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Chapter 14

Centralized Logging, Observability, and Integration with Broader Monitoring Stacks

Understand how Log4j fits into modern observability systems that collect, search, correlate, and alert on logs.

Inside this chapter

  1. Why Centralized Logging Exists
  2. Structured Logs and Searchability
  3. Observability Context
  4. Designing for Search and Correlation

Series navigation

Study the chapters in order for the clearest path from beginner logging concepts to advanced operational logging design. Use the navigation at the bottom of each page to move through the full series.

Tutorial Home

Chapter 14

Why Centralized Logging Exists

In distributed systems, logs from one machine are rarely enough. Teams often collect logs centrally so they can search across instances, correlate failures, build dashboards, and investigate incidents faster.

Chapter 14

Structured Logs and Searchability

Structured logs are easier to search, filter, and connect with metrics and traces. This is one reason modern teams increasingly prefer machine-readable log formats in production pipelines.

Chapter 14

Observability Context

Logs are only one pillar of observability. Metrics show overall system shape, traces show request paths, and logs provide detailed event evidence. Advanced teams design logging so it fits usefully with the wider observability ecosystem.

Chapter 14

Designing for Search and Correlation

If logs will be searched later, field naming, correlation ids, event categories, and structured output become much more valuable. Logging design should consider future investigation, not only current readability.

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