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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-519?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13917298#comment-13917298
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Remko Popma commented on LOG4J2-519:
------------------------------------

vibin, the quick fix may be to use %c (lowercase) in your pattern layout 
instead of %C (upper case). This will use the logger _name_ instead of its 
class and as a side-effect will be about [ten times 
faster|http://logging.apache.org/log4j/2.x/manual/async.html#Throughput_of_Logging_With_Location_includeLocationtrue]
 because it doesn't use reflection.

Ralph, this looks like a bug: 
it basically means that any location-based logic is broken for loggers that 
subclass AbstractLoggerWrapper. I've raised LOG4J2-555 for this.

> Custom/Extended Loggers
> -----------------------
>
>                 Key: LOG4J2-519
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LOG4J2-519
>             Project: Log4j 2
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: API
>    Affects Versions: 2.0-rc1
>            Reporter: Remko Popma
>         Attachments: Generate.java
>
>
> {anchor:Extending}
> *[#Extending] the Logger interface*
> LOG4J2-41 added support for custom log Levels. Users can now log messages at 
> the new custom level by passing the custom level to the {{Logger.log()}} 
> method:
> {code}
> final Logger logger = LogManager.getLogger();
> final Level VERBOSE = Level.forName("VERBOSE", 550);
> logger.log(VERBOSE, "a verbose message");
> logger.log(VERBOSE, "another message");
> {code}
> However, custom levels are not as easy to use as the built-in levels: one 
> needs to call the generic {{log()}} method and pass a {{Level}} parameter. 
> Built-in levels on the other hand have a set of convenience methods on the 
> Logger interface. For example, the Logger interface has 14 debug methods that 
> support the DEBUG level:
> {code}
> debug(Marker, Message)
> debug(Marker, Message, Throwable)
> debug(Marker, Object)
> debug(Marker, Object, Throwable)
> debug(Marker, String)
> debug(Marker, String, Object...)
> debug(Marker, String, Throwable)
> debug(Message)
> debug(Message, Throwable)
> debug(Object)
> debug(Object, Throwable)
> debug(String)
> debug(String, Object...)
> debug(String, Throwable)
> {code}
> Similar method sets exist for the other built-in levels.
> Several people have expressed the desire to have the same ease of use with 
> custom levels, so after declaring a custom VERBOSE level, we would like to be 
> able to use code like this:
> {code}
> logger.verbose("a verbose message"); // no need to pass the VERBOSE level as 
> a parameter
> logger.verbose("another message");
> {code}
> {anchor:Customizing}
> *[#Customizing] the Logger interface*
> In the above use case, convenience methods were _added_ to the Logger 
> interface, in addition to the existing {{trace()}}, {{debug()}}, {{info()}}, 
> ... methods for the built-in log levels.
> There is another use case, Domain Specific Language loggers, where we want to 
> _replace_ the existing {{trace()}}, {{debug()}}, {{info()}}, ... methods with 
> all-custom methods.
> For example, for medical devices we could have only {{critical()}}, 
> {{warning()}}, and {{advisory()}} methods. Another example could be a game 
> that has only {{defcon1()}}, {{defcon2()}}, and {{defcon3()}} levels.
> Finally, if it were possible to hide existing log levels, users could 
> customize the Logger interface to match their requirements. Some people may 
> not want to have a {{FATAL}} or a {{TRACE}} level, for example. They would 
> like to be able to create a custom Logger that only has {{debug()}}, 
> {{info()}}, {{warn()}} and {{error()}} methods.
> {anchor:wrapper}
> *Proposal: Generate source code for a Logger [#wrapper]*
> Common log4j usage is to get an instance of the {{Logger}} interface from the 
> {{LogManager}} and call the methods on this interface. This makes it hard to 
> achieve the above customization; especially taking away existing methods is 
> not possible.
> An alternative is for the user to create a wrapper class that exposes only 
> the convenience methods for the desired log levels. When _extending_ the 
> {{Logger}} API (_adding_ methods), this wrapper class could subclass 
> {{org.apache.logging.log4j.spi.AbstractLoggerWrapper}}. When _customizing_ 
> the {{Logger}} API (_removing_ built-in methods), the wrapper class would 
> simply not extend AbstractLoggerWrapper, so the only public methods would be 
> the methods for the custom log levels.
> As the custom log Levels are not known in advance, Log4J cannot provide 
> pre-built wrapper classes for these custom log Levels. However, we don't want 
> to ask the users to hand-code such a wrapper class: this is cumbersome and 
> error-prone: there are 14 methods for each built-in level. To provide 
> comparable functionality for custom log Levels one would need to provide 14 
> methods for each custom log Level.
> The proposal is to solve this by providing a tool that generates the source 
> code for a wrapper class. The user can specify:
> * the fully qualified name of the class to generate
> * the list of custom levels to support and their {{intLevel}} relative 
> strength
> * whether to extend {{Logger}} (and keep the existing built-in methods) or 
> have only methods for the custom log levels
> and the tool generates the source code for the wrapper class that has exactly 
> the required methods. Users would include this source code in the project 
> where they want to use custom log levels.
> {anchor:GeneratedWrapperUsage}
> Note that no Log4J API changes are required to support this functionality.
> Users would create instances of the wrapper by calling a factory method on 
> the wrapper class, instead of calling the {{LogManager.getLogger()}} methods.
> For example, instead of writing:
> {code}
> import org.apache.logging.log4j.Level;
> import org.apache.logging.log4j.LogManager;
> import org.apache.logging.log4j.Logger;
> final Logger logger = LogManager.getLogger(MyClass.class); // standard log4j 
> logger
> final Level VERBOSE = Level.forName("VERBOSE", 550);
> logger.log(VERBOSE, "a verbose message");
> {code}
> users would instead write:
> {code}
> // MyLogger is a generated customized logger wrapper
> import com.mycompany.myproject.MyLogger;
> final MyLogger logger = MyLogger.create(MyClass.class);
> logger.verbose("a verbose message");
> {code}
> Creating an extended or customized Logger is as easy as creating a standard 
> Logger (one line of code). Extended Loggers are drop-in replacements for 
> standard Loggers - they only add more convenience methods.



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