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      1 /*
      2  * Copyright 2001-2006 The Apache Software Foundation.
      3  *
      4  * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
      5  * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
      6  * You may obtain a copy of the License at
      7  *
      8  *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
      9  *
     10  * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     11  * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     12  * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     13  * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     14  * limitations under the License.
     15  */
     16 
     17 package org.apache.commons.logging;
     18 
     19 
     20 import java.io.BufferedReader;
     21 import java.io.FileOutputStream;
     22 import java.io.IOException;
     23 import java.io.InputStream;
     24 import java.io.InputStreamReader;
     25 import java.io.PrintStream;
     26 import java.lang.reflect.InvocationTargetException;
     27 import java.lang.reflect.Method;
     28 import java.net.URL;
     29 import java.security.AccessController;
     30 import java.security.PrivilegedAction;
     31 import java.util.Enumeration;
     32 import java.util.Hashtable;
     33 import java.util.Properties;
     34 
     35 
     36 /**
     37  * <p>Factory for creating {@link Log} instances, with discovery and
     38  * configuration features similar to that employed by standard Java APIs
     39  * such as JAXP.</p>
     40  *
     41  * <p><strong>IMPLEMENTATION NOTE</strong> - This implementation is heavily
     42  * based on the SAXParserFactory and DocumentBuilderFactory implementations
     43  * (corresponding to the JAXP pluggability APIs) found in Apache Xerces.</p>
     44  *
     45  * @author Craig R. McClanahan
     46  * @author Costin Manolache
     47  * @author Richard A. Sitze
     48  * @version $Revision: 399431 $ $Date: 2006-05-03 21:58:34 +0100 (Wed, 03 May 2006) $
     49  *
     50  * @deprecated Please use {@link java.net.URL#openConnection} instead.
     51  *     Please visit <a href="http://android-developers.blogspot.com/2011/09/androids-http-clients.html">this webpage</a>
     52  *     for further details.
     53  */
     54 
     55 @Deprecated
     56 public abstract class LogFactory {
     57 
     58 
     59     // ----------------------------------------------------- Manifest Constants
     60 
     61     /**
     62      * The name (<code>priority</code>) of the key in the config file used to
     63      * specify the priority of that particular config file. The associated value
     64      * is a floating-point number; higher values take priority over lower values.
     65      */
     66     public static final String PRIORITY_KEY = "priority";
     67 
     68     /**
     69      * The name (<code>use_tccl</code>) of the key in the config file used
     70      * to specify whether logging classes should be loaded via the thread
     71      * context class loader (TCCL), or not. By default, the TCCL is used.
     72      */
     73     public static final String TCCL_KEY = "use_tccl";
     74 
     75     /**
     76      * The name (<code>org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory</code>) of the property
     77      * used to identify the LogFactory implementation
     78      * class name. This can be used as a system property, or as an entry in a
     79      * configuration properties file.
     80      */
     81     public static final String FACTORY_PROPERTY =
     82         "org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory";
     83 
     84     /**
     85      * The fully qualified class name of the fallback <code>LogFactory</code>
     86      * implementation class to use, if no other can be found.
     87      */
     88     public static final String FACTORY_DEFAULT =
     89         "org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl";
     90 
     91     /**
     92      * The name (<code>commons-logging.properties</code>) of the properties file to search for.
     93      */
     94     public static final String FACTORY_PROPERTIES =
     95         "commons-logging.properties";
     96 
     97     /**
     98      * JDK1.3+ <a href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.3/docs/guide/jar/jar.html#Service%20Provider">
     99      * 'Service Provider' specification</a>.
    100      *
    101      */
    102     protected static final String SERVICE_ID =
    103         "META-INF/services/org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory";
    104 
    105     /**
    106      * The name (<code>org.apache.commons.logging.diagnostics.dest</code>)
    107      * of the property used to enable internal commons-logging
    108      * diagnostic output, in order to get information on what logging
    109      * implementations are being discovered, what classloaders they
    110      * are loaded through, etc.
    111      * <p>
    112      * If a system property of this name is set then the value is
    113      * assumed to be the name of a file. The special strings
    114      * STDOUT or STDERR (case-sensitive) indicate output to
    115      * System.out and System.err respectively.
    116      * <p>
    117      * Diagnostic logging should be used only to debug problematic
    118      * configurations and should not be set in normal production use.
    119      */
    120     public static final String DIAGNOSTICS_DEST_PROPERTY =
    121         "org.apache.commons.logging.diagnostics.dest";
    122 
    123     /**
    124      * When null (the usual case), no diagnostic output will be
    125      * generated by LogFactory or LogFactoryImpl. When non-null,
    126      * interesting events will be written to the specified object.
    127      */
    128     private static PrintStream diagnosticsStream = null;
    129 
    130     /**
    131      * A string that gets prefixed to every message output by the
    132      * logDiagnostic method, so that users can clearly see which
    133      * LogFactory class is generating the output.
    134      */
    135     private static String diagnosticPrefix;
    136 
    137     /**
    138      * <p>Setting this system property
    139      * (<code>org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory.HashtableImpl</code>)
    140      * value allows the <code>Hashtable</code> used to store
    141      * classloaders to be substituted by an alternative implementation.
    142      * </p>
    143      * <p>
    144      * <strong>Note:</strong> <code>LogFactory</code> will print:
    145      * <code><pre>
    146      * [ERROR] LogFactory: Load of custom hashtable failed</em>
    147      * </pre></code>
    148      * to system error and then continue using a standard Hashtable.
    149      * </p>
    150      * <p>
    151      * <strong>Usage:</strong> Set this property when Java is invoked
    152      * and <code>LogFactory</code> will attempt to load a new instance
    153      * of the given implementation class.
    154      * For example, running the following ant scriplet:
    155      * <code><pre>
    156      *  &lt;java classname="${test.runner}" fork="yes" failonerror="${test.failonerror}"&gt;
    157      *     ...
    158      *     &lt;sysproperty
    159      *        key="org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory.HashtableImpl"
    160      *        value="org.apache.commons.logging.AltHashtable"/&gt;
    161      *  &lt;/java&gt;
    162      * </pre></code>
    163      * will mean that <code>LogFactory</code> will load an instance of
    164      * <code>org.apache.commons.logging.AltHashtable</code>.
    165      * </p>
    166      * <p>
    167      * A typical use case is to allow a custom
    168      * Hashtable implementation using weak references to be substituted.
    169      * This will allow classloaders to be garbage collected without
    170      * the need to release them (on 1.3+ JVMs only, of course ;)
    171      * </p>
    172      */
    173     public static final String HASHTABLE_IMPLEMENTATION_PROPERTY =
    174         "org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory.HashtableImpl";
    175     /** Name used to load the weak hashtable implementation by names */
    176     private static final String WEAK_HASHTABLE_CLASSNAME =
    177         "org.apache.commons.logging.impl.WeakHashtable";
    178 
    179     /**
    180      * A reference to the classloader that loaded this class. This is the
    181      * same as LogFactory.class.getClassLoader(). However computing this
    182      * value isn't quite as simple as that, as we potentially need to use
    183      * AccessControllers etc. It's more efficient to compute it once and
    184      * cache it here.
    185      */
    186     private static ClassLoader thisClassLoader;
    187 
    188     // ----------------------------------------------------------- Constructors
    189 
    190 
    191     /**
    192      * Protected constructor that is not available for public use.
    193      */
    194     protected LogFactory() {
    195     }
    196 
    197     // --------------------------------------------------------- Public Methods
    198 
    199 
    200     /**
    201      * Return the configuration attribute with the specified name (if any),
    202      * or <code>null</code> if there is no such attribute.
    203      *
    204      * @param name Name of the attribute to return
    205      */
    206     public abstract Object getAttribute(String name);
    207 
    208 
    209     /**
    210      * Return an array containing the names of all currently defined
    211      * configuration attributes.  If there are no such attributes, a zero
    212      * length array is returned.
    213      */
    214     public abstract String[] getAttributeNames();
    215 
    216 
    217     /**
    218      * Convenience method to derive a name from the specified class and
    219      * call <code>getInstance(String)</code> with it.
