In this case, show how to troubleshoot logger conflicts. ### Find the ClassLoader of the UserController `sc -d com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController | grep classLoaderHash`{{execute T2}} ```bash $ sc -d com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController | grep classLoaderHash classLoaderHash 1be6f5c3 ``` Please write down your classLoaderHash here since it's dynamic. In the case here, it's `1be6f5c3`. if you use`-c`, you have to manually type hashcode by `-c `. ```bash $ ognl -c 1be6f5c3 @com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController@logger ``` For classloader with only one instance, it can be specified by `--classLoaderClass` using class name, which is more convenient to use. ```bash $ ognl --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader @org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication@logger @Slf4jLocationAwareLog[ FQCN=@String[org.apache.commons.logging.LogAdapter$Slf4jLocationAwareLog], name=@String[org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication], logger=@Logger[Logger[org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication]], ] ``` The value of `--classloaderclass` is the class name of classloader. It can only work when it matches a unique classloader instance. The purpose is to facilitate the input of general commands. However, `-c ` is dynamic. ### View the logger system used by the app Take `UserController` as an example, it uses slf4j api, but the actual logger system used is logback. `ognl --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader '@com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController@logger'`{{execute T2}} ```bash $ ognl --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader '@com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController@logger' @Logger[ serialVersionUID=@Long[5454405123156820674], FQCN=@String[ch.qos.logback.classic.Logger], name=@String[com.example.demo.arthas.user.UserController], level=null, effectiveLevelInt=@Integer[20000], parent=@Logger[Logger[com.example.demo.arthas.user]], childrenList=null, aai=null, additive=@Boolean[true], loggerContext=@LoggerContext[ch.qos.logback.classic.LoggerContext[default]], ] ``` ### Find the configuration file actually loaded by the logback `ognl --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader '#map1=@org.slf4j.LoggerFactory@getLogger("root").loggerContext.objectMap, #map1.get("CONFIGURATION_WATCH_LIST")'`{{execute T2}} ### Use the classloader command to find possible logger configuration files `classloader --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader -r logback-spring.xml`{{execute T2}} ``` $ classloader --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader -r logback-spring.xml jar:file:/Users/hengyunabc/code/java/spring-boot-inside/demo-arthas-spring-boot/target/demo-arthas-spring-boot-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar!/BOOT-INF/classes!/logback-spring.xml Affect(row-cnt:1) cost in 13 ms. ``` You can know the specific source of the loaded configuration. You can try to load files that are prone to conflict: `classloader --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader -r logback.xml`{{execute T2}} `classloader --classLoaderClass org.springframework.boot.loader.LaunchedURLClassLoader -r log4j.properties`{{execute T2}}