136

I would like to have files named for example:

dd.mm.yyyy.log

How is this possible with log4net?

1

11 Answers 11

233
<appender name="RollingLogFileAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
  <lockingModel type="log4net.Appender.FileAppender+MinimalLock"/>
  <file value="logs\" />
  <datePattern value="dd.MM.yyyy'.log'" />
  <staticLogFileName value="false" />
  <appendToFile value="true" />
  <rollingStyle value="Composite" />
  <maxSizeRollBackups value="10" />
  <maximumFileSize value="5MB" />
  <layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout">
    <conversionPattern value="%date [%thread] %-5level %logger [%property{NDC}] - %message%newline" />
  </layout>
</appender>
5
  • 2
    I think you should highlight the main point of what parameter to solve the problem as @Mun did. However, I also voted up for your answer.
    – NoName
    Feb 24, 2016 at 7:25
  • 2
    It was the datePattern element, in conjunction with the staticLogFileName element (and note the value attribute for the file element) that worked for me
    – Michhes
    Oct 24, 2017 at 5:37
  • 1
    The complete answer!
    – Nagesh
    Jun 25, 2020 at 13:50
  • Note that the accepted configuration here will result in log files for the current date getting overwritten if the application is restarted. See issues.apache.org/jira/projects/LOG4NET/issues/LOG4NET-672 for a VERY similar issue, although it doesn't solve this. For this to work as desired, the file extension must be moved from the datePattern element to the file element ex: <file value="logs\.log" /> <datePattern value="dd.MM.yyyy" />
    – user207462
    Dec 15, 2023 at 17:11
  • The above comment may only apply when <preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true" /> is set.
    – user207462
    Dec 15, 2023 at 20:13
113

In your Log4net config file, use the following parameter with the RollingFileAppender:

<param name="DatePattern" value="dd.MM.yyyy'.log'" />
3
  • 30
    Appears this has been promoted to a config element: <datePattern value="dd.MM.yyyy'.log'" /> Cheers!
    – longda
    May 29, 2013 at 0:11
  • 4
    @mstaessen <preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true" /> is the correct syntax and this is a great answer. How did the loss occur, may I ask? Feb 12, 2018 at 14:48
  • 1
    If I recall correctly, it went like this. On startup, log4net would generate the first filename in the rolling sequence. It would detect that that file already exist and would then decide to roll to the second file, but when that one also already exists, it does not decide to roll but instead clears it and overwrites everything in that second log file. It goes by totally unnoticed until you need logs of the cleared timeframe...
    – mstaessen
    Feb 12, 2018 at 15:11
33

For a RollingLogFileAppender you also need these elements and values:

<rollingStyle value="Date" />
<staticLogFileName value="false" />
3
  • 3
    This works, but appends the date after the file extension. For example I get log files like Error.log20111104 - Does anyone know of a way to format the file name a little better? Nov 4, 2011 at 13:12
  • Here's how to format the file name better: stackoverflow.com/questions/615092/… Nov 4, 2011 at 13:17
  • what is staticLogFileName used for? I only want the log file to be rolled into a new name after the day ends. I want to use a log monitor that looks at a specific each time.
    – Sun
    Aug 14, 2014 at 15:33
28

I ended up using (note the '.log' filename and the single quotes around 'myfilename_'):

  <rollingStyle value="Date" />
  <datePattern value="'myfilename_'yyyy-MM-dd"/>
  <preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true" />
  <staticLogFileName value="false" />
  <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="c:\\Logs\\.log" />

This gives me:

myfilename_2015-09-22.log
myfilename_2015-09-23.log
.
.
1
  • preserveLogFileNameExtension doesn't work for earlier versions of log4net (e.g. v1.2.10) as it's described here Nov 8, 2018 at 12:53
24

Using Log4Net 1.2.13 we use the following configuration settings to allow date time in the file name.

<file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="E:/logname-%utcdate{yyyy-MM-dd}.txt" />

Which will provide files in the following convention: logname-2015-04-17.txt

With this it's usually best to have the following to ensure you're holding 1 log per day.

<rollingStyle value="Date" />
<datePattern value="yyyyMMdd" />

If size of file is a concern the following allows 500 files of 5MB in size until a new day spawns. CountDirection allows Ascending or Descending numbering of files which are no longer current.

 <maxSizeRollBackups value="500" />
 <maximumFileSize value="5MB" />
 <rollingStyle value="Composite" />
 <datePattern value="yyyyMMdd" />
 <CountDirection value="1"/>
 <staticLogFileName value="true" />
0
20

I've tried all the answers, but there was always something missing and not functioning as expected for me.

Then I experimented a bit with the hints given in each answer and was successful with the following setting:

<appender name="RollingActivityLog" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
  <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="C:\temp\LOG4NET_Sample_Activity.log" />
  <appendToFile value="true" />
  <rollingStyle value="Date" />
  <staticLogFileName value="false" />
  <preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true" />
  <datePattern value="-yyyyMMdd" />
  <layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout">
    <conversionPattern value="%date %-5level - %message%newline" />
  </layout>
</appender>

The issue with other combinations of parameters was that the latest file didn't have the time pattern, or that the time pattern was appended as .log20171215 which created a new file time (and a new file type!) each day - or both issues appeared.

Now with this setting you are getting files like this one:

LOG4NET_Sample_Activity-20171215.log

which is what I wanted.


To summarize:

  • Don't put the date pattern in the <file value=... attribute, just define it in the datePattern.

  • Make sure you have the preserveLogFileNameExtension value attribute set to true.

  • Make sure you have the staticLogFileName value set to false.

  • Set the rollingStyle attribute value to Date.