    220      *
    221      * @param clazz Class for which a suitable Log name will be derived
    222      *
    223      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable <code>Log</code>
    224      *  instance cannot be returned
    225      */
    226     public abstract Log getInstance(Class clazz)
    227         throws LogConfigurationException;
    228 
    229 
    230     /**
    231      * <p>Construct (if necessary) and return a <code>Log</code> instance,
    232      * using the factory's current set of configuration attributes.</p>
    233      *
    234      * <p><strong>NOTE</strong> - Depending upon the implementation of
    235      * the <code>LogFactory</code> you are using, the <code>Log</code>
    236      * instance you are returned may or may not be local to the current
    237      * application, and may or may not be returned again on a subsequent
    238      * call with the same name argument.</p>
    239      *
    240      * @param name Logical name of the <code>Log</code> instance to be
    241      *  returned (the meaning of this name is only known to the underlying
    242      *  logging implementation that is being wrapped)
    243      *
    244      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable <code>Log</code>
    245      *  instance cannot be returned
    246      */
    247     public abstract Log getInstance(String name)
    248         throws LogConfigurationException;
    249 
    250 
    251     /**
    252      * Release any internal references to previously created {@link Log}
    253      * instances returned by this factory.  This is useful in environments
    254      * like servlet containers, which implement application reloading by
    255      * throwing away a ClassLoader.  Dangling references to objects in that
    256      * class loader would prevent garbage collection.
    257      */
    258     public abstract void release();
    259 
    260 
    261     /**
    262      * Remove any configuration attribute associated with the specified name.
    263      * If there is no such attribute, no action is taken.
    264      *
    265      * @param name Name of the attribute to remove
    266      */
    267     public abstract void removeAttribute(String name);
    268 
    269 
    270     /**
    271      * Set the configuration attribute with the specified name.  Calling
    272      * this with a <code>null</code> value is equivalent to calling
    273      * <code>removeAttribute(name)</code>.
    274      *
    275      * @param name Name of the attribute to set
    276      * @param value Value of the attribute to set, or <code>null</code>
    277      *  to remove any setting for this attribute
    278      */
    279     public abstract void setAttribute(String name, Object value);
    280 
    281 
    282     // ------------------------------------------------------- Static Variables
    283 
    284 
    285     /**
    286      * The previously constructed <code>LogFactory</code> instances, keyed by
    287      * the <code>ClassLoader</code> with which it was created.
    288      */
    289     protected static Hashtable factories = null;
    290 
    291     /**
    292      * Prevously constructed <code>LogFactory</code> instance as in the
    293      * <code>factories</code> map, but for the case where
    294      * <code>getClassLoader</code> returns <code>null</code>.
    295      * This can happen when:
    296      * <ul>
    297      * <li>using JDK1.1 and the calling code is loaded via the system
    298      *  classloader (very common)</li>
    299      * <li>using JDK1.2+ and the calling code is loaded via the boot
    300      *  classloader (only likely for embedded systems work).</li>
    301      * </ul>
    302      * Note that <code>factories</code> is a <i>Hashtable</i> (not a HashMap),
    303      * and hashtables don't allow null as a key.
    304      */
    305     protected static LogFactory nullClassLoaderFactory = null;
    306 
    307     /**
    308      * Create the hashtable which will be used to store a map of
    309      * (context-classloader -> logfactory-object). Version 1.2+ of Java
    310      * supports "weak references", allowing a custom Hashtable class
    311      * to be used which uses only weak references to its keys. Using weak
    312      * references can fix memory leaks on webapp unload in some cases (though
    313      * not all). Version 1.1 of Java does not support weak references, so we
    314      * must dynamically determine which we are using. And just for fun, this
    315      * code also supports the ability for a system property to specify an
    316      * arbitrary Hashtable implementation name.
    317      * <p>
    318      * Note that the correct way to ensure no memory leaks occur is to ensure
    319      * that LogFactory.release(contextClassLoader) is called whenever a
    320      * webapp is undeployed.
    321      */
    322     private static final Hashtable createFactoryStore() {
    323         Hashtable result = null;
    324         String storeImplementationClass
    325             = System.getProperty(HASHTABLE_IMPLEMENTATION_PROPERTY);
    326         if (storeImplementationClass == null) {
    327             storeImplementationClass = WEAK_HASHTABLE_CLASSNAME;
    328         }
    329         try {
    330             Class implementationClass = Class.forName(storeImplementationClass);
    331             result = (Hashtable) implementationClass.newInstance();
    332 
    333         } catch (Throwable t) {
    334             // ignore
    335             if (!WEAK_HASHTABLE_CLASSNAME.equals(storeImplementationClass)) {
    336                 // if the user's trying to set up a custom implementation, give a clue
    337                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    338                     // use internal logging to issue the warning
    339                     logDiagnostic("[ERROR] LogFactory: Load of custom hashtable failed");
    340                 } else {
    341                     // we *really* want this output, even if diagnostics weren't
    342                     // explicitly enabled by the user.
    343                     System.err.println("[ERROR] LogFactory: Load of custom hashtable failed");
    344                 }
    345             }
    346         }
    347         if (result == null) {
    348             result = new Hashtable();
    349         }
    350         return result;
    351     }
    352 
    353 
    354     // --------------------------------------------------------- Static Methods
    355 
    356     /**
    357      * <p>Construct (if necessary) and return a <code>LogFactory</code>
    358      * instance, using the following ordered lookup procedure to determine
    359      * the name of the implementation class to be loaded.</p>
    360      * <ul>
    361      * <li>The <code>org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory</code> system
    362      *     property.</li>
    363      * <li>The JDK 1.3 Service Discovery mechanism</li>
    364      * <li>Use the properties file <code>commons-logging.properties</code>
    365      *     file, if found in the class path of this class.  The configuration
    366      *     file is in standard <code>java.util.Properties</code> format and
    367      *     contains the fully qualified name of the implementation class
    368      *     with the key being the system property defined above.</li>
    369      * <li>Fall back to a default implementation class
    370      *     (<code>org.apache.commons.logging.impl.LogFactoryImpl</code>).</li>
    371      * </ul>
    372      *
    373      * <p><em>NOTE</em> - If the properties file method of identifying the
    374      * <code>LogFactory</code> implementation class is utilized, all of the
    375      * properties defined in this file will be set as configuration attributes
    376      * on the corresponding <code>LogFactory</code> instance.</p>
    377      *
    378      * <p><em>NOTE</em> - In a multithreaded environment it is possible
    379      * that two different instances will be returned for the same
    380      * classloader environment.
    381      * </p>
    382      *
    383      * @exception LogConfigurationException if the implementation class is not
    384      *  available or cannot be instantiated.
    385      */
    386     public static LogFactory getFactory() throws LogConfigurationException {
    387         // Identify the class loader we will be using
    388         ClassLoader contextClassLoader = getContextClassLoader();
    389 
    390         if (contextClassLoader == null) {
    391             // This is an odd enough situation to report about. This
    392             // output will be a nuisance on JDK1.1, as the system
    393             // classloader is null in that environment.
    394             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    395                 logDiagnostic("Context classloader is null.");
    396             }
    397         }
    398 
    399         // Return any previously registered factory for this class loader
    400         LogFactory factory = getCachedFactory(contextClassLoader);
    401         if (factory != null) {
    402             return factory;
    403         }
    404 
    405         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    406             logDiagnostic(
    407                     "[LOOKUP] LogFactory implementation requested for the first time for context classloader "
    408                     + objectId(contextClassLoader));
    409             logHierarchy("[LOOKUP] ", contextClassLoader);
    410         }
    411 
    412         // Load properties file.
    413         //
    414         // If the properties file exists, then its contents are used as
    415         // "attributes" on the LogFactory implementation class. One particular
    416         // property may also control which LogFactory concrete subclass is
    417         // used, but only if other discovery mechanisms fail..
    418         //
    419         // As the properties file (if it exists) will be used one way or
    420         // another in the end we may as well look for it first.
    421 
    422         Properties props = getConfigurationFile(contextClassLoader, FACTORY_PROPERTIES);
    423 
    424         // Determine whether we will be using the thread context class loader to
    425         // load logging classes or not by checking the loaded properties file (if any).
    426         ClassLoader baseClassLoader = contextClassLoader;
    427         if (props != null) {
    428             String useTCCLStr = props.getProperty(TCCL_KEY);
    429             if (useTCCLStr != null) {
    430                 // The Boolean.valueOf(useTCCLStr).booleanValue() formulation
    431                 // is required for Java 1.2 compatability.
    432                 if (Boolean.valueOf(useTCCLStr).booleanValue() == false) {
    433                     // Don't use current context classloader when locating any
    434                     // LogFactory or Log classes, just use the class that loaded
    435                     // this abstract class. When this class is deployed in a shared
    436                     // classpath of a container, it means webapps cannot deploy their
    437                     // own logging implementations. It also means that it is up to the
    438                     // implementation whether to load library-specific config files
    439                     // from the TCCL or not.
