Turn off System.out.println

The nohup.out file is getting too big, how to turn off System.out.println without change any coding?
          

java weblogic.Server > server.out 2>&1
          cheers
          mbg
          "Jen " <[email protected]> wrote in message
          news:[email protected]..
          >
          > How can I capture the System.out on windows?Thanks
          >
          > "Deyan D. Bektchiev" <[email protected]> wrote:
          > >just put the output to /dev/null on Unix/Linux or "nul" on Windows...
          > >
          > >Of course then the output is lost forever and you'll only have the
          > >Weblogic log files to look at any potential problems.
          > >
          > >--dejan
          > >
          > >java guy wrote:
          > >
          > >>The nohup.out file is getting too big, how to turn off
          System.out.println
          > >without change any coding?
          > >>
          > >>
          > >
          >
          

Similar Messages

  • Multiple Threads Using System.out.println...

    i have a client server app and each client that connects to the server has its own thread.
    i am running the server on a pc using windows xp and to run it i just use a bat file which uses cmd.exe and my output using System.out.println prints out in the cmd.exe.
    each of my threads is using System.out.println to send debug info and outs quite often.
    after the screen fills a scroll bar appears at the right and you can scroll back to see past output.
    my app is all running ok but when i had a ton of output coming in all at once i tried to scroll back to see the older output and realized that if i click down on the scroll bar and fight the new input it freezes my server app. then when i release it it continues lol.
    it made me wonder if output from multiple threads when there are many all at once (say 20 or 30 threads all outputing at the exact same time) could cause a slow down or effect the performance of the server?
    i use a debug variable so i can just turn this output 100 % off except for critical errors so there would be no output but i am just curious as to whether or not it may be causing problems when its on.

    That's not a performance issue, I guess System.out.println() simply gets blocked by the console while you're scrolling and thus your app stalls, until you stop doing that.
    Maybe you should look into logging.

  • Linux System.out.println()

    I am porting some JSP's from Windows to SUSE Linux. These JSP's call functions that are embedded in JAVA classes, which in turn output error messages with System.out.println() to the console. It appears that in Linux, the bash Konsole doesn't print these errors, so they are invisible.
    I suppose that if I wrote JSP's in the future, errors could be printed in the browser, but I would really like to be able to see my errors in bash or which ever shell. Any help would be appreciated.

    If you ever intend to use more than one webserver, I would suggest you look towards something like JMS. Messages can be sent to the queue from which you can pick them up and deal with them as necessary in your own time, be that real-time or delayed.
    If you think you will never need more than one, why not write a little log file reader? Remember though that the catalina.out file will grow and grow unless you stop Tomcat, rename the old file and restart Tomcat.

  • What is the different  between System.out.println and out.print

    we move a project , jsp form to servlet to mysql db
    suddenly we get Chinese input problem
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    if( chineseName!=null) {
                           chineseName= new String( chineseName.getBytes("ISO-8859-1"),"UTF-8");
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                          System.out.println("Hello1"+chineseName ); // display unread symbol
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    Thank you for the reply!
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  • Is there a way to make system.out.println() scroll down as it goes?

    I am writing a program where I want to be able to read what's printed out in the console of my IDE through System.out.println() as the program runs/after the program runs. However, right now I run the program, the message prints out, and then when I go to read it the scroll bar is all the way up so I can see only the top of the print-out (the first thing printed out). Is there any way I can get the console to scroll along with the text, kind of like floating boxes you see on various websites for various reasons? In other words, can I get it so that when I look in the console at any given moment of the program running, I am looking at the newest text printed out (the text at the bottom of the "page")? Thank you!

    That would be an IDE problem and not a Java one. You could redirect output into a text file so you can read at your leisure and scroll up and down as much as you like.

  • Is there a way to force System.out.println to run when called

    I working on my first threaded program and having a hard time debugging. I've used System.out.println to let me know what's going on but due (I assume) to the nature of threads the output is not sequential. Is there a way to force println to execute immediatly so that they show up in the order they were called?
    Thanks --- Mike

    mjs1138 wrote:
    endasil, Thanks for the reply. I'm currenlty running the program from within the NetBeans IDE. It is the output displayed by in NetBeans "output" that I'm looking at.
    --- MikeI don't use Netbeans, but I would guess that it too pipes Standard Out and Standard Error to the same console. You didn't address my comment. Are you printing to System.err as well? This happens implicitly if you use Exception.printStackTrace(), for example.

