§Configuring logging
Play uses SLF4J for logging, backed by Logback as its default logging engine. See the Logback documentation for details on configuration.
§Default configuration
In dev mode Play uses the following default configuration:
<!--
Copyright (C) 2009-2019 Lightbend Inc. <https://www.lightbend.com>
-->
<!-- The default logback configuration that Play uses in dev mode if no other configuration is provided -->
<configuration>
<conversionRule conversionWord="coloredLevel" converterClass="play.api.libs.logback.ColoredLevel" />
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>%coloredLevel %logger{15} - %message%n%xException{10}</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<logger name="play" level="INFO" />
<logger name="com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.javascript" level="OFF" />
<root level="WARN">
<appender-ref ref="STDOUT" />
</root>
</configuration>
Play uses the following default configuration in production:
<!--
Copyright (C) 2009-2019 Lightbend Inc. <https://www.lightbend.com>
-->
<!-- The default logback configuration that Play uses if no other configuration is provided -->
<configuration>
<conversionRule conversionWord="coloredLevel" converterClass="play.api.libs.logback.ColoredLevel" />
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>%coloredLevel %logger{15} - %message%n%xException{10}</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<appender name="ASYNCSTDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.classic.AsyncAppender">
<!-- increases the default queue size -->
<queueSize>512</queueSize>
<!-- don't discard messages -->
<discardingThreshold>0</discardingThreshold>
<!-- block when queue is full -->
<neverBlock>false</neverBlock>
<appender-ref ref="STDOUT" />
</appender>
<logger name="play" level="INFO" />
<logger name="com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.javascript" level="OFF" />
<root level="WARN">
<appender-ref ref="ASYNCSTDOUT" />
</root>
<shutdownHook class="ch.qos.logback.core.hook.DelayingShutdownHook"/>
</configuration>
A few things to note about these configurations:
- These default configs specify only a console logger which outputs only 10 lines of an exception stack trace.
- Play uses ANSI color codes by default in level messages.
- For production, the default config puts the console logger behind the logback AsyncAppender. For details on the performance implications on this, see this blog post.
- In order to guarantee that logged messages have had a chance to be processed by asynchronous appenders (including the TCP appender) and ensure background threads have been stopped, you’ll need to cleanly shut down logback when your application exits. For details on a shutdown hook, see this documentation. Also you must specify DelayingShutdownHook explicitly:
<shutdownHook class="ch.qos.logback.core.hook.DelayingShutdownHook"/>
.
To add a file logger, add the following appender to your conf/logback.xml
file:
<appender name="FILE" class="ch.qos.logback.core.FileAppender">
<file>${application.home:-.}/logs/application.log</file>
<encoder>
<pattern>%date [%level] from %logger in %thread - %message%n%xException</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
Optionally use the async appender to wrap the FileAppender
:
<appender name="ASYNCFILE" class="ch.qos.logback.classic.AsyncAppender">
<appender-ref ref="FILE" />
</appender>
Add the necessary appender(s) to the root:
<root level="WARN">
<appender-ref ref="ASYNCFILE" />
<appender-ref ref="ASYNCSTDOUT" />
</root>
§Security Logging
A security marker has been added for security related operations in Play, and failed security checks now log at WARN level, with the security marker set. This ensures that developers always know why a particular request is failing, which is important now that security filters are enabled by default in Play.
The security marker also allows security failures to be triggered or filtered distinct from normal logging. For example, to disable all logging with the SECURITY marker set, add the following lines to the logback.xml
file:
<turboFilter class="ch.qos.logback.classic.turbo.MarkerFilter">
<Marker>SECURITY</Marker>
<OnMatch>DENY</OnMatch>
</turboFilter>
In addition, log events using the security marker can also trigger a message to a Security Information & Event Management (SEIM) engine for further processing.
§Using a custom application loader
Note that when using a custom application loader that does not extend the default GuiceApplicationLoader
(for example when using compile-time dependency injection), the LoggerConfigurator
needs to be manually invoked to pick up your custom configuration. You can do this with code like the following:
class MyApplicationLoaderWithInitialization extends ApplicationLoader {
def load(context: Context) = {
LoggerConfigurator(context.environment.classLoader).foreach {
_.configure(context.environment, context.initialConfiguration, Map.empty)
}
new MyComponents(context).application
}
}
§Custom configuration
For any custom configuration, you will need to specify your own Logback configuration file.
§Using a configuration file from project source
You can provide a default logging configuration by providing a file conf/logback.xml
.
§Using an external configuration file
You can also specify a configuration file via a System property. This is particularly useful for production environments where the configuration file may be managed outside of your application source.
