You'd probably start with Java's split function for strings:
Oracle Doc
Look at example 3
I assume you could lump your first column as everything from the start to '>' after %LOGSOURCE%. I'm also guessing there are other columns that would be lumped together and that in the end you'd only expect a certain amount of columns per row.
You could use code like this:
//a line of the log can be split on '>' and ';' for the other columns of interest
//logLine is a line off the your log, I'm assuming it's a string object
string[] splitLine = logLine.split("[>;]+");
//I'm pretending there are 7 columns, for simplicity sake I'm using an ArrayList
// of string arrays (ArraList<string[]>) that would get declared
//above all this called logList
string[] logEntry = new string[7];
//Save the time stamp of the log entry by iterating through splitLine
for(int counter1 = 0; counter1 < splitLine.length; counter1++)
{
//Timestamp column
if(counter1 == 0)
logEntry[0] = splitLine[counter1];
//First column
if(counter1 == 1)
logEntry[1] = splitLine[counter1];
//Logic to determine what needs to get appended to second column,
//could be many if statements
if(...)
logEntry[1] += splitLine[counter1];
//Logic to determine what starts third column
if(...)
logEntry[2] = splitLine[counter1];
//Logic to determine what needs to get appended to third column,
//could be many if statements
if(...)
logEntry[2] += splitLine[counter1];
//And so on... till you fill all your columns up or as much as you want
}
//Add your columned log to your list for use after you've parsed up the file
logList.add(logEntry);
You'd probably stick all this logic in a for loop that continually grabs a line off your log into the logLine string used at the top of the code sample. It's not the most efficient way, but it's pretty straightforward. Hopefully this gives you a start to approaching your problem.