    440                     baseClassLoader = thisClassLoader;
    441                 }
    442             }
    443         }
    444 
    445         // Determine which concrete LogFactory subclass to use.
    446         // First, try a global system property
    447         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    448             logDiagnostic(
    449                     "[LOOKUP] Looking for system property [" + FACTORY_PROPERTY
    450                     + "] to define the LogFactory subclass to use...");
    451         }
    452 
    453         try {
    454             String factoryClass = System.getProperty(FACTORY_PROPERTY);
    455             if (factoryClass != null) {
    456                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    457                     logDiagnostic(
    458                             "[LOOKUP] Creating an instance of LogFactory class '" + factoryClass
    459                             + "' as specified by system property " + FACTORY_PROPERTY);
    460                 }
    461 
    462                 factory = newFactory(factoryClass, baseClassLoader, contextClassLoader);
    463             } else {
    464                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    465                     logDiagnostic(
    466                             "[LOOKUP] No system property [" + FACTORY_PROPERTY
    467                             + "] defined.");
    468                 }
    469             }
    470         } catch (SecurityException e) {
    471             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    472                 logDiagnostic(
    473                         "[LOOKUP] A security exception occurred while trying to create an"
    474                         + " instance of the custom factory class"
    475                         + ": [" + e.getMessage().trim()
    476                         + "]. Trying alternative implementations...");
    477             }
    478             ;  // ignore
    479         } catch(RuntimeException e) {
    480             // This is not consistent with the behaviour when a bad LogFactory class is
    481             // specified in a services file.
    482             //
    483             // One possible exception that can occur here is a ClassCastException when
    484             // the specified class wasn't castable to this LogFactory type.
    485             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    486                 logDiagnostic(
    487                         "[LOOKUP] An exception occurred while trying to create an"
    488                         + " instance of the custom factory class"
    489                         + ": [" + e.getMessage().trim()
    490                         + "] as specified by a system property.");
    491             }
    492             throw e;
    493         }
    494 
    495 
    496         // Second, try to find a service by using the JDK1.3 class
    497         // discovery mechanism, which involves putting a file with the name
    498         // of an interface class in the META-INF/services directory, where the
    499         // contents of the file is a single line specifying a concrete class
    500         // that implements the desired interface.
    501 
    502         if (factory == null) {
    503             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    504                 logDiagnostic(
    505                         "[LOOKUP] Looking for a resource file of name [" + SERVICE_ID
    506                         + "] to define the LogFactory subclass to use...");
    507             }
    508             try {
    509                 InputStream is = getResourceAsStream(contextClassLoader,
    510                                                      SERVICE_ID);
    511 
    512                 if( is != null ) {
    513                     // This code is needed by EBCDIC and other strange systems.
    514                     // It's a fix for bugs reported in xerces
    515                     BufferedReader rd;
    516                     try {
    517                         rd = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(is, "UTF-8"));
    518                     } catch (java.io.UnsupportedEncodingException e) {
    519                         rd = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(is));
    520                     }
    521 
    522                     String factoryClassName = rd.readLine();
    523                     rd.close();
    524 
    525                     if (factoryClassName != null &&
    526                         ! "".equals(factoryClassName)) {
    527                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    528                             logDiagnostic(
    529                                     "[LOOKUP]  Creating an instance of LogFactory class " + factoryClassName
    530                                     + " as specified by file '" + SERVICE_ID
    531                                     + "' which was present in the path of the context"
    532                                     + " classloader.");
    533                         }
    534                         factory = newFactory(factoryClassName, baseClassLoader, contextClassLoader );
    535                     }
    536                 } else {
    537                     // is == null
    538                     if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    539                         logDiagnostic(
    540                             "[LOOKUP] No resource file with name '" + SERVICE_ID
    541                             + "' found.");
    542                     }
    543                 }
    544             } catch( Exception ex ) {
    545                 // note: if the specified LogFactory class wasn't compatible with LogFactory
    546                 // for some reason, a ClassCastException will be caught here, and attempts will
    547                 // continue to find a compatible class.
    548                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    549                     logDiagnostic(
    550                         "[LOOKUP] A security exception occurred while trying to create an"
    551                         + " instance of the custom factory class"
    552                         + ": [" + ex.getMessage().trim()
    553                         + "]. Trying alternative implementations...");
    554                 }
    555                 ; // ignore
    556             }
    557         }
    558 
    559 
    560         // Third try looking into the properties file read earlier (if found)
    561 
    562         if (factory == null) {
    563             if (props != null) {
    564                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    565                     logDiagnostic(
    566                         "[LOOKUP] Looking in properties file for entry with key '"
    567                         + FACTORY_PROPERTY
    568                         + "' to define the LogFactory subclass to use...");
    569                 }
    570                 String factoryClass = props.getProperty(FACTORY_PROPERTY);
    571                 if (factoryClass != null) {
    572                     if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    573                         logDiagnostic(
    574                             "[LOOKUP] Properties file specifies LogFactory subclass '"
    575                             + factoryClass + "'");
    576                     }
    577                     factory = newFactory(factoryClass, baseClassLoader, contextClassLoader);
    578 
    579                     // TODO: think about whether we need to handle exceptions from newFactory
    580                 } else {
    581                     if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    582                         logDiagnostic(
    583                             "[LOOKUP] Properties file has no entry specifying LogFactory subclass.");
    584                     }
    585                 }
    586             } else {
    587                 if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    588                     logDiagnostic(
    589                         "[LOOKUP] No properties file available to determine"
    590                         + " LogFactory subclass from..");
    591                 }
    592             }
    593         }
    594 
    595 
    596         // Fourth, try the fallback implementation class
    597 
    598         if (factory == null) {
    599             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    600                 logDiagnostic(
    601                 "[LOOKUP] Loading the default LogFactory implementation '" + FACTORY_DEFAULT
    602                 + "' via the same classloader that loaded this LogFactory"
    603                 + " class (ie not looking in the context classloader).");
    604             }
    605 
    606             // Note: unlike the above code which can try to load custom LogFactory
    607             // implementations via the TCCL, we don't try to load the default LogFactory
    608             // implementation via the context classloader because:
    609             // * that can cause problems (see comments in newFactory method)
    610             // * no-one should be customising the code of the default class
    611             // Yes, we do give up the ability for the child to ship a newer
    612             // version of the LogFactoryImpl class and have it used dynamically
    613             // by an old LogFactory class in the parent, but that isn't
    614             // necessarily a good idea anyway.
    615             factory = newFactory(FACTORY_DEFAULT, thisClassLoader, contextClassLoader);
    616         }
    617 
    618         if (factory != null) {
    619             /**
    620              * Always cache using context class loader.
    621              */
    622             cacheFactory(contextClassLoader, factory);
    623 
    624             if( props!=null ) {
    625                 Enumeration names = props.propertyNames();
    626                 while (names.hasMoreElements()) {
    627                     String name = (String) names.nextElement();
    628                     String value = props.getProperty(name);
    629                     factory.setAttribute(name, value);
    630                 }
    631             }
    632         }
    633 
    634         return factory;
    635     }
    636 
    637 
    638     /**
    639      * Convenience method to return a named logger, without the application
    640      * having to care about factories.
    641      *
    642      * @param clazz Class from which a log name will be derived
    643      *
    644      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable <code>Log</code>
    645      *  instance cannot be returned
    646      */
    647     public static Log getLog(Class clazz)
    648         throws LogConfigurationException {
    649 
    650         // BEGIN android-added
    651         return getLog(clazz.getName());
    652         // END android-added
    653         // BEGIN android-deleted
    654         //return (getFactory().getInstance(clazz));
    655         // END android-deleted
    656 
    657     }
    658 
    659 
    660     /**
    661      * Convenience method to return a named logger, without the application
    662      * having to care about factories.
    663      *
    664      * @param name Logical name of the <code>Log</code> instance to be
    665      *  returned (the meaning of this name is only known to the underlying
    666      *  logging implementation that is being wrapped)
    667      *
    668      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable <code>Log</code>
    669      *  instance cannot be returned
    670      */
    671     public static Log getLog(String name)
    672         throws LogConfigurationException {
    673 
    674         // BEGIN android-added
    675         return new org.apache.commons.logging.impl.Jdk14Logger(name);
    676         // END android-added
    677         // BEGIN android-deleted
    678         //return (getFactory().getInstance(name));
    679         // END android-deleted
    680 
    681     }
    682 
    683 
    684     /**
    685      * Release any internal references to previously created {@link LogFactory}
    686      * instances that have been associated with the specified class loader
    687      * (if any), after calling the instance method <code>release()</code> on
    688      * each of them.
