For Java development, I use Slf4j and Logback.

Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(HelloWorld.class);
logger.debug("Hello world.");

How to use these two libs in Clojure programs? Majority of Clojure programming doesn't has .class concept (possible of course via AOT).

What do you use for logging in Clojure?

link|improve this question

79% accept rate
There are two overloads for getLog(): one uses a Class, the other takes a String. You could simply use the String one. – Joachim Sauer Mar 7 '11 at 12:56
feedback

3 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

Clojure comes with a logging contrib library in clojure.contrib.logging. Once you use the library you can start logging away

(use 'clojure.contrib.logging)
(warn "something bad happened") 

Now you can also access the logger object and set the required fields, refer to the following article for this:

http://www.paullegato.com/blog/setting-clojure-log-level/

link|improve this answer
2  
contrib is deprecated in favor of tools.logging github.com/clojure/tools.logging – Sridhar Ratnakumar Oct 17 '11 at 19:46
feedback

tools.logging. For details, refer to tools.logging vs clojure.contrib.logging

link|improve this answer
feedback

some excerpts from a one of my projects that uses log4j:

log.clj:

(ns 
    #^{:author "Arthur Ulfeldt", 
       :doc "Polynomial threshold encryption"}
  com.cryptovide.log
  (:gen-class)
  (:use
   clojure.contrib.logging))

...

(def logger (org.apache.log4j.Logger/getLogger "A1"))
(def log-levels (vec ( org.apache.log4j.Level/getAllPossiblePriorities)))

...

(defn start-logging []
  (org.apache.log4j.BasicConfigurator/configure))

main.clj:

(start-logging)
(. logger setLevel (log-levels verbose-level))
link|improve this answer
Thanks for the snippet. – Chiron Mar 16 '11 at 18:13
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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