Thanks Heiner, I did some more testing and found out that indeed Tomcat does not play nice. Tomcat contains commons logging. CL is already loaded by tomcat and as a result the jcl-over-slf4j is never used. And the log4j config of my app is not used either.
I deployed CL with my app again and now all logging ends up in the log4j log again. So my setup now is: spring / hibernate --> JCL --> LOG4J my code --> SLF4J - LOG4J regards, Kees On 12/8/05, Heiner Westphal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hello Kees! > > Did you try to capture the hibernate and spring logs > using the jcl104-slf4j bridge? > I'm not sure, if it plays nice with tomcat's > JCL though. > > If not, you still can redirect your slf4j-logs > to jcl using slf4j-jcl, which is available with > the lates release of slf4j. > > Then you will get tomcat's and your webapp's logs > mixed, but you can separate them by log4j config > (as long as tomcat does not use spring or hibernate). > > For a very short and well done description on > different configurations of slf4j and jcl > see > http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.java.jetty.general/6294/match=release+6+0+0beta4 > where Greg Wilkins explains his use case for a slf4j-jcl jar. > > [if the url got split try http://tinyurl.com/bvo56 ] > > Regards, > > Heiner > > Kees de Kooter wrote: > > I am working on a (tomcat) web app using spring and hibernate. Both > > use commons logging. My own code uses slf4j (of course ;) + log4j. > > > > No when I start my app under tomcat a lot of spring and hibernate > > logging appears on the console. The logging of my app is written to > > the file confgirued in log4j.xml. > > > > How can I send the JCL logging to the same log file? > > > > Kees > > _______________________________________________ > user mailing list > [email protected] > http://slf4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user > _______________________________________________ user mailing list [email protected] http://slf4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user