  • 32-bit JDK 7 System.out.println not working in IDE

    Hi folks,
    I have a 64-bit Windows 7 OS.
    Due to 3rd party library/jar dependencies, i had to install the 32-bit Java JDK 1.7 and Eclipse IDE.
    I also installed NetBeans.
    So i have a 64-bit OS and am running 32-bit Java JDK/JRE & IDEs.
    The problem I am having is that my program's System.out.println("...") statements are not outputting strings to either IDE debug console.
    Executing the compiled program from a command line/prompt produces the expected string output.
    The basic "Hello, World" program is enough to cause this behaviour to start occurring.
    I have not manually / intentionally changed any IDE-specific Debug Console or Windows environment settings.
    One caveat: This same environment has worked successfully in the past ?! Yes, this is one of those "..it worked last week & yesterday and today it isn't and i swear i didn't do anything..." issue.
    Thoughts ?

    Thanks for the reply.
    The 64-bit versions of Java & Eclipse were installed first.
    When i discovered I had to use the 32-bit versions, i un-installed the 64-bit ones & installed the 32-bits.
    Even after that initial un-install 64-bit/install 32-bit process, it was working.
    I have also been installing the Windows 7 64-bit OS updates when i am informed of them.
    I'm not sure if any of these would affect how the Eclipse / NetBeans IDEs behave.
    Behaviour has been inconsistent.
    Initially it was always working.
    But over the past several days, it has been working less and less.
    I don't have any large data structures.
    This isn't a large complicated program, couple hundred lines, so i highly doubt that i'm doing anything to the resources, but something has changed.
    The main project I am working on takes command line parameters, does some initial processing, produces output using System.out.printlns [SOP] then depending on the parameters, branches into 2 different processing paths, let's call them A & B. Each of these processing paths also use SOPs. When i run the program in the IDE going thru path A, sometimes the initial SOP statements will work and the SOP statements specific to path A will also work. If i immediately change the parameters to go thru path B & re-run it, not even the initial SOP statements before the branching decision work.
    I've tried doing System.flush()s too - no affect.
    I haven't tried the re-direction option to a file option you mentioned yet.
    It always works from a command prompt - that is telling me that the Java SOPs are working properly, correct ?
    Inside an Eclipse or NetBeans IDE, SOP output to the debug console is inconsistent.
    Running from a command prompt, the SOPs always work.
    It'd help to know if this an IDE issue, a Java issue, a Windows 7 issue so i can narrow down where to try and correct the situation.
    I have a Windows XP VM set up, i'll try running the program there and see if there's a difference.
    Thanks for your reply.

  • How can i put a system.out.println into txt file

    i want to generate a txt file instead of system.out.println. for the output How can i do that and what code can i use for that??
    Edited by: crystalarun on Oct 14, 2007 11:40 AM

    suppose u ant output in "Output.txt"
    then code can be
    PrintStream out = new PrintStream(new FileOutputStream("Output.txt"));
    System.setOut(out)

  • System.out.println () is not working properly

    Hi, Why does this happens:
    Object temp=null;
    System.out.println ("temp is null? "+temp==null);
    just prints: true
    expected: temp is null? true
    Why does this happens????
    If I do System.out.println ("temp is null? "+(temp==null)); it works bu it should work without the pharentesis too

    MelGohan wrote:
    Hi, Why does this happens:
    Object temp=null;
    System.out.println ("temp is null? "+temp==null);
    just prints: trueThat is odd, mine prints "false".
    type Test126.java
    public class Test126 {
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            Object temp=null;
            System.out.println ("temp is null? "+temp);
            System.out.println ("temp is null? "+temp==null);
    }javac Test126.java
    java Test126
    temp is null? null
    false

  • System.out.println in Web Dynpro Java

    I call System.out.println in some components in web dynpro java.  But I cannot find the standard console output file of SAP J2EE Engine. Anyone know where is the location of standard output file?

