Log::Log4perl::Filter(3) Log4perl Custom Filter Base Class

SYNOPSIS


use Log::Log4perl;
Log::Log4perl->init(\ <<'EOT');
log4perl.logger = INFO, Screen
log4perl.filter.MyFilter = sub { /let this through/ }
log4perl.appender.Screen = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
log4perl.appender.Screen.Filter = MyFilter
log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout
EOT
# Define a logger
my $logger = Log::Log4perl->get_logger("Some");
# Let this through
$logger->info("Here's the info, let this through!");
# Suppress this
$logger->info("Here's the info, suppress this!");
#################################################################
# StringMatch Filter:
#################################################################
log4perl.filter.M1 = Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch
log4perl.filter.M1.StringToMatch = let this through
log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true
#################################################################
# LevelMatch Filter:
#################################################################
log4perl.filter.M1 = Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch
log4perl.filter.M1.LevelToMatch = INFO
log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true

DESCRIPTION

Log4perl allows the use of customized filters in its appenders to control the output of messages. These filters might grep for certain text chunks in a message, verify that its priority matches or exceeds a certain level or that this is the 10th time the same message has been submitted --- and come to a log/no log decision based upon these circumstantial facts.

Filters have names and can be specified in two different ways in the Log4perl configuration file: As subroutines or as filter classes. Here's a simple filter named "MyFilter" which just verifies that the oncoming message matches the regular expression "/let this through/i":

    log4perl.filter.MyFilter        = sub { /let this through/i }

It exploits the fact that when the subroutine defined above is called on a message, Perl's special $_ variable will be set to the message text (prerendered, i.e. concatenated but not layouted) to be logged. The subroutine is expected to return a true value if it wants the message to be logged or a false value if doesn't.

Also, Log::Log4perl will pass a hash to the subroutine, containing all key/value pairs that it would pass to the corresponding appender, as specified in Log::Log4perl::Appender. Here's an example of a filter checking the priority of the oncoming message:

  log4perl.filter.MyFilter        = sub {    \
       my %p = @_;                           \
       if($p{log4p_level} eq "WARN" or       \
          $p{log4p_level} eq "INFO") {       \
           return 1;                         \
       }                                     \
       return 0;                             \
  }

If the message priority equals "WARN" or "INFO", it returns a true value, causing the message to be logged.

Predefined Filters

For common tasks like verifying that the message priority matches a certain priority, there's already a set of predefined filters available. To perform an exact level match, it's much cleaner to use Log4perl's "LevelMatch" filter instead:

  log4perl.filter.M1               = Log::Log4perl::Filter::LevelMatch
  log4perl.filter.M1.LevelToMatch  = INFO
  log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true

This will let the message through if its priority is INFO and suppress it otherwise. The statement can be negated by saying

  log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = false

instead. This way, the message will be logged if its priority is anything but INFO.

On a similar note, Log4perl's "StringMatch" filter will check the oncoming message for strings or regular expressions:

  log4perl.filter.M1               = Log::Log4perl::Filter::StringMatch
  log4perl.filter.M1.StringToMatch = bl.. bl..
  log4perl.filter.M1.AcceptOnMatch = true

This will open the gate for messages like "blah blah" because the regular expression in the "StringToMatch" matches them. Again, the setting of "AcceptOnMatch" determines if the filter is defined in a positive or negative way.

All class filter entries in the configuration file have to adhere to the following rule: Only after a filter has been defined by name and class/subroutine, its attribute values can be assigned, just like the "true" value above gets assigned to the "AcceptOnMatch" attribute after the filter "M1" has been defined.

Attaching a filter to an appender

Attaching a filter to an appender is as easy as assigning its name to the appender's "Filter" attribute:

    log4perl.appender.MyAppender.Filter = MyFilter

This will cause "Log::Log4perl" to call the filter subroutine/method every time a message is supposed to be passed to the appender. Depending on the filter's return value, "Log::Log4perl" will either continue as planned or withdraw immediately.

Combining filters with Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean

Sometimes, it's useful to combine the output of various filters to arrive at a log/no log decision. While Log4j, Log4perl's mother ship, has chosen to implement this feature as a filter chain, similar to Linux' IP chains, Log4perl tries a different approach.

