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Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, visit the documentation page.

You can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

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Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, you can get started over on the documentation page.

And, you can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (cat=Spring)
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Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

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Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (tag=Microservices)
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Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

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eBook – Java Concurrency – NPI EA (cat=Java Concurrency)
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Since its introduction in Java 8, the Stream API has become a staple of Java development. The basic operations like iterating, filtering, mapping sequences of elements are deceptively simple to use.

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Explore Spring Boot 3 and Spring 6 in-depth through building a full REST API with the framework:

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I built the security material as two full courses - Core and OAuth, to get practical with these more complex scenarios. We explore when and how to use each feature and code through it on the backing project.

You can explore the course here:

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Partner – MongoDB – NPI EA (tag=MongoDB)
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Traditional keyword-based search methods rely on exact word matches, often leading to irrelevant results depending on the user's phrasing.

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Explore how to build an intelligent chatbot using MongoDB Atlas, Langchain4j and Spring Boot:

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eBook – HTTP Client – NPI (cat=HTTP Client-Side)
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1. Overview

In this tutorial, we’ll show how to enable logging in Apache’s HttpClient. Additionally, we’ll explain how logging is implemented inside the library. Afterward, we’ll show how to enable different levels of logging.

2. Logging Implementation

The HttpClient library provides efficient, up-to-date, and feature-rich implementation client site of the HTTP protocol.

Indeed as a library, HttpClient doesn’t force logging implementation. With this intention, version 4.5, provides logs with Commons Logging. Similarly, the latest version, 5.1, uses a logging facade provided by SLF4J. Both versions use a hierarchy schema to match loggers with their configurations.

Thanks to that, it is possible to set up loggers for single classes or for all classes related to the same functionality.

3. Log Types

Let’s have a look at log levels defined by the library. We can distinguish 3 types of logs:

  • context logging – logs information about all internal operations of HttpClient. It contains wire and header logs as well.
  • wire logging – logs only data transmitted to and from the server
  • header logging – logs HTTP headers only

In version 4.5 the corresponding packages are org.apache.http.impl.client and org.apache.http.wire, org.apache.http.headers.

Acordingly in version 5.1 the are packages org.apache.hc.client5.http, org.apache.hc.client5.http.wire and org.apache.hc.client5.http.headers.

4. Log4j Configuration

Let’s have a look at how to enable logging in to both versions.  Our aim is to achieve the same flexibility in both versions. In version 4.1, we’ll redirect logs to SLF4j. Thanks to that, different logging frameworks can be used.

4.1. Version 4.5 Configuration

Let’s add the httpclient dependency:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.httpcomponents</groupId>
    <artifactId>httpclient</artifactId>
    <version>4.5.8</version>
    <exclusions>
        <exclusion>
            <artifactId>commons-logging</artifactId>
            <groupId>commons-logging</groupId>
        </exclusion>
    </exclusions>
</dependency>

We’ll use jcl-over-slf4j to redirect logs to SLF4J. Therefore we excluded commons-logging. Let’s then add a dependency to the bridge between JCL and SLF4J:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId>
    <artifactId>jcl-over-slf4j</artifactId>
    <version>1.7.32</version>
</dependency>

Because SLF4J is just a facade, we need a binding. In our example, we’ll use logback:

<dependency>
    <groupId>ch.qos.logback</groupId>
    <artifactId>logback-classic</artifactId>
    <version>1.2.6</version>
</dependency>

Let’s now create the ApacheHttpClientUnitTest class:

public class ApacheHttpClientUnitTest {
    private final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(this.getClass());
    public static final String DUMMY_URL = "https://postman-echo.com/get";

    @Test
    public void whenUseApacheHttpClient_thenCorrect() throws IOException {
        HttpGet request = new HttpGet(DUMMY_URL);

        try (CloseableHttpClient client = HttpClients.createDefault(); 
            CloseableHttpResponse response = client.execute(request)) {
            HttpEntity entity = response.getEntity();
            logger.debug("Response -> {}",  EntityUtils.toString(entity));
        }
    }
}

The test fetches a dummy web page and prints the contents to the log.

Let’s now define a logger configuration with our logback.xml file:

<configuration debug="false">
    <appender name="stdout" class="ch.qos.logback.core.ConsoleAppender">
        <encoder>
            <pattern>%date [%level] %logger - %msg %n</pattern>
        </encoder>
    </appender>

    <logger name="com.baeldung.httpclient.readresponsebodystring" level="debug"/>
    <logger name="org.apache.http" level="debug"/>

    <root level="WARN">
        <appender-ref ref="stdout"/>
    </root>
</configuration>

After running our test, all HttpClient’s logs can be found in the console:

...
2021-06-19 22:24:45,378 [DEBUG] org.apache.http.impl.execchain.MainClientExec - Executing request GET /get HTTP/1.1 
2021-06-19 22:24:45,378 [DEBUG] org.apache.http.impl.execchain.MainClientExec - Target auth state: UNCHALLENGED 
2021-06-19 22:24:45,379 [DEBUG] org.apache.http.impl.execchain.MainClientExec - Proxy auth state: UNCHALLENGED 
2021-06-19 22:24:45,382 [DEBUG] org.apache.http.headers - http-outgoing-0 >> GET /get HTTP/1.1 
...

4.2. Version 5.1 Configuration

Let’s have a look now at the higher version. It contains redesigned logging. Therefore, instead of Commons Logging, it utilizes SLF4J. As a result, a binding for the logger facade is the only additional dependency. Therefore we’ll use logback-classic as in the first example.

