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Hi there,

I am using log4net and in one class require logging to a RollingFile appender, but then in another class, I wish to log to the event log + rolling file + console appender.

What is the best practice? and could I see some sample code?

By the way to make things more difficult, I am using Castle Windsor Logging Facility with Log4net to resolve my Logger instance.

If it helps, I was thinking this below, but have no idea if this is best practice, or how to activate a particular logger based on 'name' still utilising my current logger instance from windsor:

log4net.config:

...
    <logger name="EventLogOnly">
      <level value="ALL" />
      <appender-ref ref="EventLogAppender" />
    </logger>
    <logger name="ConsoleEventLog">
      <level value="ALL" />
      <appender-ref ref="ColoredConsoleAppender" />
      <appender-ref ref="EventLogAppender" />
    </logger>
...

castle windsor container builder class:

container.AddFacility("logging.facility", 
   new LoggingFacility(LoggerImplementation.Log4net, "log4net.config"));

class in which to log:

private ILogger Logger;
public Test(ILogger logger) {
  Logger.Info("Can I log under event log only?");
  Logger.Info("Now can I log under both?");
}

Thanks guys.

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1 Answer

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You can do this by applying a filter to an appender. Only if the log event passes the filter does the event get logged by that appender.

This filter configuration will log only those events coming from the logger named "MyLogger":

<appender name="EventLogAppender" ...
    <filter type="log4net.Filter.LoggerMatchFilter">
        <loggerToMatch value="MyLogger" />
    </filter>   	
    <filter type="log4net.Filter.DenyAllFilter" />
</appender>

...and this one will match log messages with certain contained text:

<filter type="log4net.Filter.StringMatchFilter">
    <stringToMatch value="database" />
</filter>
<filter type="log4net.Filter.DenyAllFilter" />

There's a good bit of configuration possible with filters. See the log4net SDK, or the Filters section of the manual, for more details.

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Thanks Michael, but I am still unsure of how to access my Logger by name. Using the logging facility in Castle Windsor, I don't instantiate a new instance by using LogManager.GetLogger("loggerName"), an instance is passed through for me. – GONeale Nov 5 at 2:23
Did you read the links in my answer? There's a lot you can filter on besides logger name. – Michael Petrotta Nov 5 at 2:27
Sorry, yes I understand you are talking about filters, but to get started for this appender to work at all, I assumed I still needed to access the logger by name. How would I get the appender to be picked up? Using <root> around appenders was working earlier, should I be trying that to wrap this filtered appender in, instead of an actual named logger? – GONeale Nov 5 at 2:30
Sorry, not 'wrapped' around that. <root> with the <appender-ref> pointing to that EventLogAppender. However my problem will actually still exist, as I can't seem to name a logger "MyLogger". the log4net SDK won't help me, as this is a criteria I might need to specify through the logging facility.. – GONeale Nov 5 at 2:32
Nope, you don't need access to the logger by name, unless you're using a filter that requires it. Many don't. – Michael Petrotta Nov 5 at 2:34
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