Write to Windows Application Event Log Write to Windows Application Event Log windows windows

Write to Windows Application Event Log


Yes, there is a way to write to the event log you are looking for. You don't need to create a new source, just simply use the existent one, which often has the same name as the EventLog's name and also, in some cases like the event log Application, can be accessible without administrative privileges*.

*Other cases, where you cannot access it directly, are the Security EventLog, for example, which is only accessed by the operating system.

I used this code to write directly to the event log Application:

using (EventLog eventLog = new EventLog("Application")) {    eventLog.Source = "Application";     eventLog.WriteEntry("Log message example", EventLogEntryType.Information, 101, 1); }

As you can see, the EventLog source is the same as the EventLog's name. The reason of this can be found in Event Sources @ Windows Dev Center (I bolded the part which refers to source name):

Each log in the Eventlog key contains subkeys called event sources. The event source is the name of the software that logs the event. It is often the name of the application or the name of a subcomponent of the application if the application is large. You can add a maximum of 16,384 event sources to the registry.


As stated in MSDN (eg. https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.diagnostics.eventlog(v=vs.110).aspx ), checking an non existing source and creating a source requires admin privilege.

It is however possible to use the source "Application" without.In my test under Windows 2012 Server r2, I however get the following log entry using "Application" source:

The description for Event ID xxxx from source Application cannot be found. Either the component that raises this event is not installed on your local computer or the installation is corrupted. You can install or repair the component on the local computer. If the event originated on another computer, the display information had to be saved with the event. The following information was included with the event: {my event entry message} the message resource is present but the message is not found in the string/message table

I defined the following method to create the source:

    private string CreateEventSource(string currentAppName)    {        string eventSource = currentAppName;        bool sourceExists;        try        {            // searching the source throws a security exception ONLY if not exists!            sourceExists = EventLog.SourceExists(eventSource);            if (!sourceExists)            {   // no exception until yet means the user as admin privilege                EventLog.CreateEventSource(eventSource, "Application");            }        }        catch (SecurityException)        {            eventSource = "Application";        }        return eventSource;    }

I am calling it with currentAppName = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.FriendlyName

It might be possible to use the EventLogPermission class instead of this try/catch but not sure we can avoid the catch.

It is also possible to create the source externally, e.g in elevated Powershell:

New-EventLog -LogName Application -Source MyApp

Then, using 'MyApp' in the method above will NOT generate exception and the EventLog can be created with that source.


You can using the EventLog class, as explained on How to: Write to the Application Event Log (Visual C#):

var appLog = new EventLog("Application");appLog.Source = "MySource";appLog.WriteEntry("Test log message");

However, you'll need to configure this source "MySource" using administrative privileges:

Use WriteEvent and WriteEntry to write events to an event log. You must specify an event source to write events; you must create and configure the event source before writing the first entry with the source.