I went through the source code of log4j
. When a FileAppender/RollingFileAppender is initialized, a FileOutputStream
instance is created pointing to the File. A new FileDescriptor
object is created to represent this file connection. This is the reason, the other solutions like Monitoring the file through Cron and Creating the File in append method by overriding didn't work for me, because a new file descriptor is assigned to the new file. Log4j Writer still points to the old FileDescriptor.
The solution was to check if the file is present and if not call the activeOptions method present in FileAppender Class.
package org.apache.log4j;
import java.io.File;
import org.apache.log4j.spi.LoggingEvent;
public class ModifiedRollingFileAppender extends RollingFileAppender {
@Override
public void append(LoggingEvent event) {
checkLogFileExist();
super.append(event);
}
private void checkLogFileExist(){
File logFile = new File(super.fileName);
if (!logFile.exists()) {
this.activateOptions();
}
}
}
Finally add this to the log4j.properties file:
log4j.rootLogger=DEBUG, A1
log4j.appender.A1=org.apache.log4j.ModifiedRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.A1.File=/path/to/file
log4j.appender.A1.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.A1.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{yy/MM/dd HH:mm:ss,SSS} %p %c{1}: %m%n
//Skip the below lines for FileAppender
log4j.appender.A1.MaxFileSize=10MB
log4j.appender.A1.MaxBackupIndex=2
Note: I have tested this for log4j 1.2.17