    689      *
    690      * @param classLoader ClassLoader for which to release the LogFactory
    691      */
    692     public static void release(ClassLoader classLoader) {
    693 
    694         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    695             logDiagnostic("Releasing factory for classloader " + objectId(classLoader));
    696         }
    697         synchronized (factories) {
    698             if (classLoader == null) {
    699                 if (nullClassLoaderFactory != null) {
    700                     nullClassLoaderFactory.release();
    701                     nullClassLoaderFactory = null;
    702                 }
    703             } else {
    704                 LogFactory factory = (LogFactory) factories.get(classLoader);
    705                 if (factory != null) {
    706                     factory.release();
    707                     factories.remove(classLoader);
    708                 }
    709             }
    710         }
    711 
    712     }
    713 
    714 
    715     /**
    716      * Release any internal references to previously created {@link LogFactory}
    717      * instances, after calling the instance method <code>release()</code> on
    718      * each of them.  This is useful in environments like servlet containers,
    719      * which implement application reloading by throwing away a ClassLoader.
    720      * Dangling references to objects in that class loader would prevent
    721      * garbage collection.
    722      */
    723     public static void releaseAll() {
    724 
    725         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    726             logDiagnostic("Releasing factory for all classloaders.");
    727         }
    728         synchronized (factories) {
    729             Enumeration elements = factories.elements();
    730             while (elements.hasMoreElements()) {
    731                 LogFactory element = (LogFactory) elements.nextElement();
    732                 element.release();
    733             }
    734             factories.clear();
    735 
    736             if (nullClassLoaderFactory != null) {
    737                 nullClassLoaderFactory.release();
    738                 nullClassLoaderFactory = null;
    739             }
    740         }
    741 
    742     }
    743 
    744 
    745     // ------------------------------------------------------ Protected Methods
    746 
    747     /**
    748      * Safely get access to the classloader for the specified class.
    749      * <p>
    750      * Theoretically, calling getClassLoader can throw a security exception,
    751      * and so should be done under an AccessController in order to provide
    752      * maximum flexibility. However in practice people don't appear to use
    753      * security policies that forbid getClassLoader calls. So for the moment
    754      * all code is written to call this method rather than Class.getClassLoader,
    755      * so that we could put AccessController stuff in this method without any
    756      * disruption later if we need to.
    757      * <p>
    758      * Even when using an AccessController, however, this method can still
    759      * throw SecurityException. Commons-logging basically relies on the
    760      * ability to access classloaders, ie a policy that forbids all
    761      * classloader access will also prevent commons-logging from working:
    762      * currently this method will throw an exception preventing the entire app
    763      * from starting up. Maybe it would be good to detect this situation and
    764      * just disable all commons-logging? Not high priority though - as stated
    765      * above, security policies that prevent classloader access aren't common.
    766      *
    767      * @since 1.1
    768      */
    769     protected static ClassLoader getClassLoader(Class clazz) {
    770         try {
    771             return clazz.getClassLoader();
    772         } catch(SecurityException ex) {
    773             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
    774                 logDiagnostic(
    775                         "Unable to get classloader for class '" + clazz
    776                         + "' due to security restrictions - " + ex.getMessage());
    777             }
    778             throw ex;
    779         }
    780     }
    781 
    782     /**
    783      * Calls LogFactory.directGetContextClassLoader under the control of an
    784      * AccessController class. This means that java code running under a
    785      * security manager that forbids access to ClassLoaders will still work
    786      * if this class is given appropriate privileges, even when the caller
    787      * doesn't have such privileges. Without using an AccessController, the
    788      * the entire call stack must have the privilege before the call is
    789      * allowed.
    790      *
    791      * @return the context classloader associated with the current thread,
    792      * or null if security doesn't allow it.
    793      *
    794      * @throws LogConfigurationException if there was some weird error while
    795      * attempting to get the context classloader.
    796      *
    797      * @throws SecurityException if the current java security policy doesn't
    798      * allow this class to access the context classloader.
    799      */
    800     protected static ClassLoader getContextClassLoader()
    801         throws LogConfigurationException {
    802 
    803         return (ClassLoader)AccessController.doPrivileged(
    804             new PrivilegedAction() {
    805                 public Object run() {
    806                     return directGetContextClassLoader();
    807                 }
    808             });
    809     }
    810 
    811     /**
    812      * Return the thread context class loader if available; otherwise return
    813      * null.
    814      * <p>
    815      * Most/all code should call getContextClassLoader rather than calling
    816      * this method directly.
    817      * <p>
    818      * The thread context class loader is available for JDK 1.2
    819      * or later, if certain security conditions are met.
    820      * <p>
    821      * Note that no internal logging is done within this method because
    822      * this method is called every time LogFactory.getLogger() is called,
    823      * and we don't want too much output generated here.
    824      *
    825      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable class loader
    826      * cannot be identified.
    827      *
    828      * @exception SecurityException if the java security policy forbids
    829      * access to the context classloader from one of the classes in the
    830      * current call stack.
    831      * @since 1.1
    832      */
    833     protected static ClassLoader directGetContextClassLoader()
    834         throws LogConfigurationException
    835     {
    836         ClassLoader classLoader = null;
    837 
    838         try {
    839             // Are we running on a JDK 1.2 or later system?
    840             Method method = Thread.class.getMethod("getContextClassLoader",
    841                     (Class[]) null);
    842 
    843             // Get the thread context class loader (if there is one)
    844             try {
    845                 classLoader = (ClassLoader)method.invoke(Thread.currentThread(),
    846                         (Object[]) null);
    847             } catch (IllegalAccessException e) {
    848                 throw new LogConfigurationException
    849                     ("Unexpected IllegalAccessException", e);
    850             } catch (InvocationTargetException e) {
    851                 /**
    852                  * InvocationTargetException is thrown by 'invoke' when
    853                  * the method being invoked (getContextClassLoader) throws
    854                  * an exception.
    855                  *
    856                  * getContextClassLoader() throws SecurityException when
    857                  * the context class loader isn't an ancestor of the
    858                  * calling class's class loader, or if security
    859                  * permissions are restricted.
    860                  *
    861                  * In the first case (not related), we want to ignore and
    862                  * keep going.  We cannot help but also ignore the second
    863                  * with the logic below, but other calls elsewhere (to
    864                  * obtain a class loader) will trigger this exception where
    865                  * we can make a distinction.
    866                  */
    867                 if (e.getTargetException() instanceof SecurityException) {
    868                     ;  // ignore
    869                 } else {
    870                     // Capture 'e.getTargetException()' exception for details
    871                     // alternate: log 'e.getTargetException()', and pass back 'e'.
    872                     throw new LogConfigurationException
    873                         ("Unexpected InvocationTargetException", e.getTargetException());
    874                 }
    875             }
    876         } catch (NoSuchMethodException e) {
    877             // Assume we are running on JDK 1.1
    878             classLoader = getClassLoader(LogFactory.class);
    879 
    880             // We deliberately don't log a message here to outputStream;
    881             // this message would be output for every call to LogFactory.getLog()
    882             // when running on JDK1.1
    883             //
    884             // if (outputStream != null) {
    885             //    outputStream.println(
    886             //        "Method Thread.getContextClassLoader does not exist;"
    887             //         + " assuming this is JDK 1.1, and that the context"
    888             //         + " classloader is the same as the class that loaded"
    889             //         + " the concrete LogFactory class.");
    890             // }
    891 
    892         }
    893 
    894         // Return the selected class loader
    895         return classLoader;
    896     }
    897 
    898     /**
    899      * Check cached factories (keyed by contextClassLoader)
    900      *
    901      * @param contextClassLoader is the context classloader associated
    902      * with the current thread. This allows separate LogFactory objects
    903      * per component within a container, provided each component has
    904      * a distinct context classloader set. This parameter may be null
    905      * in JDK1.1, and in embedded systems where jcl-using code is
    906      * placed in the bootclasspath.
    907      *
    908      * @return the factory associated with the specified classloader if
    909      * one has previously been created, or null if this is the first time
    910      * we have seen this particular classloader.
