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I'm using log4net in my project and there is one problem. The major function of the program takes a long time and I use logging to save information about it. I use FileAppender for saving log to file.

My application is on the shared(local) folder and there could be several instances of the application running from one path. In this case I could log information only from the first program, other instances of my applications couldn't log info because log file is locked.

When I'm using "log4net.Appender.FileAppender+MinimalLock" option there are cases of information loss. Not all logs from both instances are saved to file.

How can I solve this problem and log info from parallel instances? Also what about performance degradation when I use "MinimalLock" option?

Thanks. Hope for your help.

2
  • 1
    could you write the log to a database instead of a file? Nov 28, 2009 at 16:13
  • Main reason to use file is that i need to exclude all DB connections. Nov 28, 2009 at 21:06

6 Answers 6

20

Simply include the process id of the application in the log file name. Different instances of your app will then log to different files. Here is an example:

<appender name="MyRollingFileAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
  <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString">
    <conversionPattern value="log_%processid.log" />
  </file>
<!-- ... -->
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  • 3
    Note to others: Be very careful not to miss the type="log4net.Util.PatternString" attribute, or it will not work! Jan 30, 2014 at 23:36
  • Also, from stackoverflow.com/a/15544239/368896, <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="c:\\testLogs\\TwoProjects-[%processid].txt" /> also works (i.e., no need for <conversionPattern ... />. Jan 30, 2014 at 23:38
  • Won't there be collisions? Wouldn't it be better to use the time that the process started plus process id?
    – crush
    Mar 24, 2015 at 17:23
4

I think it's a typical situation when centralized logging solution is desirable. Instead of worrying about files and suffer from performance bottlenecks, I'd rather pump log statements asynchronously to some remote service which will take care of storing and handling the logs. Have a look at this log aggregator called logFaces, it was designed with the purpose of decoupling applications from managing their logs. It should work with standard log4net UDP appender and will partition your log data per applications, hosts, threads, etc.. while letting you create log files any time when they really needed.

Disclosure: I am the author of this product.

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  • 5
    Seem overkill for simple desktop app that allows multiple instances.
    – Kugel
    Apr 19, 2011 at 13:42
1

You can create a custom appender that opens the file to write and then closes it. Should it hit a locked file, it could pause and retry a small number of times.

In the custom appender you could also open the file in shared write mode that would allow multiple writers, but this won't prevent pieces of log lines from being merged together.

If you aren't writing a lot of data, the open/close mechanism, listed above, is probably your best option. Note, because of the constant opening and closing of the file, you could see a noticeable performance impact if you are logging a lot of data.

A more complicated mechanism, but one that could provide a high performance logging path: Write a logging service that receives log lines via TCP or UDP. The service would be responsible for buffering data and writing it to disk. We've used this approach in the past (not via Log4Net, but as a general solution) to improve log writing efficiency.

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0

Perhaps you log to different files from each instance? Otherwise, you'd probably need to set up a separate process that is dedicated to logging. Each instance of your program would send it's log messages there and it would take care of appending it to the file. This could be accomplished using SocketAppender, perhaps. Also, I find that breaking up log output into chucks using RollingFileAppender is much easier to deal with.

0

Definitely consider creating different log files for each process, perhaps with unique filenames generated using a timestamp.

2
  • How can I specify logfile name from runtime? I thought that is available only from config. file? Nov 28, 2009 at 20:41
  • You're right, I shot from the hip... timestamp works, but configuring a new log file name for a new process gets tricky. Answer amended, thanks. Nov 28, 2009 at 21:04
0

Instead of MinimalLock using InterProcessLock can reduce the data loss incase of multiple processes accessing single logfile.

log4net.Appender.FileAppender+InterProcessLock

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