Print the stack trace of an exception
How do I print开发者_开发技巧 the stack trace of an exception to a stream other than stderr? One way I found is to use getStackTrace() and print the entire list to the stream.
There is an alternate form of Throwable.printStackTrace() that takes a print stream as an argument. http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/lang/Throwable.html#printStackTrace(java.io.PrintStream)
E.g.
catch(Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace(System.out);
}
This will print the stack trace to std out instead of std error.
Not beautiful, but a solution nonetheless:
StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
PrintWriter printWriter = new PrintWriter( writer );
exception.printStackTrace( printWriter );
printWriter.flush();
String stackTrace = writer.toString();
Throwable.printStackTrace(..)
can take a PrintWriter
or PrintStream
argument:
} catch (Exception ex) {
ex.printStackTrace(new java.io.PrintStream(yourOutputStream));
}
That said, consider using a logger interface like SLF4J with an logging implementation like LOGBack or log4j.
For the android dev minimalists: Log.getStackTraceString(exception)
Apache commons provides utility to convert the stack trace from throwable to string.
Usage:
ExceptionUtils.getStackTrace(e)
For complete documentation refer to https://commons.apache.org/proper/commons-lang/javadocs/api-release/index.html
I have created a method that helps with getting the stackTrace:
private static String getStackTrace(Exception ex) {
StringBuffer sb = new StringBuffer(500);
StackTraceElement[] st = ex.getStackTrace();
sb.append(ex.getClass().getName() + ": " + ex.getMessage() + "\n");
for (int i = 0; i < st.length; i++) {
sb.append("\t at " + st[i].toString() + "\n");
}
return sb.toString();
}
The Throwable class provides two methods named printStackTrace
, one that accepts a PrintWriter
and one that takes in a PrintStream
, that outputs the stack trace to the given stream. Consider using one of these.
See javadoc
out = some stream ...
try
{
}
catch ( Exception cause )
{
cause . printStrackTrace ( new PrintStream ( out ) ) ;
}
If you are interested in a more compact stack trace with more information (package detail) that looks like:
java.net.SocketTimeoutException:Receive timed out
at j.n.PlainDatagramSocketImpl.receive0(Native Method)[na:1.8.0_151]
at j.n.AbstractPlainDatagramSocketImpl.receive(AbstractPlainDatagramSocketImpl.java:143)[^]
at j.n.DatagramSocket.receive(DatagramSocket.java:812)[^]
at o.s.n.SntpClient.requestTime(SntpClient.java:213)[classes/]
at o.s.n.SntpClient$1.call(^:145)[^]
at ^.call(^:134)[^]
at o.s.f.SyncRetryExecutor.call(SyncRetryExecutor.java:124)[^]
at o.s.f.RetryPolicy.call(RetryPolicy.java:105)[^]
at o.s.f.SyncRetryExecutor.call(SyncRetryExecutor.java:59)[^]
at o.s.n.SntpClient.requestTimeHA(SntpClient.java:134)[^]
at ^.requestTimeHA(^:122)[^]
at o.s.n.SntpClientTest.test2h(SntpClientTest.java:89)[test-classes/]
at s.r.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)[na:1.8.0_151]
you can try to use Throwables.writeTo from the spf4j lib.
With slf4j e.g via lombok
's @Slf4j
annotation
log.error("error", e);
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