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README.md

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About logback

Thank you for your interest in logback, the reliable, generic, fast and flexible logging library for Java.

The Logback documentation can be found on the project web-site as well as under the docs/ folder of the logback distribution.

On the 1.5.x series

The 1.5.x series is a direct descendant of and a drop-in replacement for the 1.4.x series. It differs from the 1.4.x series by the relocation of the logback-access module which was moved to its own separate github repository.

Here is a summary of 1.5.x dependencies:

Logback version github branch SLF4J version JDK at runtime JDK during build Enterprise Edition (optional)
1.5.x master 2.0.x 11 21 Jakarta EE (jakarta.* namespace)

Building logback

Version 1.5.x requires Java 21 to compile and build.

More details on building logback is documented at:

https://logback.qos.ch/setup.html#ide

In case of problems

In case of problems please do not hesitate to post an e-mail message on the [email protected] mailing list. You may also post message on the github discussions forum. However, please do not directly e-mail logback developers. The answer to your question might be useful to other users. Moreover, there are many knowledgeable users on the logback-user mailing lists who can quickly answer your questions.

Urgent issues

For urgent issues do not hesitate to champion a release. In principle, most championed issues are solved within 3 business days followed up by a release.

Pull requests

If you are interested in improving logback, that is great! The logback community looks forward to your contribution. Please follow this process:

  1. Fork qos-ch/logback. Ideally, create a new branch from your fork for your contribution to make it easier to merge your changes back.

  2. Make the effort to explain the aim of your proposed change.

  3. Make your changes on the branch you hopefully created in Step 2. Be sure that your code passes existing unit tests.

  4. Please add unit tests for your work if appropriate. It usually is.

  5. Push your changes to your fork/branch in GitHub. Don't push it to your master! If you do it will make it harder to submit new changes later.

  6. Submit a pull request to logback from your commit page on GitHub. All commits must have signed off by the contributor attesting to Developer Certificate of Origin (DCO). Commits without sign off will be automatically rejected by the DCO GitHub check application.

  7. Do not forget to explain your proposed changes.