Hello Wim,

Glad to hear that you could debug the problem on your own. As for other options, I don't have a better proposal than excluding slf4j-nop.

BR

Wim Deblauwe wrote:
I found the problem. It seems the only location you need to look is your
classpath. Since I am using maven a simple 'mvn dependency:tree' tells me
the following:

[INFO] +- org.dbunit:dbunit:jar:2.3.0:test
[INFO] |  +- junit-addons:junit-addons:jar:1.4:test
[INFO] |  |  \- xerces:xmlParserAPIs:jar:2.6.2:test
[INFO] |  +- org.apache.poi:poi:jar:3.1-FINAL:test
[INFO] |  \- org.slf4j:slf4j-nop:jar:1.4.3:test

I am using dbunit and they have a dependency on slf4j-nop for testing.
However, I had imported my project in IntelliJ, which only has 1 classpath,
not a separate one for testing. So the slf4j-nop ended up in my normal
classpath. I now manually removed the slf4j-nop.jar from IntelliJ classpath,
but I wonder how this can be avoided in the future? I was thinking about
defining an <exclusion/> but I don't know if there are any other (better?)
options?

regards,

Wim


Wim Deblauwe wrote:
Hi,

I am using slf4j 1.5.6 with slf4j-log4j12 1.5.6 and log4j 1.2.15. However,
when I get a few lines of output on the console (I configured
log4j.properties that way), but then nothing. After debugging with logger
I get back from the LoggerFactory, it seems I get a NopLogger!

How can I debug why I am getting this NopLogger?

regards,

Wim



--
Ceki Gülcü
Logback: The reliable, generic, fast and flexible logging framework for Java.
http://logback.qos.ch
_______________________________________________
user mailing list
user@slf4j.org
http://www.slf4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user

Reply via email to