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Autolog

Apache 2.0 License Maven Central GitHub Workflow Status Code Coverage Javadoc

A library providing capabilities for automatic logging in Java applications.

Modules

autolog-core

This is the core module of the library: it provides the core logging features independently of the implementation chosen for automation.

autolog-aspectj

This module provides aspects for logging automation based on AspectJ weaving and using annotations defined in autolog-core module.

autolog-spring

This module is the implementation of the logging automation based on Spring AOP and using annotations defined in autolog-core module. It acts as a Spring Boot starter by providing auto-configuration class for Autolog.

autolog-coverage-reporting

This module is only used to generate a code coverage report for the entire project.

Getting started

Prerequisites

Using Autolog requires JDK 11 or greater.

Installing

The latest release of Autolog is available on Maven Central. You can install Autolog in your application using one of the following Maven dependencies:

  • In a Spring application:
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.maximevw</groupId>
    <artifactId>autolog-spring</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.0</version>
</dependency>
  • In an application using AspectJ weaving for logging automation by AOP:
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.maximevw</groupId>
    <artifactId>autolog-aspectj</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.0</version>
</dependency>
  • In a classic Java application, you can use logging methods provided by Autolog without automation by AOP (not recommended):
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.github.maximevw</groupId>
    <artifactId>autolog-core</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.0</version>
</dependency>

Usage

Autolog annotations

Basically, Autolog provides two types of annotations used to automatically generates log thanks to AOP (using Spring AOP implementation in the module autolog-spring or AspectJ weaving in the module autolog-aspectj):

  • @AutoLogMethodInOut, @AutoLogMethodInput and @AutoLogMethodOutput: it helps to log, respectively, the input and output data of methods, the input data only and the output data only. It can also be used to automatically log exceptions.
  • @AutoLogPerformance: it helps to monitor and log the performance (execution time, failures, ...) of invoked methods during the execution of an application. Please note that the usage of this annotation may impact the performance of your application. If you need high performance during the execution of your code, don't use it (especially in production).

These annotations can be located on classes or methods (or both, in this case the configuration of the annotations at method level gets the priority). For further information about the configuration of each annotation, please consult the Javadoc.

  • @Mask: only located on method arguments, it allows masking (totally or partially) the values of arguments logged thanks to the annotation @AutoLogMethodInOut or @AutoLogMethodInput.

Loggers management

Each time Autolog will log something, it will use the loggers configured in a LoggerManager instance (which is a Spring-managed bean in Spring applications). The LoggerManager maintains a list of all the loggers to use, so Autolog is able to log the information at different places simultaneously. The real loggers instances managed by LoggerManager are wrapped in singleton adapters implementing LoggerInterface. By default, Autolog provides the following adapters:

  • JavaLoggerAdapter: wraps an instance of the classic java.util.logging.Logger
  • Log4j2Adapter: wraps an instance of org.apache.logging.log4j.Logger
  • Slf4jAdapter: wraps an instance of org.slf4j.Logger
  • LogbackWithLogstashAdapter: wraps an instance of org.slf4j.Logger which should use Logback implementation with Logstash encoder
  • SystemOutAdapter: wraps the standard output (System.out and System.err)
  • XSlf4jAdapter: wraps an instance of org.slf4j.ext.XLogger
  • (Experimental) JdbcAdapter: persists log events into a database using JDBC.

In Spring Boot applications, the LoggerManager can be configured in the application properties (by setting the list of LoggerInterface implementations to register in the property autolog.loggers) thanks to the auto-configuration class AutologAutoConfiguration.

Usage with AspectJ weaving

In order to use AspectJ weaving for logging automation by AOP, in addition to the dependency to autolog-aspectj, ensure to have org.aspectj:aspectjrt in your classpath and to compile your application using AspectJ weaving, including the dependency to autolog-aspectj in the weaved dependencies.

At the starting of your application, insert the following code to instantiate the LoggerManager required by Autolog for logging automation:

public class HelloApplication {
    public static void main(final String[] args) {
        // Instantiate Autolog.
        final LoggerManager loggerManager = new LoggerManager();
        // Register any loggers you want to use. See LoggerManager documentation for further details.
        // loggerManager.register(...);
        AspectJLoggerManager.getInstance().init(loggerManager);

        // Put the code of your application here...
    }
}

Now, you can use Autolog annotations into your application.

Basic example with a Spring application

Assuming your application is a REST API developed with Spring Web framework using an implementation of Slf4j for logging.

Here is the main class of your application:

@SpringBootApplication
@EnableAspectJAutoProxy
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class HelloApplication {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        SpringApplication.run(HelloApplication.class, args);
    }
}

The configuration file of your Spring application contains the following property:

autolog.loggers=Slf4jAdapter

Here is your web controller using Autolog annotations with default configuration:

@RestController
@AutoLogMethodInOut
@AutoLogPerformance
public class HelloWebController {
    @Autowired
    private HelloService helloService;

    @GetMapping("/hello")
    public String sayHello(@RequestParam final String name) {
        return helloService.sayHello(name);
    }
}

Here is the service, called by the web controller, using Autolog annotations with default configuration:

@Service
@AutoLogMethodInOut
@AutoLogPerformance
public class HelloService {
    public String sayHello(final String name) {
        return "Hello " + name + "!";
    }
}

When the API endpoint GET /hello?name=John is called, Autolog produces the following logs:

INFO  Entering HelloWebController.sayHello(name=John)
INFO  Entering HelloService.sayHello(name=John)
INFO  Exiting HelloService.sayHello() returning Hello John!
DEBUG Method HelloService.sayHello executed in 6 ms (started: 2019-12-30 14:30:25.602, ended: 2019-12-30 14:30:25.608).
INFO  Exiting HelloWebController.sayHello() returning Hello John!
DEBUG Method [GET] /hello executed in 10 ms (started: 2019-12-30 14:30:25.600, ended: 2019-12-30 14:30:25.610).
DEBUG Performance summary report for /hello:
DEBUG > /hello executed in 10 ms
DEBUG |_ > HelloService.sayHello executed in 6 ms

More examples are available in this GitHub repository.

Contributing

If you want to contribute to Autolog project, please read the content of CONTRIBUTING file.

Versioning

Autolog uses Semantic Versioning.

License

Autolog is distributed under Apache License 2.0.

Next features

Find below a non-exhaustive (and not sorted by priority) list of features we've planned to develop:

  • @AutoLog annotation and logging profiles

    A new annotation @AutoLog grouping the behaviour of both annotations @AutoLogMethodInOut and @AutoLogPerformance and using a configuration file (classpath:autolog.yaml by default) to define the parameters used to generate logs. For example: using

    @AutoLog(profile = "customProfile")
    public void exampleMethod() {
    }

    instead of

    @AutoLogMethodInOut(/*custom parameters...*/)
    @AutoLogPerformance(/*custom parameters...*/)
    public void exampleMethod() {
    }

    In Spring Boot auto-configuration, the profiles could be directly defined in the application property autolog.profiles.

  • Additional logger

    Provide new implementation KafkaAdapter of LoggerInterface to directly publish the generated logs in Kafka topics.

  • Log HTTP requests and responses

    Automate the logging of HTTP requests and responses for applications providing a REST API (using JAX-RS or Spring Web Framework) by using servlet filters.

  • Loggers configuration by profile

    Register different loggers in the different defined logging profiles. For example: a custom profile uses SystemOutAdapter and another one Slf4jAdapter.

    In a given profile, the used loggers could also be different: for example the performance information logging uses SystemOutAdapter and the logging of input/output data uses Log4j2Adapter.