    911      */
    912     private static LogFactory getCachedFactory(ClassLoader contextClassLoader)
    913     {
    914         LogFactory factory = null;
    915 
    916         if (contextClassLoader == null) {
    917             // We have to handle this specially, as factories is a Hashtable
    918             // and those don't accept null as a key value.
    919             //
    920             // nb: nullClassLoaderFactory might be null. That's ok.
    921             factory = nullClassLoaderFactory;
    922         } else {
    923             factory = (LogFactory) factories.get(contextClassLoader);
    924         }
    925 
    926         return factory;
    927     }
    928 
    929     /**
    930      * Remember this factory, so later calls to LogFactory.getCachedFactory
    931      * can return the previously created object (together with all its
    932      * cached Log objects).
    933      *
    934      * @param classLoader should be the current context classloader. Note that
    935      * this can be null under some circumstances; this is ok.
    936      *
    937      * @param factory should be the factory to cache. This should never be null.
    938      */
    939     private static void cacheFactory(ClassLoader classLoader, LogFactory factory)
    940     {
    941         // Ideally we would assert(factory != null) here. However reporting
    942         // errors from within a logging implementation is a little tricky!
    943 
    944         if (factory != null) {
    945             if (classLoader == null) {
    946                 nullClassLoaderFactory = factory;
    947             } else {
    948                 factories.put(classLoader, factory);
    949             }
    950         }
    951     }
    952 
    953     /**
    954      * Return a new instance of the specified <code>LogFactory</code>
    955      * implementation class, loaded by the specified class loader.
    956      * If that fails, try the class loader used to load this
    957      * (abstract) LogFactory.
    958      * <p>
    959      * <h2>ClassLoader conflicts</h2>
    960      * Note that there can be problems if the specified ClassLoader is not the
    961      * same as the classloader that loaded this class, ie when loading a
    962      * concrete LogFactory subclass via a context classloader.
    963      * <p>
    964      * The problem is the same one that can occur when loading a concrete Log
    965      * subclass via a context classloader.
    966      * <p>
    967      * The problem occurs when code running in the context classloader calls
    968      * class X which was loaded via a parent classloader, and class X then calls
    969      * LogFactory.getFactory (either directly or via LogFactory.getLog). Because
    970      * class X was loaded via the parent, it binds to LogFactory loaded via
    971      * the parent. When the code in this method finds some LogFactoryYYYY
    972      * class in the child (context) classloader, and there also happens to be a
    973      * LogFactory class defined in the child classloader, then LogFactoryYYYY
    974      * will be bound to LogFactory@childloader. It cannot be cast to
    975      * LogFactory@parentloader, ie this method cannot return the object as
    976      * the desired type. Note that it doesn't matter if the LogFactory class
    977      * in the child classloader is identical to the LogFactory class in the
    978      * parent classloader, they are not compatible.
    979      * <p>
    980      * The solution taken here is to simply print out an error message when
    981      * this occurs then throw an exception. The deployer of the application
    982      * must ensure they remove all occurrences of the LogFactory class from
    983      * the child classloader in order to resolve the issue. Note that they
    984      * do not have to move the custom LogFactory subclass; that is ok as
    985      * long as the only LogFactory class it can find to bind to is in the
    986      * parent classloader.
    987      * <p>
    988      * @param factoryClass Fully qualified name of the <code>LogFactory</code>
    989      *  implementation class
    990      * @param classLoader ClassLoader from which to load this class
    991      * @param contextClassLoader is the context that this new factory will
    992      * manage logging for.
    993      *
    994      * @exception LogConfigurationException if a suitable instance
    995      *  cannot be created
    996      * @since 1.1
    997      */
    998     protected static LogFactory newFactory(final String factoryClass,
    999                                            final ClassLoader classLoader,
   1000                                            final ClassLoader contextClassLoader)
   1001         throws LogConfigurationException
   1002     {
   1003         // Note that any unchecked exceptions thrown by the createFactory
   1004         // method will propagate out of this method; in particular a
   1005         // ClassCastException can be thrown.
   1006         Object result = AccessController.doPrivileged(
   1007             new PrivilegedAction() {
   1008                 public Object run() {
   1009                     return createFactory(factoryClass, classLoader);
   1010                 }
   1011             });
   1012 
   1013         if (result instanceof LogConfigurationException) {
   1014             LogConfigurationException ex = (LogConfigurationException) result;
   1015             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1016                 logDiagnostic(
   1017                         "An error occurred while loading the factory class:"
   1018                         + ex.getMessage());
   1019             }
   1020             throw ex;
   1021         }
   1022         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1023             logDiagnostic(
   1024                     "Created object " + objectId(result)
   1025                     + " to manage classloader " + objectId(contextClassLoader));
   1026         }
   1027         return (LogFactory)result;
   1028     }
   1029 
   1030     /**
   1031      * Method provided for backwards compatibility; see newFactory version that
   1032      * takes 3 parameters.
   1033      * <p>
   1034      * This method would only ever be called in some rather odd situation.
   1035      * Note that this method is static, so overriding in a subclass doesn't
   1036      * have any effect unless this method is called from a method in that
   1037      * subclass. However this method only makes sense to use from the
   1038      * getFactory method, and as that is almost always invoked via
   1039      * LogFactory.getFactory, any custom definition in a subclass would be
   1040      * pointless. Only a class with a custom getFactory method, then invoked
   1041      * directly via CustomFactoryImpl.getFactory or similar would ever call
   1042      * this. Anyway, it's here just in case, though the "managed class loader"
   1043      * value output to the diagnostics will not report the correct value.
   1044      */
   1045     protected static LogFactory newFactory(final String factoryClass,
   1046                                            final ClassLoader classLoader) {
   1047 	    return newFactory(factoryClass, classLoader, null);
   1048     }
   1049 
   1050     /**
   1051      * Implements the operations described in the javadoc for newFactory.
   1052      *
   1053      * @param factoryClass
   1054      *
   1055      * @param classLoader used to load the specified factory class. This is
   1056      * expected to be either the TCCL or the classloader which loaded this
   1057      * class. Note that the classloader which loaded this class might be
   1058      * "null" (ie the bootloader) for embedded systems.
   1059      *
   1060      * @return either a LogFactory object or a LogConfigurationException object.
   1061      * @since 1.1
   1062      */
   1063     protected static Object createFactory(String factoryClass, ClassLoader classLoader) {
   1064 
   1065         // This will be used to diagnose bad configurations
   1066         // and allow a useful message to be sent to the user
   1067         Class logFactoryClass = null;
   1068         try {
   1069             if (classLoader != null) {
   1070                 try {
   1071                     // First the given class loader param (thread class loader)
   1072 
   1073                     // Warning: must typecast here & allow exception
   1074                     // to be generated/caught & recast properly.
   1075                     logFactoryClass = classLoader.loadClass(factoryClass);
   1076                     if (LogFactory.class.isAssignableFrom(logFactoryClass)) {
   1077                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1078                             logDiagnostic(
   1079                                     "Loaded class " + logFactoryClass.getName()
   1080                                     + " from classloader " + objectId(classLoader));
   1081                         }
   1082                     } else {
   1083                         //
   1084                         // This indicates a problem with the ClassLoader tree.
   1085                         // An incompatible ClassLoader was used to load the
   1086                         // implementation.
   1087                         // As the same classes
   1088                         // must be available in multiple class loaders,
   1089                         // it is very likely that multiple JCL jars are present.
   1090                         // The most likely fix for this
   1091                         // problem is to remove the extra JCL jars from the
   1092                         // ClassLoader hierarchy.
   1093                         //
   1094                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1095                             logDiagnostic(
   1096                                     "Factory class " + logFactoryClass.getName()
   1097                                 + " loaded from classloader " + objectId(logFactoryClass.getClassLoader())
   1098                                 + " does not extend '" + LogFactory.class.getName()
   1099                                 + "' as loaded by this classloader.");
   1100                             logHierarchy("[BAD CL TREE] ", classLoader);
   1101                         }
   1102                     }
   1103 
   1104                     return (LogFactory) logFactoryClass.newInstance();
   1105 
   1106                 } catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
   1107                     if (classLoader == thisClassLoader) {
   1108                         // Nothing more to try, onwards.
   1109                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1110                             logDiagnostic(
   1111                                     "Unable to locate any class called '" + factoryClass
   1112                                     + "' via classloader " + objectId(classLoader));
   1113                         }
   1114                         throw ex;
   1115                     }
   1116                     // ignore exception, continue
   1117                 } catch (NoClassDefFoundError e) {
   1118                     if (classLoader == thisClassLoader) {
   1119                         // Nothing more to try, onwards.
