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ServiceStack.Logging is an implementation and dependency-free logging API with adapters for all of .NET's popular logging providers.
It allows your business logic to bind to an easily-mockable and testable dependency-free interface whilst providing the flexibility to switch logging providers at runtime.
Download on NuGet
Currently there are 6 different .NET logging providers available on NuGet:
Note: The ConsoleLogger and DebugLogger and are already built-in and bind to .NET Framework's Console and Debug loggers
Commercial support will be available for ServiceStack, contact team@servicestack.net for details
Even in the spirit of Bind to interfaces, not implemenations, many .NET projects still have
a hard dependency to log4net.
Although log4net is the standard for logging in .NET, potential problems can arise from your libraries having a hard dependency on it:
Your library needs to be shipped with a third-party dependency
Potential conflicts can occur when different libraries have dependency on different versions of log4net (e.g. the 1.2.9 / 1.2.10 dependency problem).
You may want to use a different logging provider (i.e. network distributed logging)
You want your logging for Unit and Integration tests to redirect to the Console or Debug logger without any configuraiton.
Something better like elmah can come along requiring a major rewrite to take advantage of it
ServiceStack.Logging solves these problems by providing an implementation-free ILog interface that your application logic can bind to
where your Application Host project can bind to the concrete logging implementation at deploy or runtime.
ServiceStack.Logging also includes adapters for the following logging providers:
Elmah
NLog
Log4Net 1.2.10+
Log4Net 1.2.9
Enterprise Library 5.0
EventLog
Console Log
Debug Log
Null / Empty Log
Usage Examples
Once on your App Startup, either In your AppHost.cs or Global.asax file inject the concrete logging implementation that your app should use, e.g.
Log4Net
LogManager.LogFactory = new Log4NetFactory(true); //Also runs log4net.Config.XmlConfigurator.Configure()
Event Log
LogManager.LogFactory = new EventLogFactory("ServiceStack.Logging.Tests", "Application");
Then your application logic can bind to and use a lightweight implementation-free ILog which at runtime will be an instance of the concrete implementation configured in your host:
Since September 2013, ServiceStack source code is available under GNU Affero General Public License/FOSS License Exception, see license.txt in the source. Alternative commercial licensing is also available, contact team@servicestack.net for details.
Contributing
Commits should be made to the v3-fixes branch so they can be merged into both v3 and master (v4) release branches.
Contributors need to approve the Contributor License Agreement before any code will be reviewed, see the Contributing wiki for more details.
About
Dependency and Implementation-free, abstract logging interface