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My production setup has 1 physical server with 2 weblogic managed nodes running and deployed with a package war file.

The package war file contains the log4j configuration file which specifies the log file to be written to /log/mypath/mylogfile.log.

Will multiple weblogic managed nodes attempting to read/write to the same log file result in file lock/IO issues?

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  • Have you set up an async log4j appender? Jun 14, 2016 at 3:41

2 Answers 2

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Yes, you will have issues that will prevent the logs from rolling. Adding the the server name as a variable name with alleviate this, but will give you two log files instead of one. The log path will look like this:

/log/mypath/mylogfile.${weblogic.Name}.log

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  • But, If I am having the same war file and variables how would ${weblogic.Name} would help? Jun 15, 2016 at 13:41
  • The variable name will cause each JVM to create and use its own log file. This removes the contention of two JVMs trying to use the same file.
    – Brian Ochs
    Jun 15, 2016 at 13:52
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I find that if there is too much logging going on, such as using full debugging to troubleshoot a high volume production system, we can get stuck threads. I have seen this happen with just one managed server, let alone with several. It might depend on log4j version but it has been a periodic problem for us with high log levels.

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