34

Is it possible to access application properties of spring boot in log back xml.

application.properties

dummy.property=hello

logback.xml

${dummy.property}

This did not work.

Does any one have idea if it will work.

Patan
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3 Answers3

56

If you name your configuration file logback-spring.xml, rather than logback.xml, you can use <springProperty> to access properties from Spring's environment including those configured in application.properties. This is described in the documentation:

The tag allows you to surface properties from the Spring Environment for use within Logback. This can be useful if you want to access values from your application.properties file in your logback configuration. The tag works in a similar way to Logback’s standard tag, but rather than specifying a direct value you specify the source of the property (from the Environment). You can use the scope attribute if you need to store the property somewhere other than in local scope.

<springProperty scope="context" name="fluentHost" source="myapp.fluentd.host"/>
<appender name="FLUENT" class="ch.qos.logback.more.appenders.DataFluentAppender">
    <remoteHost>${fluentHost}</remoteHost>
    ...
</appender>
Andy Wilkinson
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  • I having issue with logback-spring.xml after renaming from logback.xml to logback-spring.xml. @Andy Our custom layout pattern seem override by default spring pattern layout. Any idea I pretend our custom layout but also can access to spring environment? – Joey Trang Aug 23 '18 at 05:02
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    @Joey Please ask a question of your own. It’s a better way to get some help. – Andy Wilkinson Aug 24 '18 at 06:46
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    Shame that the springProperty tag is needed even if the variable names are identical – JRA_TLL Dec 06 '18 at 14:25
12

According to the http://logback.qos.ch/manual/configuration.html#variableSubstitution

Variables can be defined one at a time in the configuration file itself or loaded wholesale from an external properties file or an external resource.
...
The property is not declared in the configuration file, thus logback will look for it in the System properties.

Logback can use system properties or properties defined explicitely. So you need to tell logback to use application.properties file

<property resource="application.properties" />
Evgeny
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0

Just add your prefix that exists in your configuration file (properties, yaml) like this line:

<springProperty scope="context" name="LOGS" source="logging.path"/>

in: logback.xml

In this case: logging.path is the prefix