    Thanks Deepak. Your link blog is working.
    Sreeni: I cannot find a start-up log file. Could you please tell me the real path?
    Edited by: Nuttakorn Boonthamtanarung on Apr 1, 2010 6:58 AM

  • System.out.println not working in Tomcat-4.1.x

    System.out.println not working in Tomcat-4.1.24. Any settings has to be enabled??? I am using tomcat for Solaris

    I think u can use ServletContext.log() to output info instased.

  • Where to see the System.out.println() messages

    I deploy my application in Oracle9ias . I have some System.out.println() statements in java class files.
    When I run the application I need to know where I can see those println() statements.

    The Member Feedback forum is for suggestions and feedback for OTN Developer Services. This forum is not monitored by Oracle support or product teams and so Oracle product and technology related questions will not be answered. We recommend that you post this thread to the Application Server-General forum. The URL is:
    Oracle Application Server - General

  • Where to see the System.out.println statements on soa server.

    Hi,
    I have generated some proxy classes in my jdeveloper. And I have deployed that project to the admin server on my soa_domain.
    Now my java files have some System.out.println statements. I want to see those values.
    Can anyone please let me know where I can see those statements on server.
    What s the file name where i can see.
    do i have to enable some debigging on the server. if yes then for what level i need to enable the log at what level.
    Thanks
    Anoop

    Hi,
    System.out.println is not really a good way to debug in weblogic... If you didn't configure where the stdout will go those messages can end up going nowhere...
    I suggest you use one of these...
    This will go to the soa*diagnostic logs... for example DOMAIN_HOME/servers/soa_server1/soa_server1-diagnostic.log...
    import java.util.logging.Level;
    import java.util.logging.Logger;
    import oracle.fabric.logging.LogFormatter;
        private static final Logger soa_logger = Logger.getLogger("oracle.soa.Logger");
        static {
            LogFormatter.configFormatter(soa_logger);
            soa_logger.log(Level.INFO, message);
            soa_logger.log(Level.INFO, message, t);or
    This will go to the server logs... for example DOMAIN_HOME/servers/soa_server1/soa_server1.log...
    import weblogic.logging.NonCatalogLogger;
        private static NonCatalogLogger weblogic_logger = new NonCatalogLogger("SomeMeaningfulNameHere");
            weblogic_logger.notice(message);
            weblogic_logger.notice(message, t);Usually info and notice will go to the logs by default, you can try with higher levels (error,warning) as well or you can tweek the server debug level to use lower levels...
    Cheers,
    Vlad

  • System.out.println - Hello World Example

    Hi All
    I am using Apache Tomcat and trying t produce a simple output to the browser. Cannot get System.out.println to work. See code and out below:
    begin code
    <HTML>
    <HEAD><TITLE>hello jsp</TITLE></HEAD>
    <BODY>
    <%@ page language='java' contentType='text/html' %>
    <%
    String message = "Hello World";
    message = message + "\nAFTER";
    System.out.println("BEFORE");
    %>
    <%= (message) %>
    </BODY>
    </HTML>
    END code
    --begin browser output
    Hello World AFTER
    end browser ouput
    Would be grateful if someone could explain why the System.out.print statement cannot be seen in the browser output.
    many thanks
    Naresh

    System.out prints to System.out. What that is depends:
    In applets, (which the OP was not talking about) it is the Java Console.
    In JSP, it's the same as any application by default.
    You can change in Java what System.out prints to, but you don't often do this. But in JSP it doesn't print to the browser. JSP is not CGI, which does you the standard out as the destination for written data.

  • Redirect system.out.println() to a file

    hi all,
         how can i redirect all the console prints to a txt file in java application? i have used system.out oftenly in many class throught the
    application. is there any way to redirect all those console prints to a
    txt file by converting or assigning the System.out stream to a stream for filewriter or
    somthing like that, so that whenever system.out.println() is executed
    the content is written to a file insted of on the console.
    thanks in advance
    Sojan

    Actually,System.setOut(new PrintStream(new FileOutputStream("output.txt"), true));
    System.setErr(System.out);since setOut wants a PrintStream and not just some OuputStream...

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