Log4Net: Rolling File appender, define extension - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-12-22T14:04:08Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/615092 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/615092/log4net-rolling-file-appender-define-extension 5 Log4Net: Rolling File appender, define extension Sem Dendoncker 2009-03-05T14:49:42Z 2009-03-16T17:12:11Z <p>Hi,</p> <p>I want my logfile to look something like this: 2009-02-13.log</p> <p>but the problem is that I can't seem to find any way to add the .log extension.</p> <p>I've tried a lot of things but nothing helps. This is what I have this far:</p> <pre><code>&lt;appender name="RollingFileAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender"&gt; &lt;file value="Logs/Log4Net/.log"/&gt; &lt;appendToFile value="true"/&gt; &lt;rollingStyle value="Date"/&gt; &lt;datePattern value="yyyy-MM-dd" /&gt; &lt;layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout"&gt; &lt;conversionPattern value="%date [%thread] %-5level %logger [%property{NDC}] - %message%newline"/&gt; &lt;/layout&gt; &lt;/appender&gt; </code></pre> <p>Kind regards,</p> <p>Sem</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/615092/log4net-rolling-file-appender-define-extension/615137#615137 7 Answer by gwhitake for Log4Net: Rolling File appender, define extension gwhitake 2009-03-05T14:58:51Z 2009-03-05T14:58:51Z <p>Sem,</p> <p>Try adding the .log extension to your date pattern like so and remove it from the file attribute.</p> <pre><code>&lt;datePattern value="yyyy-MM-dd.lo\g"/&gt; </code></pre> <p>-Woody</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/615092/log4net-rolling-file-appender-define-extension/615139#615139 2 Answer by devinb for Log4Net: Rolling File appender, define extension devinb 2009-03-05T14:59:07Z 2009-03-05T14:59:07Z <p>add ".lo\g" to the end of your datepattern</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/615092/log4net-rolling-file-appender-define-extension/651308#651308 7 Answer by Craig Walker for Log4Net: Rolling File appender, define extension Craig Walker 2009-03-16T17:12:11Z 2009-03-16T17:12:11Z <p>The other answers escape the "g" in "log" since "g" is a special character in datePattern. This isn't wrong, but I prefer to wrap the entire set of non-date characters in single quotes, like so:</p> <pre><code>&lt;datePattern value="yyyy-MM-dd'.log'" /&gt; </code></pre> <p>This gives the same results, but is easier for me to manage. This way, I don't have to recall which specific characters are special for datePattern (the list is long and varied). If I forget one character then I don't run the risk of borking my file names; they're all nicely escaped en masse.</p>