $other, $parameters) = @_;
}
Instead, if a function/method wants a reference to the logger, it just
calls the Logger's static "get_logger()" method to obtain a reference to
the *one and only* possible logger object of a certain category. That's
called a *singleton* if you're a Gamma fan.
How does the logger know which messages it is supposed to log and which
ones to suppress? "Log::Log4perl" works with inheritence: The config
file above didn't specify anything about "My::MegaPackage". And yet,
we've defined a logger of the category "My::MegaPackage". In this case,
"Log::Log4perl" will walk up the class hierarchy ("My" and then the
we're at the root) to figure out if a log level is defined somewhere. In
the case above, the log level at the root (root *always* defines a log
level, but not necessary an appender) defines that the log level is
supposed to be "ERROR" -- meaning that *debug* and *info* messages are
suppressed.
Configuration within Perl
Initializing the logger can certainly also be done from within Perl. At
last, this is what "Log::Log4perl::Config" does behind the scenes. At
the Perl level, we can specify exactly, which loggers work with which
appenders and which layouts.
Here's the code for a root logger which sends error and higher
prioritized messages to the "/tmp/my.log" logfile:
# Initialize the logger
use Log::Log4perl;
use Log::Dispatch::Screen;
use Log::Log4perl::Appender;
my $app = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new("Log::Dispatch::Screen");
my $layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::PatternLayout
->new("%d> %F %L %m %n");
$app->layout($layout);
my $logger = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My.Component");
$logger->add_appender($app);
And after this, we can, again, start logging *anywhere* in the system
like this (remember, we don't want to pass around references, so we just
get the logger via the singleton-mechanism):
# Use the logger
use Log::Log4perl;
my $log = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My::Component");
$log->debug("Debug Message");
$log->info("Info Message");
$log->error("Error Message");
Log Levels
There's five predefined log levels: "FATAL", "ERROR", "WARN", "INFO" and
"DEBUG" (in descending priority). Your configured logging level has to
at least match the priority of the logging message.
If your configured logging level is "WARN", then messages logged with
"info()" and "debug()" message will be suppressed. "fatal()", "error()"
and "warn()" will make their way through, because their priority is
higher or equal than the configured setting.
Instead of calling the methods
$logger->debug("..."); # Log a debug message
$logger->info("..."); # Log a info message
$logger->warn("..."); # Log a warn message
$logger->error("..."); # Log a error message
$logger->fatal("..."); # Log a fatal message
you could also call the "log()" method with the appropriate level using
the constants defined in "Log::Log4perl::Level":
use Log::Log4perl::Level;
$logger->log($DEBUG, "...");
$logger->log($INFO, "...");
$logger->log($WARN, "...");
$logger->log($ERROR, "...");
$logger->log($FATAL, "...");
But nobody does that, really. Neither does anyone need more logging
levels than these predefined ones. If you think you do, I would suggest
you look into steering your logging behaviour via the category
mechanism.
If you need to find out if the currently configured logging level would
allow a logger's logging statement to go through, use the logger's
"is_*level*()" methods:
$logger->is_debug() # True if debug messages would go through
$logger->is_info() # True if info messages would go through
$logger->is_warn() # True if warn messages would go through
$logger->is_error() # True if error messages would go through
$logger->is_fatal() # True if fatal messages would go through
Example: "$logger->is_warn()" returns true if the logger's current
level, as derived from either the logger's category (or, in absence of
that, one of the logger's parent's level setting) is $WARN, $ERROR or
$FATAL.
These level checking functions will come in handy later, when we want to
block unnecessary expensive parameter construction in case the logging
level is too low to log the statement anyway, like in:
if($logger->is_error()) {
$logger->error("Erroneous array: @super_long_array");
}
If we had just written
$logger->error("Erroneous array: @super_long_array");
then Perl would have interpolated @super_long_array into the string via
an expensive operation only to figure out shortly after that the string
can be ignored entirely because the configured logging level is lower
than $ERROR.
The to-be-logged message passed to all of the functions described above
can consist of an arbitrary number of arguments, which the logging
functions just chain together to a single string. Therefore
$logger->debug("Hello ", "World", "!"); # and
$logger->debug("Hello World!");
are identical.