   1120                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1121                             logDiagnostic(
   1122                                     "Class '" + factoryClass + "' cannot be loaded"
   1123                                     + " via classloader " + objectId(classLoader)
   1124                                     + " - it depends on some other class that cannot"
   1125                                     + " be found.");
   1126                         }
   1127                         throw e;
   1128                     }
   1129                     // ignore exception, continue
   1130                 } catch(ClassCastException e) {
   1131                     if (classLoader == thisClassLoader) {
   1132                         // There's no point in falling through to the code below that
   1133                         // tries again with thisClassLoader, because we've just tried
   1134                         // loading with that loader (not the TCCL). Just throw an
   1135                         // appropriate exception here.
   1136 
   1137                     	final boolean implementsLogFactory = implementsLogFactory(logFactoryClass);
   1138 
   1139                         //
   1140                         // Construct a good message: users may not actual expect that a custom implementation
   1141                         // has been specified. Several well known containers use this mechanism to adapt JCL
   1142                         // to their native logging system.
   1143                         //
   1144                         String msg =
   1145                             "The application has specified that a custom LogFactory implementation should be used but " +
   1146                             "Class '" + factoryClass + "' cannot be converted to '"
   1147                             + LogFactory.class.getName() + "'. ";
   1148                         if (implementsLogFactory) {
   1149                             msg = msg + "The conflict is caused by the presence of multiple LogFactory classes in incompatible classloaders. " +
   1150                     		"Background can be found in http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/logging/tech.html. " +
   1151                     		"If you have not explicitly specified a custom LogFactory then it is likely that " +
   1152                     		"the container has set one without your knowledge. " +
   1153                     		"In this case, consider using the commons-logging-adapters.jar file or " +
   1154                     		"specifying the standard LogFactory from the command line. ";
   1155                         } else {
   1156                         	msg = msg + "Please check the custom implementation. ";
   1157                         }
   1158                         msg = msg + "Help can be found @http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/logging/troubleshooting.html.";
   1159 
   1160                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1161                             logDiagnostic(msg);
   1162                         }
   1163 
   1164                         ClassCastException ex = new ClassCastException(msg);
   1165                         throw ex;
   1166                     }
   1167 
   1168                     // Ignore exception, continue. Presumably the classloader was the
   1169                     // TCCL; the code below will try to load the class via thisClassLoader.
   1170                     // This will handle the case where the original calling class is in
   1171                     // a shared classpath but the TCCL has a copy of LogFactory and the
   1172                     // specified LogFactory implementation; we will fall back to using the
   1173                     // LogFactory implementation from the same classloader as this class.
   1174                     //
   1175                     // Issue: this doesn't handle the reverse case, where this LogFactory
   1176                     // is in the webapp, and the specified LogFactory implementation is
   1177                     // in a shared classpath. In that case:
   1178                     // (a) the class really does implement LogFactory (bad log msg above)
   1179                     // (b) the fallback code will result in exactly the same problem.
   1180                 }
   1181             }
   1182 
   1183             /* At this point, either classLoader == null, OR
   1184              * classLoader was unable to load factoryClass.
   1185              *
   1186              * In either case, we call Class.forName, which is equivalent
   1187              * to LogFactory.class.getClassLoader().load(name), ie we ignore
   1188              * the classloader parameter the caller passed, and fall back
   1189              * to trying the classloader associated with this class. See the
   1190              * javadoc for the newFactory method for more info on the
   1191              * consequences of this.
   1192              *
   1193              * Notes:
   1194              * * LogFactory.class.getClassLoader() may return 'null'
   1195              *   if LogFactory is loaded by the bootstrap classloader.
   1196              */
   1197             // Warning: must typecast here & allow exception
   1198             // to be generated/caught & recast properly.
   1199             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1200                 logDiagnostic(
   1201                     "Unable to load factory class via classloader "
   1202                     + objectId(classLoader)
   1203                     + " - trying the classloader associated with this LogFactory.");
   1204             }
   1205             logFactoryClass = Class.forName(factoryClass);
   1206             return (LogFactory) logFactoryClass.newInstance();
   1207         } catch (Exception e) {
   1208             // Check to see if we've got a bad configuration
   1209             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1210                 logDiagnostic("Unable to create LogFactory instance.");
   1211             }
   1212             if (logFactoryClass != null
   1213                 && !LogFactory.class.isAssignableFrom(logFactoryClass)) {
   1214 
   1215                 return new LogConfigurationException(
   1216                     "The chosen LogFactory implementation does not extend LogFactory."
   1217                     + " Please check your configuration.",
   1218                     e);
   1219             }
   1220             return new LogConfigurationException(e);
   1221         }
   1222     }
   1223 
   1224     /**
   1225      * Determines whether the given class actually implements <code>LogFactory</code>.
   1226      * Diagnostic information is also logged.
   1227      * <p>
   1228      * <strong>Usage:</strong> to diagnose whether a classloader conflict is the cause
   1229      * of incompatibility. The test used is whether the class is assignable from
   1230      * the <code>LogFactory</code> class loaded by the class's classloader.
   1231      * @param logFactoryClass <code>Class</code> which may implement <code>LogFactory</code>
   1232      * @return true if the <code>logFactoryClass</code> does extend
   1233      * <code>LogFactory</code> when that class is loaded via the same
   1234      * classloader that loaded the <code>logFactoryClass</code>.
   1235      */
   1236     private static boolean implementsLogFactory(Class logFactoryClass) {
   1237         boolean implementsLogFactory = false;
   1238         if (logFactoryClass != null) {
   1239             try {
   1240                 ClassLoader logFactoryClassLoader = logFactoryClass.getClassLoader();
   1241                 if (logFactoryClassLoader == null) {
   1242                     logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] was loaded by the boot classloader");
   1243                 } else {
   1244                     logHierarchy("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] ", logFactoryClassLoader);
   1245                     Class factoryFromCustomLoader
   1246                         = Class.forName("org.apache.commons.logging.LogFactory", false, logFactoryClassLoader);
   1247                     implementsLogFactory = factoryFromCustomLoader.isAssignableFrom(logFactoryClass);
   1248                     if (implementsLogFactory) {
   1249                         logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] " + logFactoryClass.getName()
   1250                                 + " implements LogFactory but was loaded by an incompatible classloader.");
   1251                     } else {
   1252                         logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] " + logFactoryClass.getName()
   1253                                 + " does not implement LogFactory.");
   1254                     }
   1255                 }
   1256             } catch (SecurityException e) {
   1257                 //
   1258                 // The application is running within a hostile security environment.
   1259                 // This will make it very hard to diagnose issues with JCL.
   1260                 // Consider running less securely whilst debugging this issue.
   1261                 //
   1262                 logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] SecurityException thrown whilst trying to determine whether " +
   1263                         "the compatibility was caused by a classloader conflict: "
   1264                         + e.getMessage());
   1265             } catch (LinkageError e) {
   1266                 //
   1267                 // This should be an unusual circumstance.
   1268                 // LinkageError's usually indicate that a dependent class has incompatibly changed.
   1269                 // Another possibility may be an exception thrown by an initializer.
   1270                 // Time for a clean rebuild?
   1271                 //
   1272                 logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] LinkageError thrown whilst trying to determine whether " +
   1273                         "the compatibility was caused by a classloader conflict: "
   1274                         + e.getMessage());
   1275             } catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
   1276                 //
   1277                 // LogFactory cannot be loaded by the classloader which loaded the custom factory implementation.
   1278                 // The custom implementation is not viable until this is corrected.
   1279                 // Ensure that the JCL jar and the custom class are available from the same classloader.
   1280                 // Running with diagnostics on should give information about the classloaders used
   1281                 // to load the custom factory.
   1282                 //
   1283                 logDiagnostic("[CUSTOM LOG FACTORY] LogFactory class cannot be loaded by classloader which loaded the " +
   1284                         "custom LogFactory implementation. Is the custom factory in the right classloader?");
   1285             }
   1286         }
   1287         return implementsLogFactory;
   1288     }
   1289 
   1290     /**
   1291      * Applets may run in an environment where accessing resources of a loader is
   1292      * a secure operation, but where the commons-logging library has explicitly
   1293      * been granted permission for that operation. In this case, we need to
   1294      * run the operation using an AccessController.
