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@jbowes
Created July 5, 2011 16:44
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CLF style access logger for Netty based HTTP servers
/**
* Copyright (c) 2011 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* This software is licensed to you under the GNU General Public License,
* version 2 (GPLv2). There is NO WARRANTY for this software, express or
* implied, including the implied warranties of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS
* FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You should have received a copy of GPLv2
* along with this software; if not, see
* http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.txt.
*
* Red Hat trademarks are not licensed under GPLv2. No permission is
* granted to use or replicate Red Hat trademarks that are incorporated
* in this software or its documentation.
*/
package org.candlepin.thumbslug;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.InetSocketAddress;
import java.net.SocketAddress;
import java.util.Calendar;
import java.util.Locale;
import org.apache.log4j.FileAppender;
import org.apache.log4j.Layout;
import org.apache.log4j.Logger;
import org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.ChannelEvent;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.ChannelHandlerContext;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.MessageEvent;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.SimpleChannelHandler;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http.HttpChunk;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http.HttpHeaders;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http.HttpRequest;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.http.HttpResponse;
/**
* HttpRequestLogger - logs client requests in an apache like format
*/
class HttpRequestLogger extends SimpleChannelHandler {
// this logger we use for the access log. the other is
// for logging stuff like not being able to open the access log file
private final Logger accessLog = Logger.getLogger(
HttpRequestLogger.class.getCanonicalName() + ".accessLog");
private final Logger log = Logger.getLogger(HttpRequestLogger.class);
// CLF. see wikipedia ;)
private static final String DEFAULT_LOG_FORMAT =
"%1$s - - [%2$td/%2$tb/%2$tY:%2$tT %2$tz] \"%3$s %4$s %5$s\" %6$d %7$d";
private String inetAddress;
private String method;
private String uri;
private String protocol;
private int status;
private Long contentLength;
HttpRequestLogger(String fileName) {
clearState();
configureAccessLog(fileName);
}
// the client request
@Override
public void handleUpstream(ChannelHandlerContext ctx, ChannelEvent e) throws Exception {
if (e instanceof MessageEvent) {
HttpRequest request = (HttpRequest) ((MessageEvent) e).getMessage();
// on the off chance that this isn't an ip connection,
// we're going to check first
inetAddress = "-";
SocketAddress address = ((MessageEvent) e).getRemoteAddress();
if (address instanceof InetSocketAddress) {
inetAddress = ((InetSocketAddress) address).getAddress().toString();
if (inetAddress.startsWith("/")) {
inetAddress = inetAddress.substring(1);
}
}
// maybe this request was proxied or load balanced.
// try and get the real originating IP
if (request.containsHeader("X-Forwarded-For")) {
// can contain multiple IPs for proxy chains. the first ip is our client.
String proxyChain = request.getHeader("X-Forwarded-For");
int firstComma = proxyChain.indexOf(',');
if (firstComma != -1) {
inetAddress = proxyChain.substring(0, proxyChain.indexOf(','));
}
else {
inetAddress = proxyChain;
}
}
method = request.getMethod().getName();
uri = request.getUri();
protocol = request.getProtocolVersion().toString();
}
super.handleUpstream(ctx, e);
}
/**
* handleDownstream - handle the http response
*
* in both cases, we can get the status and content length from the first reply message.
* if the reply is chunked, we have to wait till we've sent back the last response
* before logging, so we can get an accurate time.
*/
@Override
public void handleDownstream(ChannelHandlerContext ctx, ChannelEvent e)
throws Exception {
super.handleDownstream(ctx, e);
if (e instanceof MessageEvent) {
Object msg = ((MessageEvent) e).getMessage();
if (msg instanceof HttpResponse) {
HttpResponse response = (HttpResponse) msg;
status = response.getStatus().getCode();
contentLength = HttpHeaders.getContentLength(response);
if (!response.isChunked()) {
logAccess();
clearState();
}
}
else if (msg instanceof HttpChunk) {
HttpChunk chunk = (HttpChunk) msg;
if (chunk.isLast()) {
logAccess();
clearState();
}
}
}
}
private void clearState() {
inetAddress = null;
method = null;
uri = null;
protocol = null;
status = -1;
contentLength = -1L;
}
private void logAccess() {
// We've got to use the a default locale here, so that month name is
// formatted properly for CLF, regardless of server locale. I've chosen Canada!
if (accessLog.isInfoEnabled()) {
accessLog.info(String.format(Locale.CANADA, DEFAULT_LOG_FORMAT,
inetAddress, Calendar.getInstance(), method, uri, protocol, status,
contentLength));
}
}
private void configureAccessLog(String fileName) {
accessLog.setLevel(org.apache.log4j.Level.INFO);
try {
Layout layout = new PatternLayout("%m%n");
FileAppender fileAppender = new FileAppender(layout, fileName);
accessLog.addAppender(fileAppender);
accessLog.setAdditivity(false);
}
catch (IOException e) {
log.error("unable to open access.log for writing!", e);
}
}
}
@bgranvea
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I found a bug when you use HTTP 1.1: a new request can reset handler state before the previous one was logged. That's because super.handleDownstream(ctx, e) should be called at the end of handleDownstream and not at the beginning.

@er1c
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er1c commented Jan 12, 2016

It's worth noting this is a netty 3.0-only implementation, a lot changed in 4.0 and you can't just hook into two upstream/downstream calls

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