Note: The logging system gives top preference to configuration files specified by system properties, secondly to files in the
conf
directory, and lastly to the default. This allows you to customize your application’s logging configuration and still override it for specific environments or developer setups.
§Using -Dlogger.resource
Specify a configuration file to be loaded from the classpath:
$ start -Dlogger.resource=prod-logger.xml
§Using -Dlogger.file
Specify a configuration file to be loaded from the file system:
$ start -Dlogger.file=/opt/prod/logger.xml
Note: To see which file is being used, you can set a system property to debug it:
-Dlogback.debug=true
.
§Examples
Here’s an example of configuration that uses a rolling file appender, as well as a separate appender for outputting an access log:
<configuration>
<appender name="FILE" class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.RollingFileAppender">
<file>${application.home:-.}/logs/application.log</file>
<rollingPolicy class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.TimeBasedRollingPolicy">
<!-- Daily rollover with compression -->
<fileNamePattern>${application.home:-.}/logs/application-log-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}.gz</fileNamePattern>
<!-- keep 30 days worth of history -->
<maxHistory>30</maxHistory>
</rollingPolicy>
<encoder>
<pattern>%date{yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss ZZZZ} [%level] from %logger in %thread - %message%n%xException</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<appender name="SECURITY_FILE" class="ch.qos.logback.core.FileAppender">
<filter class="ch.qos.logback.core.filter.EvaluatorFilter">
<evaluator class="ch.qos.logback.classic.boolex.OnMarkerEvaluator">
<marker>SECURITY</marker>
</evaluator>
<OnMismatch>DENY</OnMismatch>
<OnMatch>ACCEPT</OnMatch>
</filter>
<file>${application.home:-.}/logs/security.log</file>
<encoder>
<pattern>%date [%level] [%marker] from %logger in %thread - %message%n%xException</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<appender name="ACCESS_FILE" class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.RollingFileAppender">
<file>${application.home:-.}/logs/access.log</file>
<rollingPolicy class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.TimeBasedRollingPolicy">
<!-- daily rollover with compression -->
<fileNamePattern>${application.home:-.}/logs/access-log-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}.gz</fileNamePattern>
<!-- keep 1 week worth of history -->
<maxHistory>7</maxHistory>
</rollingPolicy>
<encoder>
<pattern>%date{yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss ZZZZ} %message%n</pattern>
<!-- this quadruples logging throughput -->
<immediateFlush>false</immediateFlush>
</encoder>
</appender>
<!-- additivity=false ensures access log data only goes to the access log -->
<logger name="access" level="INFO" additivity="false">
<appender-ref ref="ACCESS_FILE" />
</logger>
<root level="INFO">
<appender-ref ref="FILE"/>
<appender-ref ref="SECURITY_FILE"/>
</root>
</configuration>
This demonstrates a few useful features:
- It uses
RollingFileAppender
which can help manage growing log files. See more details here. - It writes log files to a directory external to the application so they will not affected by upgrades, etc.
- The
FILE
appender uses an expanded message format that can be parsed by third party log analytics providers such as Sumo Logic. - The
access
logger is routed to a separate log file using theACCESS_FILE
appender. - Any log messages sent with the “SECURITY” marker attached are logged to the
security.log
file using the EvaluatorFilter and the OnMarkerEvaluator. - All loggers are set to a threshold of
INFO
which is a common choice for production logging.
Note: the
file
tag is optional and you can omit it if you want to avoid file renaming. See Logback docs for more information.
§Including Properties
By default, only the property application.home
is exported to the logging framework, meaning that files can be referenced relative to the Play application:
<file>${application.home:-}/example.log</file>
If you want to reference properties that are defined in the application.conf
file, you can add play.logger.includeConfigProperties=true
to your application.conf file. When the application starts, all properties defined in configuration will be available to the logger:
<appender name="STDOUT" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
<encoder>
<pattern>context = ${my.property.defined.in.application.conf} %message%n</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
§Akka logging configuration
Akka system logging can be done by changing the akka
logger to INFO.
<!-- Set logging for all Akka library classes to INFO -->
<logger name="akka" level="INFO" />
<!-- Set a specific actor to DEBUG -->
<logger name="actors.MyActor" level="DEBUG" />
You may also wish to configure an appender for the Akka loggers that includes useful properties such as thread and actor address. For more information about configuring Akka’s logging, including details on Logback and Slf4j integration, see the Akka documentation.
§Using a Custom Logging Framework
Play uses Logback by default, but it is possible to configure Play to use another logging framework as long as there is an SLF4J adapter for it. To do this, the PlayLogback
sbt plugin must be disabled using disablePlugins
:
lazy val root = (project in file("."))