   1295      */
   1296     private static InputStream getResourceAsStream(final ClassLoader loader,
   1297                                                    final String name)
   1298     {
   1299         return (InputStream)AccessController.doPrivileged(
   1300             new PrivilegedAction() {
   1301                 public Object run() {
   1302                     if (loader != null) {
   1303                         return loader.getResourceAsStream(name);
   1304                     } else {
   1305                         return ClassLoader.getSystemResourceAsStream(name);
   1306                     }
   1307                 }
   1308             });
   1309     }
   1310 
   1311     /**
   1312      * Given a filename, return an enumeration of URLs pointing to
   1313      * all the occurrences of that filename in the classpath.
   1314      * <p>
   1315      * This is just like ClassLoader.getResources except that the
   1316      * operation is done under an AccessController so that this method will
   1317      * succeed when this jarfile is privileged but the caller is not.
   1318      * This method must therefore remain private to avoid security issues.
   1319      * <p>
   1320      * If no instances are found, an Enumeration is returned whose
   1321      * hasMoreElements method returns false (ie an "empty" enumeration).
   1322      * If resources could not be listed for some reason, null is returned.
   1323      */
   1324     private static Enumeration getResources(final ClassLoader loader,
   1325             final String name)
   1326     {
   1327         PrivilegedAction action =
   1328             new PrivilegedAction() {
   1329                 public Object run() {
   1330                     try {
   1331                         if (loader != null) {
   1332                             return loader.getResources(name);
   1333                         } else {
   1334                             return ClassLoader.getSystemResources(name);
   1335                         }
   1336                     } catch(IOException e) {
   1337                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1338                             logDiagnostic(
   1339                                 "Exception while trying to find configuration file "
   1340                                 + name + ":" + e.getMessage());
   1341                         }
   1342                         return null;
   1343                     } catch(NoSuchMethodError e) {
   1344                         // we must be running on a 1.1 JVM which doesn't support
   1345                         // ClassLoader.getSystemResources; just return null in
   1346                         // this case.
   1347                         return null;
   1348                     }
   1349                 }
   1350             };
   1351         Object result = AccessController.doPrivileged(action);
   1352         return (Enumeration) result;
   1353     }
   1354 
   1355     /**
   1356      * Given a URL that refers to a .properties file, load that file.
   1357      * This is done under an AccessController so that this method will
   1358      * succeed when this jarfile is privileged but the caller is not.
   1359      * This method must therefore remain private to avoid security issues.
   1360      * <p>
   1361      * Null is returned if the URL cannot be opened.
   1362      */
   1363     private static Properties getProperties(final URL url) {
   1364         PrivilegedAction action =
   1365             new PrivilegedAction() {
   1366                 public Object run() {
   1367                     try {
   1368                         InputStream stream = url.openStream();
   1369                         if (stream != null) {
   1370                             Properties props = new Properties();
   1371                             props.load(stream);
   1372                             stream.close();
   1373                             return props;
   1374                         }
   1375                     } catch(IOException e) {
   1376                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1377                             logDiagnostic("Unable to read URL " + url);
   1378                         }
   1379                     }
   1380 
   1381                     return null;
   1382                 }
   1383             };
   1384         return (Properties) AccessController.doPrivileged(action);
   1385     }
   1386 
   1387     /**
   1388      * Locate a user-provided configuration file.
   1389      * <p>
   1390      * The classpath of the specified classLoader (usually the context classloader)
   1391      * is searched for properties files of the specified name. If none is found,
   1392      * null is returned. If more than one is found, then the file with the greatest
   1393      * value for its PRIORITY property is returned. If multiple files have the
   1394      * same PRIORITY value then the first in the classpath is returned.
   1395      * <p>
   1396      * This differs from the 1.0.x releases; those always use the first one found.
   1397      * However as the priority is a new field, this change is backwards compatible.
   1398      * <p>
   1399      * The purpose of the priority field is to allow a webserver administrator to
   1400      * override logging settings in all webapps by placing a commons-logging.properties
   1401      * file in a shared classpath location with a priority > 0; this overrides any
   1402      * commons-logging.properties files without priorities which are in the
   1403      * webapps. Webapps can also use explicit priorities to override a configuration
   1404      * file in the shared classpath if needed.
   1405      */
   1406     private static final Properties getConfigurationFile(
   1407             ClassLoader classLoader, String fileName) {
   1408 
   1409         Properties props = null;
   1410         double priority = 0.0;
   1411         URL propsUrl = null;
   1412         try {
   1413             Enumeration urls = getResources(classLoader, fileName);
   1414 
   1415             if (urls == null) {
   1416                 return null;
   1417             }
   1418 
   1419             while (urls.hasMoreElements()) {
   1420                 URL url = (URL) urls.nextElement();
   1421 
   1422                 Properties newProps = getProperties(url);
   1423                 if (newProps != null) {
   1424                     if (props == null) {
   1425                         propsUrl = url;
   1426                         props = newProps;
   1427                         String priorityStr = props.getProperty(PRIORITY_KEY);
   1428                         priority = 0.0;
   1429                         if (priorityStr != null) {
   1430                             priority = Double.parseDouble(priorityStr);
   1431                         }
   1432 
   1433                         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1434                             logDiagnostic(
   1435                                 "[LOOKUP] Properties file found at '" + url + "'"
   1436                                 + " with priority " + priority);
   1437                         }
   1438                     } else {
   1439                         String newPriorityStr = newProps.getProperty(PRIORITY_KEY);
   1440                         double newPriority = 0.0;
   1441                         if (newPriorityStr != null) {
   1442                             newPriority = Double.parseDouble(newPriorityStr);
   1443                         }
   1444 
   1445                         if (newPriority > priority) {
   1446                             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1447                                 logDiagnostic(
   1448                                     "[LOOKUP] Properties file at '" + url + "'"
   1449                                     + " with priority " + newPriority
   1450                                     + " overrides file at '" + propsUrl + "'"
   1451                                     + " with priority " + priority);
   1452                             }
   1453 
   1454                             propsUrl = url;
   1455                             props = newProps;
   1456                             priority = newPriority;
   1457                         } else {
   1458                             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1459                                 logDiagnostic(
   1460                                     "[LOOKUP] Properties file at '" + url + "'"
   1461                                     + " with priority " + newPriority
   1462                                     + " does not override file at '" + propsUrl + "'"
   1463                                     + " with priority " + priority);
   1464                             }
   1465                         }
   1466                     }
   1467 
   1468                 }
   1469             }
   1470         } catch (SecurityException e) {
   1471             if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1472                 logDiagnostic("SecurityException thrown while trying to find/read config files.");
   1473             }
   1474         }
   1475 
   1476         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1477             if (props == null) {
   1478                 logDiagnostic(
   1479                     "[LOOKUP] No properties file of name '" + fileName
   1480                     + "' found.");
   1481             } else {
   1482                 logDiagnostic(
   1483                     "[LOOKUP] Properties file of name '" + fileName
   1484                     + "' found at '" + propsUrl + '"');
   1485             }
   1486         }
   1487 
   1488         return props;
   1489     }
   1490 
   1491     /**
   1492      * Determines whether the user wants internal diagnostic output. If so,
   1493      * returns an appropriate writer object. Users can enable diagnostic
   1494      * output by setting the system property named {@link #DIAGNOSTICS_DEST_PROPERTY} to
   1495      * a filename, or the special values STDOUT or STDERR.
   1496      */
   1497     private static void initDiagnostics() {
   1498         String dest;
   1499     	try {
   1500     	    dest = System.getProperty(DIAGNOSTICS_DEST_PROPERTY);
   1501     	    if (dest == null) {
   1502     	        return;
   1503     	    }
   1504     	} catch(SecurityException ex) {
   1505     	    // We must be running in some very secure environment.
   1506     	    // We just have to assume output is not wanted..
   1507     	    return;
   1508     	}
   1509 
   1510     	if (dest.equals("STDOUT")) {
   1511     	    diagnosticsStream = System.out;
   1512     	} else if (dest.equals("STDERR")) {
   1513     	    diagnosticsStream = System.err;
   1514     	} else {
   1515     	    try {
   1516                 // open the file in append mode
   1517     	        FileOutputStream fos = new FileOutputStream(dest, true);
   1518     	        diagnosticsStream = new PrintStream(fos);
   1519     	    } catch(IOException ex) {
   1520     	        // We should report this to the user - but how?
