vote up 0 vote down star

Hi, Log4Net doesn't do the correct patternString substitution for my login name (minus domian) that I'm expecting. Anyone have an example of inserting the "username" in the apppender's file name? I've tried a bunch of things, I'm still scratching my head.

<appender name="core_Appender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender" >
<!-- <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString"  value="Logs/%date{yyyyMMdd}/MSMQcore_%identity.log" /> -->
<!-- <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString"  value="Logs/%date{yyyyMMdd}/MSMQcore_%property{user}.log" /> -->
<file type="log4net.Util.PatternString"  value="Logs/%date{yyyyMMdd}/MSMQcore_%username.log" />
</appender>

I want my log to be "Logs/YYYYMMDD/MSMQcore_%USERNAME.log" .... when I use the %username property, I get the "domain\nusername" ... which adds another folder indirection in there. I only want the user name.

anyone ?

Thanks,

Craig

flag

1 Answer

vote up 2 vote down

Using the environment variable pattern works for me:

<file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="Logs\\%env{USERNAME}.txt" />

Update: if the USERNAME environment variable is not an option, subclassing PatternString could be an alternative. Here is a simple implementation:

public class MyPatternString : PatternString
{
    public MyPatternString()
    {
        AddConverter("usernameonly", typeof(UserNameOnlyConverter));
    }    
}

public class UserNameOnlyConverter : PatternConverter 
{
    override protected void Convert(TextWriter writer, object state) 
    {
        var windowsIdentity = WindowsIdentity.GetCurrent();
        if (windowsIdentity != null && windowsIdentity.Name != null)
        {
            var name = windowsIdentity.Name.Split('\\')[1];
            writer.Write(name);
        }
    }
}

The new setting will look like this:

<file type="MyPatternString" value="Logs\\%usernameonly.txt" />


Update 2: to answer why %identity and %property{user} doesn't work:

The %identity pattern picks up the identity property on the current thread. This property is in my tests null, and is probably so until one assigns a specific Windows identity to the running thread. This will not work in the context of the appender because you will not know which thread will perform the actual appending.

The %property pattern picks up properties from the GlobalContext and ThreadContext classes. By default, only the log4net:HostName (LoggingEvent.HostNameProperty) is registered in the GlobalContext. So unless you actively register properties in those contexts you cannot use them with the %property pattern. Again, ThreadContext is useless in the context of the appender since you have no way of knowing which thread will be doing the appending.

That said, registering a property called username in the GlobalContext.Properties collection, somewhere in the application startup routine perhaps, will enable the %property{username} to work as expected.

link|flag
Peter, Thanks ... this also worked for me. Lucky the environment variable was set. I'm still not sure why the other versions didn't work. perhaps the PatternString only parses the string in one pass ?? tvm, Craig – Craig Oct 14 at 9:29
Thanks a bunch. This is awesome. – Skinniest Man Oct 15 at 20:47

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.