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Spring/Hibernate Improved SQL Logging with log4jdbc---reference
Hibernate provides SQL logging out of the box, but such logging only shows prepared statements, and not the actual SQL queries sent to the database.
It also does not log the execution time of each query, which is useful for performance troubleshooting. This blog post will go over how to setup Hibernate query logging, and then compare it to the logging that can be obtained with log4jdbc .
The Hibernate query logging functionality
Hibernate does not log the real SQL queries sent to the database. This is because Hibernate interacts with the database via the JDBC driver, to which it sends prepared statements but not the actual queries.
So Hibernate can only log the prepared statements and the values of their binding parameters, but not the actual SQL queries themselves.
This is how a query looks like when logged by Hibernate:
1.
select
/*
load
your.package.Employee */ this_.code, ...
2.
from
employee this_
3.
where
this_.employee_id=?
4.
5.
TRACE 12-04-2014@16:06:02 BasicBinder - binding parameter [1]
as
[NUMBER] - 1000
See this post Hibernate Debugging - Finding the origin of a Query for how to setup this type of logging.
Using log4jdbc
For a developer it‘s useful to be able to copy paste a query from the log and be able to execute the query directly in an SQL client, but the variable placeholders ?
make that unfeasible.
Log4jdbc in an open source tool that allows to do just that, and more. Log4jdbc is a spy driver that will wrap itself around the real JDBC driver, logging queries as they go through it.
The version linked from this post provides Spring integration, unlike several other log4jdbc forks.
Setting up log4jdbc
First include the log4jdbc-remix library in your pom.xml. This library is a fork of the original log4jdbc:
1.
<
dependency
>
2.
<
groupId
>org.lazyluke</
groupId
>
3.
<
artifactId
>log4jdbc-remix</
artifactId
4.
<version>0.2.7</
version
>
5.
</
dependency
>
Next, find in the Spring configuration the definition of the data source. As an example, when using the JNDI lookup element this is how the data source looks like:
1.
<
jee:jndi-lookup
id
=
"dataSource"
2.
jndi-name
=
"java:comp/env/jdbc/some-db"
/>
After finding the data source definition, rename it to the following name:
1.
<
jee:jndi-lookup
id
=
"originalDataSource"
2.
jndi-name
=
"java:comp/env/jdbc/some-db"
/>
Then define a new log4jdbc data source that wraps the real data source, and give it the original name:
01.
<
bean
id
=
"dataSource"
class
=
"net.sf.log4jdbc.Log4jdbcProxyDataSource"
>
02.
<
constructor-arg
ref
=
"originalDataSource"
/>
03.
<
property
name
=
"logFormatter"
>
04.
<
bean
class
=
"net.sf.log4jdbc.tools.Log4JdbcCustomFormatter"
>
05.
<
property
name
=
"loggingType"
value
=
"SINGLE_LINE"
/>
06.
<
property
name
=
"margin"
value
=
"19"
/>
07.
<
property
name
=
"sqlPrefix"
value
=
"SQL:::"
/>
08.
</
bean
>
09.
</
property
>
10.
</
bean
>
With this configuration, the query logging should already be working. It‘s possible to customize the logging level of the several log4jdbc loggers available.
The original log4jdbc documentation provides more information on the available loggers:
jdbc.sqlonly
: Logs only SQLjdbc.sqltiming
: Logs the SQL, post-execution, including timing execution statisticsjdbc.audit
: Logs ALL JDBC calls except for ResultSetsjdbc.resultset
: all calls to ResultSet objects are loggedjdbc.connection
: Logs connection open and close events
The jdbc.audit
logger is especially useful to validate the scope of transactions, as it logs the begin/commit/rollback events of a database transaction.
This is the proposed log4j configuration that will print only the SQL queries together with their execution time:
01.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.sqltiming"
additivity
=
"false"
>
02.
<
level
value
=
"info"
/>
03.
</
logger
>
04.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.resultset"
additivity
=
"false"
>
05.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
06.
</
logger
>
07.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.audit"
additivity
=
"false"
>
08.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
09.
</
logger
>
10.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.sqlonly"
additivity
=
"false"
>
11.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
12.
</
logger
>
13.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.resultsettable"
additivity
=
"false"
>
14.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
15.
</
logger
>
16.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.connection"
additivity
=
"false"
>
17.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
18.
</
logger
>
19.
<
logger
name
=
"jdbc.resultsettable"
additivity
=
"false"
>
20.
<
level
value
=
"error"
/>
21.
</
logger
>
Conclusion
Using log4jdbc does imply some initial setup, but once it‘s in place it‘s really convenient to have. Having a true query log is also useful for performance troubleshooting (to be described in a future post).
reference from:http://java.dzone.com/articles/springhibernate-improved-sql