36

How to (programmatically, without xml config) configure multiple loggers with Log4Net? I need them to write to different files.

4 Answers 4

46

This thread at the log4net Dashboard details an approach.

To summarize a little, hopefully without ripping off too much code:

using log4net;
using log4net.Appender;
using log4net.Layout;
using log4net.Repository.Hierarchy;

// Set the level for a named logger
public static void SetLevel(string loggerName, string levelName)
{
    ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(loggerName);
    Logger l = (Logger)log.Logger;

    l.Level = l.Hierarchy.LevelMap[levelName];
    }

// Add an appender to a logger
public static void AddAppender(string loggerName, IAppender appender)
{
    ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(loggerName);
    Logger l = (Logger)log.Logger;

    l.AddAppender(appender);
}

// Create a new file appender
public static IAppender CreateFileAppender(string name, string fileName)
{
    FileAppender appender = new
        FileAppender();
    appender.Name = name;
    appender.File = fileName;
    appender.AppendToFile = true;

    PatternLayout layout = new PatternLayout();
    layout.ConversionPattern = "%d [%t] %-5p %c [%x] - %m%n";
    layout.ActivateOptions();

    appender.Layout = layout;
    appender.ActivateOptions();

    return appender;
}

// In order to set the level for a logger and add an appender reference you
// can then use the following calls:
SetLevel("Log4net.MainForm", "ALL");
AddAppender("Log4net.MainForm", CreateFileAppender("appenderName", "fileName.log"));

// repeat as desired
5
  • I've taken this approach for one of my assemblies, rather than using the XML configuration approach. While the file does get generated, for some reason the ILog logging-related methods don't write anything to the files. Is there a method to call to make the new appender take effect? I haven't found anything like this, yet...
    – Dave
    Mar 26, 2012 at 15:34
  • 8
    @Dave: I had the same problem and solved it by appending l.Repository.Configured = true; to AddAppender.
    – Stephan
    Apr 20, 2012 at 10:55
  • @Stephan thanks, I believe that's exactly what I had to do to make it work as well. :)
    – Dave
    Apr 23, 2012 at 22:26
  • 1
    Link appears to be dead. Any chance the discussion is stored somewhere else? Jun 9, 2015 at 19:41
  • 1
    @MonkeyWrench: I found it here.
    – InteXX
    Sep 15, 2015 at 2:30
3
using System;
using Com.Foo;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using log4net.Config;
using log4net;
using log4net.Appender;
using log4net.Layout;
using log4net.Repository.Hierarchy;


public class MyApp
{


    public static void SetLevel(string loggerName, string levelName)
    {
        ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(loggerName);
        Logger l = (Logger)log.Logger;

        l.Level = l.Hierarchy.LevelMap[levelName];
    }

    // Add an appender to a logger
    public static void AddAppender(string loggerName, IAppender appender)
    {
        ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(loggerName);
        Logger l = (Logger)log.Logger;

        l.AddAppender(appender);
    }
    // Add an appender to a logger
    public static void AddAppender2(ILog log, IAppender appender)
    {
       // ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(loggerName);
        Logger l = (Logger)log.Logger;

        l.AddAppender(appender);
    }

    // Create a new file appender
    public static IAppender CreateFileAppender(string name, string fileName)
    {
        FileAppender appender = new
            FileAppender();
        appender.Name = name;
        appender.File = fileName;
        appender.AppendToFile = true;

        PatternLayout layout = new PatternLayout();
        layout.ConversionPattern = "%d [%t] %-5p %c [%logger] - %m%n";
        layout.ActivateOptions();

        appender.Layout = layout;
        appender.ActivateOptions();

        return appender;
    }

    private static readonly ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(typeof(MyApp));
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        BasicConfigurator.Configure();
        SetLevel("Log4net.MainForm", "ALL");
        AddAppender2(log, CreateFileAppender("appenderName", "fileName.log"));
        log.Info("Entering application.");
        Console.WriteLine("starting.........");
        log.Info("Entering application.");
        Bar bar = new Bar();
        bar.DoIt();
        Console.WriteLine("starting.........");
        log.Error("Exiting application.");
        Console.WriteLine("starting.........");
    }
}


namespace Com.Foo
{
    public class Bar
    {
        private static readonly ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(typeof(Bar));

        public void DoIt()
        {
            log.Debug("Did it again!");
        }
    }
}
1
  • this one is working fine,for this atleast log4jNet dll version2.0 is required. Jun 18, 2012 at 9:56
3

I Hope this helps, it configures a simple console logger.

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    const string logLayoutPattern =
        "[%date %timestamp][%level] %message %newline" +
        "Domain: %appdomain, User: %username %identity %newline" +
        "%stacktracedetail{10} %newline" +
        "%exception %newline";

    var wrapperLogger = LogManager.GetLogger(MethodBase.GetCurrentMethod().DeclaringType);
    var logger = (Logger) wrapperLogger.Logger;
    logger.Hierarchy.Root.Level = Level.All;

    var consoleAppender = new ConsoleAppender
    {
        Name = "ConsoleAppender",
        Layout = new PatternLayout(logLayoutPattern)
    };

    logger.Hierarchy.Root.AddAppender(consoleAppender);
    logger.Hierarchy.Configured = true;

    wrapperLogger.Debug("Hello");
    Console.ReadKey();
}
0

I mixed together the code from Blair Conrad's answer and the code from Philipp M on this post:

stackoverflow.com/questions/16336917/can-you-configure-log4net-in-code-instead-of-using-a-config-file

I compiled the result into a dll that I reference in my projects and call like this, usually on the first line of the main program:

public static Log = new Log4NetWrapper.LogWrapper().Setup(@"c:\myLog.log", "TestLog");

Here is the code in the DLL:

public class LogWrapper
    {
        public ILog Setup(string logFilePath, string logName, string maxFileSize = "10MB")
        {
            var patternLayout = new PatternLayout();
            patternLayout.ConversionPattern = "%date [%thread] %-5level %logger - %message%newline";
            patternLayout.ActivateOptions();

            var roller = new RollingFileAppender();
            roller.AppendToFile = true;
            roller.File = logFilePath;
            roller.Layout = patternLayout;
            roller.MaxSizeRollBackups = 5;
            roller.MaximumFileSize = maxFileSize;
            roller.RollingStyle = RollingFileAppender.RollingMode.Size;
            roller.StaticLogFileName = true;
            roller.ActivateOptions();
            //hierarchy.Root.AddAppender(roller);

            var memory = new MemoryAppender();
            memory.ActivateOptions();

            ILog log = LogManager.GetLogger(logName);
            var l = (Logger)log.Logger;
            l.AddAppender(roller);
            l.AddAppender(memory);

            l.Level = l.Hierarchy.LevelMap["Debug"];
            l.Repository.Configured = true;
            return log;
        }
    }

One could of course add parameters as needed to the constructor or create overrides.

1
  • Sadly, I have found that although this is working fine in one of my project, in another one logging suddenly stopped working unless the code runs within the visual studio hosting process. I spent a lot of time on it and yet I have no idea why. So i must agree with a comment about log4net from another post. Log4Net is difficult to use and simply not reliable ):
    – pasx
    Sep 14, 2018 at 14:46

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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