   1521     	        return;
   1522     	    }
   1523     	}
   1524 
   1525         // In order to avoid confusion where multiple instances of JCL are
   1526         // being used via different classloaders within the same app, we
   1527         // ensure each logged message has a prefix of form
   1528         // [LogFactory from classloader OID]
   1529         //
   1530         // Note that this prefix should be kept consistent with that
   1531         // in LogFactoryImpl. However here we don't need to output info
   1532         // about the actual *instance* of LogFactory, as all methods that
   1533         // output diagnostics from this class are static.
   1534         String classLoaderName;
   1535         try {
   1536             ClassLoader classLoader = thisClassLoader;
   1537             if (thisClassLoader == null) {
   1538                 classLoaderName = "BOOTLOADER";
   1539             } else {
   1540                 classLoaderName = objectId(classLoader);
   1541             }
   1542         } catch(SecurityException e) {
   1543             classLoaderName = "UNKNOWN";
   1544         }
   1545         diagnosticPrefix = "[LogFactory from " + classLoaderName + "] ";
   1546     }
   1547 
   1548     /**
   1549      * Indicates true if the user has enabled internal logging.
   1550      * <p>
   1551      * By the way, sorry for the incorrect grammar, but calling this method
   1552      * areDiagnosticsEnabled just isn't java beans style.
   1553      *
   1554      * @return true if calls to logDiagnostic will have any effect.
   1555      * @since 1.1
   1556      */
   1557     protected static boolean isDiagnosticsEnabled() {
   1558         return diagnosticsStream != null;
   1559     }
   1560 
   1561     /**
   1562      * Write the specified message to the internal logging destination.
   1563      * <p>
   1564      * Note that this method is private; concrete subclasses of this class
   1565      * should not call it because the diagnosticPrefix string this
   1566      * method puts in front of all its messages is LogFactory (at) ....,
   1567      * while subclasses should put SomeSubClass (at) ...
   1568      * <p>
   1569      * Subclasses should instead compute their own prefix, then call
   1570      * logRawDiagnostic. Note that calling isDiagnosticsEnabled is
   1571      * fine for subclasses.
   1572      * <p>
   1573      * Note that it is safe to call this method before initDiagnostics
   1574      * is called; any output will just be ignored (as isDiagnosticsEnabled
   1575      * will return false).
   1576      *
   1577      * @param msg is the diagnostic message to be output.
   1578      */
   1579     private static final void logDiagnostic(String msg) {
   1580         if (diagnosticsStream != null) {
   1581             diagnosticsStream.print(diagnosticPrefix);
   1582             diagnosticsStream.println(msg);
   1583             diagnosticsStream.flush();
   1584         }
   1585     }
   1586 
   1587     /**
   1588      * Write the specified message to the internal logging destination.
   1589      *
   1590      * @param msg is the diagnostic message to be output.
   1591      * @since 1.1
   1592      */
   1593     protected static final void logRawDiagnostic(String msg) {
   1594         if (diagnosticsStream != null) {
   1595             diagnosticsStream.println(msg);
   1596             diagnosticsStream.flush();
   1597         }
   1598     }
   1599 
   1600     /**
   1601      * Generate useful diagnostics regarding the classloader tree for
   1602      * the specified class.
   1603      * <p>
   1604      * As an example, if the specified class was loaded via a webapp's
   1605      * classloader, then you may get the following output:
   1606      * <pre>
   1607      * Class com.acme.Foo was loaded via classloader 11111
   1608      * ClassLoader tree: 11111 -> 22222 (SYSTEM) -> 33333 -> BOOT
   1609      * </pre>
   1610      * <p>
   1611      * This method returns immediately if isDiagnosticsEnabled()
   1612      * returns false.
   1613      *
   1614      * @param clazz is the class whose classloader + tree are to be
   1615      * output.
   1616      */
   1617     private static void logClassLoaderEnvironment(Class clazz) {
   1618         if (!isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1619             return;
   1620         }
   1621 
   1622         try {
   1623             logDiagnostic("[ENV] Extension directories (java.ext.dir): " + System.getProperty("java.ext.dir"));
   1624             logDiagnostic("[ENV] Application classpath (java.class.path): " + System.getProperty("java.class.path"));
   1625         } catch(SecurityException ex) {
   1626             logDiagnostic("[ENV] Security setting prevent interrogation of system classpaths.");
   1627         }
   1628 
   1629         String className = clazz.getName();
   1630         ClassLoader classLoader;
   1631 
   1632         try {
   1633             classLoader = getClassLoader(clazz);
   1634         } catch(SecurityException ex) {
   1635             // not much useful diagnostics we can print here!
   1636             logDiagnostic(
   1637                 "[ENV] Security forbids determining the classloader for " + className);
   1638             return;
   1639         }
   1640 
   1641         logDiagnostic(
   1642             "[ENV] Class " + className + " was loaded via classloader "
   1643             + objectId(classLoader));
   1644         logHierarchy("[ENV] Ancestry of classloader which loaded " + className + " is ", classLoader);
   1645     }
   1646 
   1647     /**
   1648      * Logs diagnostic messages about the given classloader
   1649      * and it's hierarchy. The prefix is prepended to the message
   1650      * and is intended to make it easier to understand the logs.
   1651      * @param prefix
   1652      * @param classLoader
   1653      */
   1654     private static void logHierarchy(String prefix, ClassLoader classLoader) {
   1655         if (!isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1656             return;
   1657         }
   1658         ClassLoader systemClassLoader;
   1659         if (classLoader != null) {
   1660             final String classLoaderString = classLoader.toString();
   1661             logDiagnostic(prefix + objectId(classLoader) + " == '" + classLoaderString + "'");
   1662         }
   1663 
   1664         try {
   1665             systemClassLoader = ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader();
   1666         } catch(SecurityException ex) {
   1667             logDiagnostic(
   1668                     prefix + "Security forbids determining the system classloader.");
   1669             return;
   1670         }
   1671         if (classLoader != null) {
   1672             StringBuffer buf = new StringBuffer(prefix + "ClassLoader tree:");
   1673             for(;;) {
   1674                 buf.append(objectId(classLoader));
   1675                 if (classLoader == systemClassLoader) {
   1676                     buf.append(" (SYSTEM) ");
   1677                 }
   1678 
   1679                 try {
   1680                     classLoader = classLoader.getParent();
   1681                 } catch(SecurityException ex) {
   1682                     buf.append(" --> SECRET");
   1683                     break;
   1684                 }
   1685 
   1686                 buf.append(" --> ");
   1687                 if (classLoader == null) {
   1688                     buf.append("BOOT");
   1689                     break;
   1690                 }
   1691             }
   1692             logDiagnostic(buf.toString());
   1693         }
   1694     }
   1695 
   1696     /**
   1697      * Returns a string that uniquely identifies the specified object, including
   1698      * its class.
   1699      * <p>
   1700      * The returned string is of form "classname@hashcode", ie is the same as
   1701      * the return value of the Object.toString() method, but works even when
   1702      * the specified object's class has overidden the toString method.
   1703      *
   1704      * @param o may be null.
   1705      * @return a string of form classname@hashcode, or "null" if param o is null.
   1706      * @since 1.1
   1707      */
   1708     public static String objectId(Object o) {
   1709         if (o == null) {
   1710             return "null";
   1711         } else {
   1712             return o.getClass().getName() + "@" + System.identityHashCode(o);
   1713         }
   1714     }
   1715 
   1716     // ----------------------------------------------------------------------
   1717     // Static initialiser block to perform initialisation at class load time.
   1718     //
   1719     // We can't do this in the class constructor, as there are many
   1720     // static methods on this class that can be called before any
   1721     // LogFactory instances are created, and they depend upon this
   1722     // stuff having been set up.
   1723     //
   1724     // Note that this block must come after any variable declarations used
   1725     // by any methods called from this block, as we want any static initialiser
   1726     // associated with the variable to run first. If static initialisers for
   1727     // variables run after this code, then (a) their value might be needed
   1728     // by methods called from here, and (b) they might *override* any value
   1729     // computed here!
   1730     //
   1731     // So the wisest thing to do is just to place this code at the very end
   1732     // of the class file.
   1733     // ----------------------------------------------------------------------
   1734 
   1735     static {
   1736         // note: it's safe to call methods before initDiagnostics.
   1737         thisClassLoader = getClassLoader(LogFactory.class);
   1738         initDiagnostics();
   1739         logClassLoaderEnvironment(LogFactory.class);
   1740         factories = createFactoryStore();
   1741         if (isDiagnosticsEnabled()) {
   1742             logDiagnostic("BOOTSTRAP COMPLETED");
   1743         }
   1744     }
   1745 }
   1746