2
  • You can also set rollingStyle to Composite, which rolls on both date and size.
    – Simon Elms
    Nov 2, 2018 at 1:10
  • 1
    Works great. I would also add in the summarize: Make sure you have the staticLogFileName value set to false Jun 23, 2019 at 10:23
6

To preserve file extension:

<log4net>
    <root>
      <level value="DEBUG"/>
      <appender-ref ref="RollingLogFileAppender"/>
    </root>
    <appender name="RollingLogFileAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
      <file type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="D:\\LogFolder\\%date{yyyyMM}\\SchT.log" />
      <appendToFile value="true" />
      <rollingStyle value="Date" />
      <maximumFileSize value="30MB" />
      <staticLogFileName value="true" />
      <preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true"/>
      <datePattern value="ddMMyyyy" />
      <layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout">
        <conversionPattern value="%date [%thread] %-5level %logger - %message%newline" />
      </layout>
    </appender>
  </log4net>
7
  • why there are %date{yyyyMM} and value="ddMMyyyy" ? which is the effective date pattern?
    – Allan Ruin
    Aug 17, 2017 at 8:34
  • I think datePattern is for the file name but %date{yyyyMM} is for the parent directory (I wanted it that way)
    – Fourat
    Aug 17, 2017 at 13:13
  • The datePattern attribute sets the rolling period for Date rollingStyle. See logging.apache.org/log4net/release/config-examples.html under RollingFileAppender. "For example, a date pattern of "yyyyMMdd" will roll every day. See System.Globalization.DateTimeFormatInfo for a list of available patterns." Jan 25, 2018 at 22:21
  • @rbuddicom yeah but the question is about how to preserve file extension.
    – Fourat
    Jan 26, 2018 at 8:47
  • I know, Allan questioned the purpose of 'value="ddMMyyyy"'. Your comment "I think datePattern is for the file name" is incorrect in that regard. Jan 29, 2018 at 20:04
0

The extended configuration section in a previous response with

 ...
 ...
 <rollingStyle value="Composite" />
 ...
 ...

listed works but I did not have to use

<staticLogFileName value="false" /> 

. I think the RollingAppender must (logically) ignore that setting since by definition the file gets rebuilt each day when the application restarts/reused. Perhaps it does matter for immediate rollover EVERY time the application starts.

2
  • For me, it wouldn't work without the <staticLogFileName value="false" />
    – nurettin
    Aug 16, 2012 at 8:02
  • me as well, had to set staticLogFileName to false otherwise it wouldn't log
    – oonyalo
    Aug 2, 2016 at 19:46
0

I moved configuration to code to enable easy modification from CI using system variable. I used this code for file name and result is 'Log_03-23-2020.log'

            log4net.Repository.ILoggerRepository repository = LogManager.GetRepository(Assembly.GetEntryAssembly());
            Hierarchy hierarchy = (Hierarchy)repository;
            PatternLayout patternLayout = new PatternLayout();
            patternLayout.ConversionPattern = "%date %level - %message%newline%exception";
            patternLayout.ActivateOptions();

            RollingFileAppender roller = new RollingFileAppender();
            roller.AppendToFile = true;
            roller.File = "Log_";
            roller.DatePattern = "MM-dd-yyyy'.log'";
            roller.Layout = patternLayout;
            roller.MaxFileSize = 1024*1024*10;
            roller.MaxSizeRollBackups = 10;
            roller.StaticLogFileName = false;
            roller.RollingStyle = RollingFileAppender.RollingMode.Composite;
            roller.ActivateOptions();
            hierarchy.Root.AddAppender(roller);

0

Your answer is that the way to changing "rollingStyle value" to "Date". The others things are look like fine.

<rollingStyle value="Date" />

The trick is hidden those four definitions:

 ...
  <file value="logs\" />
  <datePattern value="dd.MM.yyyy'.log'" />
  <staticLogFileName value="false" />
  <rollingStyle value="Date" />
  ...

This is my log4net configuration:

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<configuration>
    <!-- Log4Net -->
    <configSections>
        <section name="log4net" type="log4net.Config.Log4NetConfigurationSectionHandler, log4net" />
    </configSections>
    <log4net>
        <root>
            <level value="ALL" />
            <appender-ref ref="RollingFileAppender" />
        </root>
        <appender name="RollingFileAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
            <file value="logs\log_" />
            <rollingStyle value="Date" />
            <datePattern value="yyyy_MM_dd'.txt'"/>
            <staticLogFileName value="false" />
            <appendToFile value="true" />
            <maxSizeRollBackups value="50" />
            <maximumFileSize value="10MB" />
            <lockingModel type="log4net.Appender.FileAppender+MinimalLock" />
            <layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout">
                <conversionPattern value="%date [%thread] %level - %message%newline%exception" />
            </layout>
            <filter type="log4net.Filter.LevelRangeFilter">
                <levelMin value="INFO" />
                <levelMax value="ERROR" />
                <levelMin value="DEBUG" />
            </filter>
        </appender>
    </log4net>
    <!-- Log4Net -->
</configuration>
0

for me, the solution was to modify the datePattern value like this:

<datePattern value="'-'yyyy-MM-dd'.log'" />

Here is my appender:

<appender name="testAppender" type="log4net.Appender.RollingFileAppender">
<file  type="log4net.Util.PatternString" value="ApplicationLog" />
<appendToFile value="true" />
<rollingStyle value="Date" />
<staticLogFileName value="false" />
<preserveLogFileNameExtension value="true" />
<datePattern value="'-'yyyy-MM-dd'.log'" />
<maxSizeRollBackups value="10" />
<maximumFileSize value="100MB" />
<layout type="log4net.Layout.PatternLayout">
  <conversionPattern value="%date %-5level - %message%newline" />
</layout>

My log file will be named: ApplicationLog-2022-11-04.log

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