Typically, filter results will not need to be bumped along chains but combined in a programmatic manner using boolean logic. ``Log if this filter says 'yes' and that filter says 'no''' is a fairly common requirement, but hard to implement as a chain.

"Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean" is a specially predefined custom filter for Log4perl. It combines the results of other custom filters in arbitrary ways, using boolean expressions:

    log4perl.logger = WARN, AppWarn, AppError
    log4perl.filter.Match1       = sub { /let this through/ }
    log4perl.filter.Match2       = sub { /and that, too/ }
    log4perl.filter.MyBoolean       = Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean
    log4perl.filter.MyBoolean.logic = Match1 || Match2
    log4perl.appender.Screen        = Log::Log4perl::Appender::Screen
    log4perl.appender.Screen.Filter = MyBoolean
    log4perl.appender.Screen.layout = Log::Log4perl::Layout::SimpleLayout

"Log::Log4perl::Filter::Boolean"'s boolean expressions allow for combining different appenders by name using AND (&& or &), OR (|| or |) and NOT (!) as logical expressions. Also, parentheses can be used for defining precedences. Operator precedence follows standard Perl conventions. Here's a bunch of examples:

    Match1 && !Match2            # Match1 and not Match2
    !(Match1 || Match2)          # Neither Match1 nor Match2
    (Match1 && Match2) || Match3 # Both Match1 and Match2 or Match3

Writing your own filter classes

If none of Log::Log4perl's predefined filter classes fits your needs, you can easily roll your own: Just define a new class, derive it from the baseclass "Log::Log4perl::Filter", and define its "new" and "ok" methods like this:

    package Log::Log4perl::Filter::MyFilter;
    use base Log::Log4perl::Filter;
    sub new {
        my ($class, %options) = @_;
        my $self = { %options,
                   };
     
        bless $self, $class;
        return $self;
    }
    sub ok {
         my ($self, %p) = @_;
         # ... decide and return 1 or 0
    }
    1;

Log4perl will call the ok() method to determine if the filter should let the message pass or not. A true return value indicates the message will be logged by the appender, a false value blocks it.

Values you've defined for its attributes in Log4perl's configuration file, will be received through its "new" method:

    log4perl.filter.MyFilter       = Log::Log4perl::Filter::MyFilter
    log4perl.filter.MyFilter.color = red

will cause "Log::Log4perl::Filter::MyFilter"'s constructor to be called like this:

    Log::Log4perl::Filter::MyFilter->new( name  => "MyFilter",
                                          color => "red" );

The custom filter class should use this to set the object's attributes, to have them available later to base log/nolog decisions on it.

"ok()" is the filter's method to tell if it agrees or disagrees with logging the message. It will be called by Log::Log4perl whenever it needs the filter to decide. A false value returned by "ok()" will block messages, a true value will let them through.

A Practical Example: Level Matching

See Log::Log4perl::FAQ for this.

LICENSE

Copyright 2002-2013 by Mike Schilli <[email protected]> and Kevin Goess <[email protected]>.

This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

AUTHOR

Please contribute patches to the project on Github:

    http://github.com/mschilli/log4perl

Send bug reports or requests for enhancements to the authors via our

MAILING LIST (questions, bug reports, suggestions/patches): [email protected]

Authors (please contact them via the list above, not directly): Mike Schilli <[email protected]>, Kevin Goess <[email protected]>

Contributors (in alphabetical order): Ateeq Altaf, Cory Bennett, Jens Berthold, Jeremy Bopp, Hutton Davidson, Chris R. Donnelly, Matisse Enzer, Hugh Esco, Anthony Foiani, James FitzGibbon, Carl Franks, Dennis Gregorovic, Andy Grundman, Paul Harrington, Alexander Hartmaier David Hull, Robert Jacobson, Jason Kohles, Jeff Macdonald, Markus Peter, Brett Rann, Peter Rabbitson, Erik Selberg, Aaron Straup Cope, Lars Thegler, David Viner, Mac Yang.