Appenders
If you don't define any appenders, nothing will happen. Appenders will
be triggered whenever the configured logging level requires a message to
be logged and not suppressed.
"Log::Log4perl" doesn't define any appenders by default, not even the
root logger has one.
"Log::Log4perl" utilizes *Dave Rolskys* excellent "Log::Dispatch" module
to implement a wide variety of different appenders. You can have your
messages written to STDOUT, to a file or to a database -- or to all of
them at once if you desire to do so.
Here's the list of appender modules currently available via
"Log::Dispatch":
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::Handle
Log::Dispatch::Screen
Log::Dispatch::Syslog
Log::Dispatch::Tk (by Dominique Dumont)
Now let's assume that we want to go overboard and log "info()" or higher
prioritized messages in the "My::Category" class to both STDOUT and to a
log file, say "/tmp/my.log". In the initialisation section of your
system, just define two appenders using the readily available
"Log::Dispatch::File" and "Log::Dispatch::Screen" modules via the
"Log::Log4perl::Appender" wrapper:
########################
# Initialisation section
########################
use Log::Log4perl;
use Log::Log4perl::Layout;
use Log::Log4perl::Level;
# Define a category logger
my $log = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My::Category");
# Define a layout
my $layout = Log::Log4perl->new("[%r] %F %L %m%n");
# Define a file appender
my $file_appender = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new(
"Log::Dispatch::File",
name => "filelog",
filename => "/tmp/my.log");
# Define a stdout appender
my $stdout_appender = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new(
"Log::Dispatch::Screen",
name => "screenlog",
stderr => 0);
# Have both appenders use the same layout (could be different)
$stdout_appender->layout($layout);
$file_appender->layout($layout);
$log->add_appender($stdout_appender);
$log->add_appender($file_appender);
$log->level($INFO);
Please note the class of the "Log::Dispatch" object is passed as a
*string* to "Log::Log4perl::Appender" in the *first* argument. Behind
the scenes, "Log::Log4perl::Appender" will create the necessary
"Log::Dispatch::*" object and pass along the name value pairs we
provided to "Log::Log4perl::Appender->new()" after the first argument.
The "name" value is optional and if you don't provide one,
"Log::Log4perl::Appender->new()" will create a unique one for you. The
names and values of additional parameters are dependent on the
requirements of the particular "Log::Dispatch::*" class and can be
looked up in their manual pages.
On a side note: In case you're wondering if
"Log::Log4perl::Appender->new()" will also take care of the "min_level"
argument to the "Log::Dispatch::*" constructors called behind the scenes
-- yes, it does. This is because we want the "Log::Dispatch" objects to
blindly log everything we send them ("debug" is their lowest setting)
because *we* in "Log::Log4perl" want to call the shots and decide on
when and what to log.
The call to the appender's *layout()* method specifies the format (as a
previously created "Log::Log4perl::PatternLayout" object) in which the
message is being logged in the specified appender. The format shown
above is logging not only the message but also the number of
milliseconds since the program has started (%r), the name of the file
the call to the logger has happened and the line number there (%F and
%L), the message itself (%m) and a OS-specific newline character (%n).
For more detailed info on layout formats, see "Log Layouts". If you
don't specify a layout, the logger will fall back to
"Log::Log4perl::SimpleLayout", which logs the debug level, a hyphen (-)
and the log message.
Once the initialisation shown above has happened once, typically in the
startup code of your system, just use this logger anywhere in your
system (or better yet, only in "My::Category", since we defined it this
way) as often as you like:
##########################
# ... in some function ...
##########################
my $log = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My::Category");
$log->info("This is an informational message");
Above, we chose to define a *category* logger ("My::Category") in a
specific way. This will cause only messages originating from this
specific category logger to be logged in the defined format and
locations.
Instead, we could have configured the *root* logger with the appenders
and layout shown above. Now
##########################
# ... in some function ...
##########################
my $log = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("My::Category");
$log->info("This is an informational message");
will trigger a logger with no layout or appenders or even a level
defined. This logger, however, will inherit the level from categories up
the hierarchy -- ultimately the root logger, since there's no "My"
logger. Once it detects that it needs to log a message, it will first
try to find its own appenders (which it doesn't have any of) and then
walk up the hierarchy (first "My", then "root") to call any appenders
defined there.
