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I have a system which contains multiple applications connected together using JMS and Spring Integration. Messages get sent along a chain of applications.

[App A] -> [App B] -> [App C]

We set a global id in the message header so we can trace each message lifecycle through the system.

I would like to be able to prepend any log message in the system with the message global id.

Has anyone else done this? Is there any way to associate this variable to the Thread so I can access it in future methods? I'd rather not pass the variable around in methods of the system.

4 Answers 4

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I think ThreadLocal may be what you want here, though some may find this approach an abuse of ThreadLocal's purpose, or good design. Something like:

public class MyIDManager {
  public static final ThreadLocal<Long> myID = new ThreadLocal<Long>();
}

...
// set ID at some point
MyIDManager.myID.set(theNewID);

...
// read it later
long currentID = MyIDManager.get();

The magic here is that myID's value is actually specific to a Thread, and will be different when accessed from different threads.

You can then do what you like with the ID, including logging it.

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  • Log4j uses thread-local variables to implement its NDC and MDC classes, which is what I'd use for this problem with log4j. If you had to roll your own, a ThreadLocal is a good fit.
    – erickson
    Nov 9, 2009 at 15:12
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Thread t = Thread.currentThread();
t.setName("Your ID Here");
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Another answer, which I believe the first post is alluding to, is to simply ask your logging framework to include the thread name in the log statement. For example, log4j lets you add the thread name with 't' in its PatternLayout: http://logging.apache.org/log4j/1.2/apidocs/org/apache/log4j/PatternLayout.html I've seen this in other frameworks too.

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  • we do this, but obviously there can be many different threads used throughout the system. Nov 9, 2009 at 15:12
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BTW, this approach is part of a wider enterprise logging pattern. I attempted to document this pattern here. The summary is:

TL;DR

At the earliest inception of a ‘process’ create an ID which is a combination of an ‘origin id’ and ‘unique id’. This non-business related global inception ID (GIID), should be used for every log output to provide machine readability and tool use. When each new business level or operational id is obtained or generated, it is logged to provide an ‘association’ with this GIID. This is similar to various existing practices so it is presented as a Software Design Pattern.

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