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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-6107?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12724536#action_12724536
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Steve Loughran commented on HADOOP-6107:
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sounds like you need a way of having different plug-ins for monitoring, or a
thrift back-end to log4j
> Have some log messages designed for machine parsing, either real-time or
> post-mortem
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: HADOOP-6107
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/HADOOP-6107
> Project: Hadoop Common
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Affects Versions: 0.21.0
> Reporter: Steve Loughran
>
> Many programs take the log output of bits of Hadoop, and try and parse it.
> Some may also put their own back end behind commons-logging, to capture the
> input without going via Log4J, so as to keep the output more machine-readable.
> These programs need log messages that
> # are easy to parse by a regexp or other simple string parse (consider
> quoting values, etc)
> # push out the full exception chain rather than stringify() bits of it
> # stay stable across versions
> # log the things the tools need to analyse: events, data volumes, errors
> For these logging tools, ease of parsing, retention of data and stability
> over time take the edge over readability. In HADOOP-5073, Jiaqi Tan proposed
> marking some of the existing log events as evolving towards stability. As
> someone who regulary patches log messages to improve diagnostics, this
> creates a conflict of interest. For me, good logs are ones that help people
> debug their problems without anyone else helping, and if that means improving
> the text, so be it. Tools like Chukwa have a different need.
> What to do? Some options
> # Have some messages that are designed purely for other programs to handle
> # Have some logs specifically for machines, to which we log alongside the
> human-centric messages
> # Fix many of the common messages, then leave them alone.
> # Mark log messages to be left alone (somehow)
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