'Tomcat, Docker, Logging, and STDOUT?
I'm running tomcat in docker, but I can't see the logs. They are written to various log files under tomcat/logs, but I can't see them when tomcat is running in a docker container.
Here is my Dockerfile
FROM tomcat:7-jre8
COPY target/MYAPP.war /usr/local/tomcat/webapps/MYAPP.war
RUN ["/usr/local/tomcat/bin/catalina.sh", "start"]
This is how I build image & start container from it:
docker build -t MYAPP .
docker run -it --rm -p 8080:8080 --name MYAPP MYAPP
My app creates log file: /var/log/MYAPP.log after tomcat deploys MYAPP.war
How should I amend Dockerfile and which command should I use to run it ("docker run ...") so that right after starting the container MYAPP using the oneliner "docker run -it --rm -p 8080:8080 --name MYAPP MYAPP" the contents of /var/log/MYAPP.log would be printed to stdout?
I tried to add to Dockerfile the command below but it didn't help.
CMD tail -f /usr/local/MYAPP.log
Solution 1:[1]
You seem to be confused about the different between RUN and CMD.
The RUN directive is used to run commands during the build process. It is never executed in a container. When you write...
RUN ["/usr/local/tomcat/bin/catalina.sh", "start"]
...this means that during the docker build process, Docker will start tomcat, but will immediately kill it and continue to build your image.
Only the CMD and ENTRYPOINT directives define commands that will be run when you boot an image with docker run. So possibly you want something like:
CMD /usr/local/tomcat/bin/catalina.sh start && tail -f /usr/local/MYAPP.log
Solution 2:[2]
Following needs to be done to direct all logs to stdout:
- Similar to the answer given to How to stop application logs from logging into catalina.out in Tomcat, you can pass the CATALINA_OUT environment variable value as
/dev/stdout. This will make sure all tomcat logs are sent to stdout. - In logging.properties of catalina base, keep java.util.logging.ConsoleHandler and remove other handlers.
- Change the configuration of the logging in your application (For example, log4j2.xml file if you are using log4j2) to send logs to stdout. In log4j2, you can do it by using the console appender.
Solution 3:[3]
Ok, your dockerfile should contain something like this**:
from tomcat:7-jre8
copy target/myapp.war /usr/local/tomcat/webapps/myapp.war
entrypoint ["/bin/bash", "/usr/local/tomcat/bin/catalina.sh", "run"]
Then you can run a container based on this image with something like:
docker run -itd -p 8080:8080 --name aname animage
So, the catalina 'run' command is designed to redirect all logs to stdout. This is useful to us because this is how docker works. If you run the container now you'll be able to run:
docker logs aname
The output will be anything that has been sent to stdout within the container. You can do with this what you wish, but common strategies are transporting the logs to logstash, splunk, or a thousand other places, or you could write them to a file (though that last one is mostly for developers).
** Of course, you'll have to change the entrypoint to match the specifics of your installation. And the run command I've shown here is for a daemon.
Original problem:
Your original problems were based on a common mistake; you were trying to run the tomcat server during provisioning (building the image). You actually want to run the server when you run the container. So, I've removed the run and replaced it with an entrypoint, which is the correct way of running a command like this. Finally, cmd is for passing parameters to the entrypoint, which we don't need in this case.
Finally, I've chosen to use cataline.sh run rather than start because run is designed to send the logs to stdout rather than a file, as start does.
References
View logs: https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/
Conf logs: https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/configure/
Solution 4:[4]
Found a nice way here: https://github.com/Scout24/tomcat-stdout-accesslog/issues/2
Replace the following Valve in your server.xml file.
<Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.AccessLogValve" directory="/proc/self/fd"
prefix="1" suffix="" rotatable="false"
pattern="%h %l %u %t "%r" %s %b" />
Linux only!
This "nice way" works for me as expected.
Solution 5:[5]
Below worked for me in Tomcat 9.0.37:
Instead of using ./statup.sh, use ./catalina.sh run to start the tomcat server.
Solution 6:[6]
May be it will be better to write logs directly to the stdout instead of the file in the container. It will be lost after restart.
See for more details https://12factor.net/logs
Solution 7:[7]
If you are already using log4j2. you can just remove the default logging.properties when building your image.
RUN rm /usr/local/tomcat/conf/logging.properties
ref: Keeping your logs clean with Apache Tomcat 9, log4j2 and spring-boot
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
| Solution | Source |
|---|---|
| Solution 1 | larsks |
| Solution 2 | |
| Solution 3 | |
| Solution 4 | Lars |
| Solution 5 | Nimantha |
| Solution 6 | Ardling |
| Solution 7 | Mahmoud K. |
