This is now an FAQ for one of my projects, hopefully more people will find this here: java.util.logging works fine on Android. Please don't use anything else in your code, logging frameworks are like a pest in the Java world.
What is broken is the default logging handler shipped with Android, it ignores any log messages with level finer than INFO. You don't see DEBUG etc. messages.
The reason is the call to Log.isLoggable() in AndroidHandler.java:
https://github.com/android/platform_frameworks_base/blob/master/core/java/com/android/internal/logging/AndroidHandler.java
Here is how you fix it:
import android.util.Log;
import java.util.logging.*;
/**
* Make JUL work on Android.
*/
public class AndroidLoggingHandler extends Handler {
public static void reset(Handler rootHandler) {
Logger rootLogger = LogManager.getLogManager().getLogger("");
Handler[] handlers = rootLogger.getHandlers();
for (Handler handler : handlers) {
rootLogger.removeHandler(handler);
}
rootLogger.addHandler(rootHandler);
}
@Override
public void close() {
}
@Override
public void flush() {
}
@Override
public void publish(LogRecord record) {
if (!super.isLoggable(record))
return;
String name = record.getLoggerName();
int maxLength = 30;
String tag = name.length() > maxLength ? name.substring(name.length() - maxLength) : name;
try {
int level = getAndroidLevel(record.getLevel());
Log.println(level, tag, record.getMessage());
if (record.getThrown() != null) {
Log.println(level, tag, Log.getStackTraceString(record.getThrown()));
}
} catch (RuntimeException e) {
Log.e("AndroidLoggingHandler", "Error logging message.", e);
}
}
static int getAndroidLevel(Level level) {
int value = level.intValue();
if (value >= Level.SEVERE.intValue()) {
return Log.ERROR;
} else if (value >= Level.WARNING.intValue()) {
return Log.WARN;
} else if (value >= Level.INFO.intValue()) {
return Log.INFO;
} else {
return Log.DEBUG;
}
}
}
In the main activity/initialization code of your application:
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
AndroidLoggingHandler.reset(new AndroidLoggingHandler());
java.util.logging.Logger.getLogger("my.category").setLevel(Level.FINEST);
...
TL;DR: Yes, you could use some magic properties, or adb shell command, or even learn how the stupid built-in logging handler's DalvikLogging.loggerNameToTag
converts category names to tags (which you would have to do for those magic properties and shell commands), but why bother? Isn't logging painful enough?