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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-531?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13895779#comment-13895779
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Matt Sicker commented on LOG4J2-531:
------------------------------------

Can confirm this bug using trunk. The results I get when I run the provided 
test as is indicate a loss of the initial 64 log messages, then a loss of 50 
message in between each file rollover. This test is comparable to rolling3, but 
with the addition of a default rollover strategy.

> Rolled logfiles overwritten by RollingFile appender with composite time and 
> size based policies
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: LOG4J2-531
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-531
>             Project: Log4j 2
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Appenders
>    Affects Versions: 2.0-beta9
>         Environment: Ubuntu 12.04 and 13.04, java version "1.7.0_51"
>            Reporter: Geoff Ballinger
>
> We have a system which generates high volume logs which are required to be 
> preserved for audit purposes, and have been having problems with files being 
> unexpectedly overwritten.
> We are using a RollingFile appender with day granularity, time based and size 
> based triggering policies, and a rollover strategy with a suitably large max 
> value.
> I have created a simple test case with minute granularity to quickly 
> illustrate the problem, which is v. similar to the example given in the 
> documentation:
> {noformat}
> import org.apache.logging.log4j.LogManager;
> import org.apache.logging.log4j.Logger;
> public class LogTest
> {
>     private static final Logger logger = LogManager.getLogger("TestLogger");
>     public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
>     {
>         for (long i=0; ; i+=1) {
>             logger.debug("Sequence: " + i);
>             Thread.sleep(250);
>         }
>     }
> }
> {noformat}
> ... with a config of:
> {noformat}
> <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
> <Configuration>
>     <Appenders>
>         <RollingFile name="Test" fileName="logs/test.log" 
> filePattern="logs/test/$${date:yyyyMMddHHmm}/TEST-%d{yyyyMMddHHmm}-%i.log.gz">
>             <PatternLayout pattern="%d %p (%t) [%c] - %m%n"/>
>             <Policies>
>                 <TimeBasedTriggeringPolicy />
>                 <SizeBasedTriggeringPolicy size="1 KB"/>
>             </Policies>
>             <DefaultRolloverStrategy max="999999"/>
>         </RollingFile>
>     </Appenders>
>     <Loggers>
>         <Root level="debug">
>             <AppenderRef ref="Test"/>
>         </Root>
>     </Loggers>
> </Configuration>
> {noformat}
> If this is run as is many of the rollover logfiles have other files written 
> over them and are lost, as can clearly be seen by the gaps in the remaining 
> sequence numbers, and the order the sequence numbers appear in the resulting 
> files.
> If the time based policy is removed from the config and it is re-run then all 
> sequence numbers are correctly stored and in the expected order., Without the 
> time based trigger some are carried over into the folder for the next period 
> which is not ideal, though is what we are using at present to avoid data loss.



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