This will result in exactly the same behaviour as shown above -- with
the exception that other category loggers could also use the root
logger's appenders and layouts, but could certainly define their own
categories and levels.
Turn off a component
"Log4perl" doesn't only allow you to selectively switch *on* a category
of log messages, you can also use the mechanism to selectively *disable*
logging in certain components whereas logging is kept turned on in
higher-level categories. This mechanism comes in handy if you find that
while bumping up the logging level of a high-level (i. e. close to root)
category, that one component logs more than it should,
Here's how it works:
############################################################
# Turn off logging in a lower-level category while keeping
# it active in higher-level categories.
############################################################
log4j.rootLogger=debug, LOGFILE
log4j.logger.deep.down.the.hierarchy = error, LOGFILE
# ... Define appenders ...
This way, log messages issued from within "Deep::Down::The::Hierarchy"
and below will be logged only if they're "error" or worse, while in all
other system components even "debug" messages will be logged.
Configuration files
As shown above, you can define "Log::Log4perl" loggers both from within
your Perl code or from configuration files. The latter have the
unbeatible advantage that you can modify your system's logging behaviour
without interfering with the code at all. So even if your code is being
run by somebody who's totally oblivious to Perl, they still can adapt
the module's logging behaviour to their needs.
"Log::Log4perl" has been designed to understand "Log4j" configuration
files -- as used by the original Java implementation. Instead of
reiterating the format description in [1], let me just list three
examples (also derived from [1]), which should also illustrate how it
works:
log4j.rootLogger=DEBUG, A1
log4j.appender.A1=ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.A1.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern=%-4r [%t] %-5p %c %x - %m%n
This enables messages of priority "debug" or higher in the root
hierarchy and has the system write them to the console.
"ConsoleAppender" is a Java appender, but "Log::Log4perl" jumps through
a significant number of hoops internally to map these to their
corresponding Perl classes, "Log::Dispatch::Screen" in this case.
Second example:
log4j.rootLogger=DEBUG, A1
log4j.appender.A1=Log::Dispatch::Screen
log4j.appender.A1.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern=%d [%t] %-5p %c - %m%n
log4j.logger.com.foo=WARN
This defines two loggers: The root logger and the "com.foo" logger. The
root logger is easily triggered by debug-messages, but the "com.foo"
logger makes sure that messages issued within the "Com::Foo" component
and below are only forwarded to the appender if they're of priority
*warning* or higher.
Note that the "com.foo" logger doesn't define an appender. Therefore, it
will just propagate the message up the hierarchy until the root logger
picks it up and forwards it to the one and only appender of the root
category, using the format defined for it.
Third example:
log4j.rootLogger=debug, stdout, R
log4j.appender.stdout=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.stdout.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.stdout.layout.ConversionPattern=%5p [%t] (%F:%L) - %m%n
log4j.appender.R=org.apache.log4j.FileAppender
log4j.appender.R.File=example.log
log4j.appender.R.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.R.layout.ConversionPattern=%p %t %c - %m%n
The root logger defines two appenders here: "stdout", which uses
"org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender" (ultimately mapped by "Log::Log4perl"
to "Log::Dispatch::Screen") to write to the screen. And "R", a
"org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender" (ultimately mapped by
"Log::Log4perl" to "Log::Dispatch::File" with the "File" attribute
specifying the log file.
Log Layouts
If the logging engine passes a message to an appender, because it thinks
it should be logged, the appender doesn't just write it out haphazardly.
There's ways to tell the appender how to format the message and add all
sorts of interesting data to it: The date and time when the event
happened, the file, the line number, the debug level of the logger and
others.
There's currently two layouts defined in "Log::Log4perl":
"Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout" and
"Log::Log4perl::Layout::Patternlayout":
"Log::Log4perl::SimpleLayout"
formats a message in a simple way and just prepends it by the debug
level and a hyphen: ""$level - $message", for example "FATAL - Can't
open password file".
"Log::Log4perl::PatternLayout"
on the other hand is very powerful and allows for a very flexible
format in "printf"-style. The format string can contain a number of
placeholders which will be replaced by the logging engine when it's
time to log the message:
%c Category of the logging event.