.enablePlugins(PlayScala)
.disablePlugins(PlayLogback)
From there, a custom logging framework can be used. Here, Log4J 2 is used as an example.
libraryDependencies ++= Seq(
"org.apache.logging.log4j" % "log4j-slf4j-impl" % "2.4.1",
"org.apache.logging.log4j" % "log4j-api" % "2.4.1",
"org.apache.logging.log4j" % "log4j-core" % "2.4.1"
)
Once the libraries and the SLF4J adapter are loaded, the log4j.configurationFile
system property can be set on the command line as usual.
If custom configuration depending on Play’s mode is required, you can do additional customization with the LoggerConfigurator
. To do this, add a logger-configurator.properties
to the classpath, with
play.logger.configurator=Log4J2LoggerConfigurator
And then extend LoggerConfigurator with any customizations:
- Java
-
import com.typesafe.config.Config; import com.typesafe.config.ConfigFactory; import org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory; import play.Environment; import play.LoggerConfigurator; import play.Mode; import play.api.PlayException; import java.io.File; import java.net.URISyntaxException; import java.net.URL; import java.util.Collections; import java.util.HashMap; import java.util.Map; import java.util.Optional; import org.apache.logging.log4j.LogManager; import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.*; import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.Configurator; public class JavaLog4JLoggerConfigurator implements LoggerConfigurator { private ILoggerFactory factory; @Override public void init(File rootPath, Mode mode) { Map<String, String> properties = new HashMap<>(); properties.put("application.home", rootPath.getAbsolutePath()); String resourceName = "log4j2.xml"; URL resourceUrl = this.getClass().getClassLoader().getResource(resourceName); configure(properties, Optional.ofNullable(resourceUrl)); } @Override public void configure(Environment env) { Map<String, String> properties = LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties(env, ConfigFactory.empty(), Collections.emptyMap()); URL resourceUrl = env.resource("log4j2.xml"); configure(properties, Optional.ofNullable(resourceUrl)); } @Override public void configure( Environment env, Config configuration, Map<String, String> optionalProperties) { // LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties enables play.logger.includeConfigProperties=true Map<String, String> properties = LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties(env, configuration, optionalProperties); URL resourceUrl = env.resource("log4j2.xml"); configure(properties, Optional.ofNullable(resourceUrl)); } @Override public void configure(Map<String, String> properties, Optional<URL> config) { try { LoggerContext loggerContext = (LoggerContext) LogManager.getContext(false); loggerContext.setConfigLocation(config.get().toURI()); factory = org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder.getSingleton().getLoggerFactory(); } catch (URISyntaxException ex) { throw new PlayException( "log4j2.xml resource was not found", "Could not parse the location for log4j2.xml resource", ex); } } @Override public ILoggerFactory loggerFactory() { return factory; } @Override public void shutdown() { LoggerContext loggerContext = (LoggerContext) LogManager.getContext(); Configurator.shutdown(loggerContext); } }
- Scala
-
import java.io.File import java.net.URI import java.net.URL import play.api.{Mode, Configuration, Environment, LoggerConfigurator} import org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory import org.apache.logging.log4j.LogManager import org.apache.logging.log4j.core._ import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.Configurator import play.api.Mode import play.api.Configuration import play.api.Environment import play.api.LoggerConfigurator import org.slf4j.ILoggerFactory class Log4J2LoggerConfigurator extends LoggerConfigurator { private var factory: ILoggerFactory = _ override def init(rootPath: File, mode: Mode): Unit = { val properties = Map("application.home" -> rootPath.getAbsolutePath) val resourceName = "log4j2.xml" val resourceUrl = Option(this.getClass.getClassLoader.getResource(resourceName)) configure(properties, resourceUrl) } override def shutdown(): Unit = { val context = LogManager.getContext().asInstanceOf[LoggerContext] Configurator.shutdown(context) } override def configure(env: Environment): Unit = { val properties = LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties(env, Configuration.empty, Map.empty) val resourceUrl = env.resource("log4j2.xml") configure(properties, resourceUrl) } override def configure( env: Environment, configuration: Configuration, optionalProperties: Map[String, String] ): Unit = { // LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties enables play.logger.includeConfigProperties=true val properties = LoggerConfigurator.generateProperties(env, configuration, optionalProperties) val resourceUrl = env.resource("log4j2.xml") configure(properties, resourceUrl) } override def configure(properties: Map[String, String], config: Option[URL]): Unit = { val context = LogManager.getContext(false).asInstanceOf[LoggerContext] context.setConfigLocation(config.get.toURI) factory = org.slf4j.impl.StaticLoggerBinder.getSingleton.getLoggerFactory } override def loggerFactory: ILoggerFactory = factory }
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