NLog not working in release mode

2020-08-10 07:55发布

问题:

I am using NLog to log the exceptions in my asp.net mvc (C#) application.

NLog is not working in release mode. The same is working when running in debug mode.

What may be the problem? Is there any fix for this?

回答1:

I was having the same problem as you:

  • ASP.NET MVC 3
  • .NET 4
  • IIS 7
  • Release Mode

I tried changing directories, and changing permissions to no avail. I even tried enabling the internal logging but even that didn't work! No failures, no exceptions, nothing!

After doing some more investigating, I found the solution. For some reason, NLog wasn't loading the config file AT ALL. I realized this after I programmatically enabled the internal logging. The internal logging reported this:

2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Targets for MyMvcController by level:
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Trace =>
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Debug =>
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Info =>
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Warn =>
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Error =>
2012-02-13 11:34:40.3181 Debug Fatal =>

This was basically saying that there were no targets defined for any of the log levels! Definitely not correct!

My NLog configuration file was as simple as it could be(and it was set to Copy to Output Directory):

<nlog xmlns="http://www.nlog-project.org/schemas/NLog.xsd" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" autoReload="true" throwExceptions="true">
  <targets>
    <target name="file" xsi:type="File" fileName="${basedir}/MyApplication.log" />
  </targets>
  <rules>
    <logger name="*" minlevel="Trace" writeTo="file" />
  </rules>
</nlog>

I'm still not sure exactly why this was happening, but moving the NLog configuration into the web.config directly resolved the problem.



回答2:

set up environment variables:NLOG_INTERNAL_LOG_LEVEL and NLOG_INTERNAL_LOG_FILE, rerun your release build then check the log file see what's wrong



回答3:

For anyone, who is not sure about 'why nlog is not working in prod environment':

  1. Go to Nlog.config file
  2. SET throwExceptions="true" in nlog tag and start debugging with proper errors.

Good luck.



回答4:

Transfer nlog config to config file of your application (web.config for example), and try again.



回答5:

Make sure your target file saves within a "/logs/" folder. See below

<target xsi:type="File" name="f" fileName="${basedir}/logs/${shortdate}.log"
            layout="${longdate} ${uppercase:${level}} ${message}" />

I tried to log into "root/log.log" and was not working, then tried "root/logs/log.log" and worked

Below full config file.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<nlog xmlns="http://www.nlog-project.org/schemas/NLog.xsd"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.nlog-project.org/schemas/NLog.xsd NLog.xsd"
      autoReload="true"
      throwExceptions="false"
      internalLogLevel="Off" internalLogFile="c:\temp\nlog-internal.log" >


  <!-- optional, add some variabeles
  https://github.com/nlog/NLog/wiki/Configuration-file#variables
  -->
  <variable name="myvar" value="myvalue"/>

  <!-- 
  See https://github.com/nlog/nlog/wiki/Configuration-file 
  for information on customizing logging rules and outputs.
   -->
  <targets>

    <!-- 
    add your targets here 
    See https://github.com/nlog/NLog/wiki/Targets for possible targets.
    See https://github.com/nlog/NLog/wiki/Layout-Renderers for the possible layout renderers.
    -->

    <!--
    Writing events to the a file with the date in the filename. -->
    <target xsi:type="File" name="f" fileName="${basedir}/logs/${shortdate}.log"
            layout="${longdate} ${uppercase:${level}} ${message}" />

  </targets>

  <rules>
    <!-- add your logging rules here -->

    <!--
    Write all events with minimal level of Debug (So Debug, Info, Warn, Error and Fatal, but not Trace)  to "f"-->
    <logger name="*" minlevel="Debug" writeTo="f" />

  </rules>
</nlog>


回答6:

Assuming you've configured NLog in the right way, like the other answers suggest, Try one of these

  1. Write Permission for your Server

    If you are using IIS, give WRITE permission for user IIS_USRS for your log folder.

  2. Constructor

    public LoggerService() {
        _logger = NLogBuilder.ConfigureNLog("nlog.config").GetCurrentClassLogger();
    }
    

    The path for nlog.config could be different for you. Mine was on the same folder