%C Fully qualified package (or class) name of the caller
%d Current date in yyyy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss format
%F File where the logging event occurred
%l Fully qualified name of the calling method followed by the
callers source the file name and line number between
parentheses.
%L Line number within the file where the log statement was issued
%m The message to be logged
%M Method or function where the logging request was issued
%n Newline (OS-independent)
%p Priority of the logging event
%r Number of milliseconds elapsed from program start to logging
event
%% A literal percent (%) sign
All placeholders are quantifiable, just like in *printf*. Following this
tradition, "%-20c" will reserve 20 chars for the category and
right-justify it.
Layouts are objects, here's how you create them:
# Create a simple layout
my $simple = Log::Log4perl::SimpleLayout();
# create a flexible layout:
# ("yyyy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss (file:lineno)> message\n")
my $pattern = Log::Log4perl::PatternLayout("%d (%F:%L)> %m%n");
Every appender has exactly one layout assigned to it. You assign the
layout to the appender using the appender's "layout()" object:
my $app = Log::Log4perl::Appender->new(
"Log::Dispatch::Screen",
name => "screenlog",
stderr => 0);
# Assign the previously defined flexible layout
$app->layout($pattern);
# Add the appender to a previously defined logger
$logger->add_appender($app);
# ... and you're good to go!
$logger->debug("Blah");
# => "2002/07/10 23:55:35 (test.pl:207)> Blah\n"
If you don't specify a layout for an appender, the logger will fall back
to "SimpleLayout".
For more details on logging and how to use the flexible and the simple
format, check out the original "log4j" website under
http://jakarta.apache.org/log4j/docs/api/org/apache/log4j/SimpleLayout.html
http://jakarta.apache.org/log4j/docs/api/org/apache/log4j/PatternLayout.html
Penalties
Logging comes with a price tag. "Log::Log4perl" is currently being
optimized to allow for maximum performance, both with logging enabled
and disabled.
But you need to be aware that there's a small hit every time your code
encounters a log statement -- no matter if logging is enabled or not.
"Log::Log4perl" has been designed to keep this so low that it will be
unnoticable to most applications.
Here's a couple of tricks which help "Log::Log4perl" to avoid
unnecessary delays:
You can save serious time if you're logging something like
# Expensive in non-debug mode!
for (@super_long_array) {
$Logger->debug("Element: $_\n");
}
and @super_long_array is fairly big, so looping through it is pretty
expensive. Only you, the programmer, knows that going through that "for"
loop can be skipped entirely if the current logging level for the actual
component is higher than "debug". In this case, use this instead:
# Cheap in non-debug mode!
if($Logger->is_debug()) {
for (@super_long_array) {
$Logger->debug("Element: $_\n");
}
}
If you're afraid that the way you're generating the parameters to the of
the logging function is fairly expensive, use closures:
# Passed as subroutine ref
use Data::Dumper;
$Logger->debug(sub { Dumper($data) } );
This won't unravel $data via Dumper() unless it's actually needed
because it's logged.
Categories
"Log::Log4perl" uses *categories* to determine if a log statement in a
component should be executed or suppressed at the current logging level.
Most of the time, these categories are just the classes the log
statements are located in:
package Candy::Twix;
sub new {
my $logger = Log::Log4perl->new("Candy::Twix");
$logger->debug("Creating a new Twix bar");
bless {}, shift;
}
# ...
package Candy::Snickers;
sub new {
my $logger = Log::Log4perl->new("Candy.Snickers");
$logger->debug("Creating a new Snickers bar");
bless {}, shift;
}
# ...
package main;
Log::Log4perl->init("mylogdefs.conf") or
die "Whoa, cannot read mylogdefs.conf!";
# => "LOG> Creating a new Snickers bar"
my $first = Candy::Snickers->new();
# => "LOG> Creating a new Twix bar"
my $second = Candy::Twix->new();
Note that you can separate your category hierarchy levels using either
dots like in Java (.) or double-colons (::) like in Perl. Both notations
are equivalent and are handled the same way internally.
However, categories are just there to make use of inheritance: if you
invoke a logger in a sub-category, it will bubble up the hierarchy and
call the appropriate appenders. Internally, categories are not related
to the class hierarchy of the program at all -- they're purely virtual.