Let’s add the httpclient5 dependency:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apache.httpcomponents.client5</groupId>
    <artifactId>httpclient5</artifactId>
    <version>5.1</version>
</dependency>

Let’s add a similar test as in the previous example:

public class ApacheHttpClient5UnitTest {
    private final Logger logger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(this.getClass());
    public static final String DUMMY_URL = "https://postman-echo.com/get";

    @Test
    public void whenUseApacheHttpClient_thenCorrect() throws IOException, ParseException {
        HttpGet request = new HttpGet(DUMMY_URL);

        try (CloseableHttpClient client = HttpClients.createDefault(); 
            CloseableHttpResponse response = client.execute(request)) {
            HttpEntity entity = response.getEntity();
            logger.debug("Response -> {}", EntityUtils.toString(entity));
        }
    }
}

Next, we need to add a logger to the logback.xml file:

<configuration debug="false">
...
    <logger name="org.apache.hc.client5.http" level="debug"/>
...
</configuration>

Let’s run the test class ApacheHttpClient5UnitTest and check the output. It is similar to the old version:

...
2021-06-19 22:27:16,944 [DEBUG] org.apache.hc.client5.http.impl.classic.InternalHttpClient - ep-0000000000 endpoint connected 
2021-06-19 22:27:16,944 [DEBUG] org.apache.hc.client5.http.impl.classic.MainClientExec - ex-0000000001 executing GET /get HTTP/1.1 
2021-06-19 22:27:16,944 [DEBUG] org.apache.hc.client5.http.impl.classic.InternalHttpClient - ep-0000000000 start execution ex-0000000001 
2021-06-19 22:27:16,944 [DEBUG] org.apache.hc.client5.http.impl.io.PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager - ep-0000000000 executing exchange ex-0000000001 over http-outgoing-0 
2021-06-19 22:27:16,960 [DEBUG] org.apache.hc.client5.http.headers - http-outgoing-0 >> GET /get HTTP/1.1 
...

5. Conclusion

That concludes this short tutorial on how to configure logging for Apache’s HttpClient. Firstly, we explained how logging is implemented in the library. Secondly, we configured logging in two versions and executed simple test cases to show the output.

The code backing this article is available on GitHub. Once you're logged in as a Baeldung Pro Member, start learning and coding on the project.
Baeldung Pro – NPI EA (cat = Baeldung)
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Baeldung Pro comes with both absolutely No-Ads as well as finally with Dark Mode, for a clean learning experience:

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Once the early-adopter seats are all used, the price will go up and stay at $33/year.

Partner – Microsoft – NPI EA (cat = Baeldung)
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Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, visit the documentation page.

You can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Microsoft – NPI EA (cat = Spring Boot)
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Azure Container Apps is a fully managed serverless container service that enables you to build and deploy modern, cloud-native Java applications and microservices at scale. It offers a simplified developer experience while providing the flexibility and portability of containers.

Of course, Azure Container Apps has really solid support for our ecosystem, from a number of build options, managed Java components, native metrics, dynamic logger, and quite a bit more.

To learn more about Java features on Azure Container Apps, visit the documentation page.

You can also ask questions and leave feedback on the Azure Container Apps GitHub page.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (cat = Spring)
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Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

Partner – Orkes – NPI EA (tag = Microservices)
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Modern software architecture is often broken. Slow delivery leads to missed opportunities, innovation is stalled due to architectural complexities, and engineering resources are exceedingly expensive.

Orkes is the leading workflow orchestration platform built to enable teams to transform the way they develop, connect, and deploy applications, microservices, AI agents, and more.

With Orkes Conductor managed through Orkes Cloud, developers can focus on building mission critical applications without worrying about infrastructure maintenance to meet goals and, simply put, taking new products live faster and reducing total cost of ownership.

Try a 14-Day Free Trial of Orkes Conductor today.

eBook – HTTP Client – NPI EA (cat=HTTP Client-Side)
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The Apache HTTP Client is a very robust library, suitable for both simple and advanced use cases when testing HTTP endpoints. Check out our guide covering basic request and response handling, as well as security, cookies, timeouts, and more:

>> Download the eBook

eBook – Java Concurrency – NPI EA (cat=Java Concurrency)
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Handling concurrency in an application can be a tricky process with many potential pitfalls. A solid grasp of the fundamentals will go a long way to help minimize these issues.

Get started with understanding multi-threaded applications with our Java Concurrency guide:

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eBook – Java Streams – NPI EA (cat=Java Streams)
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Since its introduction in Java 8, the Stream API has become a staple of Java development. The basic operations like iterating, filtering, mapping sequences of elements are deceptively simple to use.

But these can also be overused and fall into some common pitfalls.

To get a better understanding on how Streams work and how to combine them with other language features, check out our guide to Java Streams:

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eBook – Persistence – NPI EA (cat=Persistence)
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Partner – MongoDB – NPI EA (tag=MongoDB)
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Traditional keyword-based search methods rely on exact word matches, often leading to irrelevant results depending on the user's phrasing.

By comparison, using a vector store allows us to represent the data as vector embeddings, based on meaningful relationships. We can then compare the meaning of the user’s query to the stored content, and retrieve more relevant, context-aware results.

Explore how to build an intelligent chatbot using MongoDB Atlas, Langchain4j and Spring Boot:

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