You can use arbitrary categories -- for example in the following
program, which isn't oo-style, but procedural:
sub print_portfolio {
my $log = Log::Log4perl->new("user.portfolio");
$log->debug("Quotes requested: @_");
for(@_) {
print "$_: ", get_quote($_), "\n";
}
}
sub get_quote {
my $log = Log::Log4perl->new("internet.quotesystem");
$log->debug("Fetching quote: $_[0]");
return yahoo_quote($_[0]);
}
The logger in first function, "print_portfolio", is assigned the
(virtual) "user.portfolio" category. Depending on the "Log4perl"
configuration, this will either call a "user.portfolio" appender, a
"user" appender, or an appender assigned to root -- without
"user.portfolio" having any relevance to the class system used in the
program. The logger in the second function adheres to the
"internet.quotesystem" category -- again, maybe because it's bundled
with other Internet functions, but not because there would be a class of
this name somewhere.
However, be careful, don't go overboard: if you're developing a system
in object-oriented style, using the class hierarchy is usually your best
choice. Think about the people taking over your code one day: The class
hierarchy is probably what they know right up front, so it's easy for
them to tune the logging to their needs.
Cool Tricks
Shortcuts
When getting an instance of a logger, instead of saying
use Log::Log4perl;
my $logger = Log::Log4perl->get_logger();
it's often more convenient to import the "get_logger" method from
"Log::Log4perl" into the current namespace:
use Log::Log4perl qw(get_logger);
my $logger = get_logger();
Alternative initialization
Instead of having "init()" read in a configuration file, you can also
pass in a reference to a string, containing the content of the file:
Log::Log4perl->init( \$config_text );
Also, if you've got the "name=value" pairs of the configuration in a
hash, you can just as well initialized "Log::Log4perl" with a reference
to it:
my %key_value_pairs = (
"log4j.rootLogger" => "error, LOGFILE",
"log4j.appender.LOGFILE" => "Log::Dispatch::File",
...
);
Log::Log4perl->init( \%key_value_pairs );
How about Log::Dispatch::Config?
Yeah, I've seen it. I like it, but I think it is too dependent on
defining everything in a configuration file. I've designed
"Log::Log4perl" to be more flexible.
Using Log::Log4perl from wrapper classes
If you don't use "Log::Log4perl" as described above, but from a wrapper
class (like your own Logging class which in turn uses "Log::Log4perl"),
the pattern layout will generate wrong data for %F, %C, %L and the like.
Reason for this is that "Log::Log4perl"'s loggers assume a static caller
depth to the application that's using them. If you're using one (or
more) wrapper classes, "Log::Log4perl" will indicate where your logger
classes called the loggers, not where your application called your
wrapper, which is probably what you want in this case. But don't
dispair, there's a solution: Just increase the value of
$Log::Log4perl::caller_depth (defaults to 0) by one for every wrapper
that's in between your application and "Log::Log4perl", then
"Log::Log4perl" will compensate for the difference.
INSTALLATION
"Log::Log4perl" needs "Log::Dispatch" (2.00 or better) and "Time::HiRes"
(1.20 or better) from CPAN. They're automatically fetched if you're
using the CPAN shell (CPAN.pm), because they're listed as requirements
in Makefile.PL.
Manual installation works as usual with
perl Makefile.PL
make
make test
make install
DEVELOPMENT
"Log::Log4perl" is under heavy development. The latest CVS tarball can
be obtained from SourceForge, check "http://log4perl.sorceforge.net" for
details. Bug reports and feedback are always welcome, just email to our
mailing list shown in CONTACT.
REFERENCES
[1] Ceki Gülcü, "Short introduction to log4j",
http://jakarta.apache.org/log4j/docs/manual.html
[2] Vipan Singla, "Don't Use System.out.println! Use Log4j.",
http://www.vipan.com/htdocs/log4jhelp.html
[3] The Log::Log4perl project home page: http://log4perl.sourceforge.net
CONTACT
Please send bug reports or requests for enhancements to the authors via
our log4perl development mailing list:
log4perl-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
AUTHORS
Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com>
Kevin Goess <cpan@goess.org>
Contributors:
Chris R. Donnelly <cdonnelly@digitalmotorworks.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 2002 by Mike Schilli <m@perlmeister.com> and Kevin Goess
<cpan@goess.org>.
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.