This page describes an older version of the product. The latest stable version is 16.4.

Custom Reporter


This page demonstrates how to implement and use a custom metric reporter. For demonstration purposes we’ll show a reporter which writes metrics to a text file.

Implementation

A custom metric reporter implementation requires overriding two classes: MetricReporter and MetricReporterFactory. The custom MetricReporter accepts metric snapshots and reports them as it wishes. The MetricReporterFactory is used to encapsulate configuration and instantiate the MetricReporter.

FileReporterFactory

The FileReporterFactory extends MetricReporterFactory in order to create a reporter (in this case, a FileReporter) instance with the relevant settings. This being a file reporter, we’ll obviously want to let the user choose the target file. For example:

public class FileReporterFactory extends MetricReporterFactory<FileReporter> {
    private String path;

    @Override
    public FileReporter create() throws Exception {
        return new FileReporter(this);
    }

    @Override
    public void load(Properties properties) {
        super.load(properties);
        path = properties.getProperty("path");
        if (path == null)
            throw new RuntimeException("Property `path` must be provided");
    }

    public String getPath() {
        return path;
    }
}

Note that we’re overriding the load(Properties properties) method to load the path property from the configuration file.

FileReporter

Implementing a reporter requires creating a constructor to configure the reporter using the reporter factory, and overriding the report(List<MetricRegistrySnapshot> snapshots) method to traverse the metrics data and actually report it (in this case, writing it to a file). For example:

public class FileReporter extends MetricReporter {
    private final File file;

    public FileReporter(FileReporterFactory factory) {
        super(factory);
        this.file = new File(factory.getPath()).getAbsoluteFile();
    }

    @Override
    public void report(List<MetricRegistrySnapshot> snapshots) {
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        sb.append("Reported at " + formatDateTime(System.currentTimeMillis())).append(EOL);
        for (MetricRegistrySnapshot snapshot : snapshots) {
            sb.append("Sample taken at " + formatDateTime(snapshot.getTimestamp())).append(EOL);
            for (Map.Entry<MetricTagsSnapshot, MetricGroupSnapshot> groupEntry : snapshot.getGroups().entrySet()) {
                sb.append("\tTags: " + groupEntry.getKey()).append(EOL);
                for (Map.Entry<String, Object> metricEntry : groupEntry.getValue().getMetricsValues().entrySet()) {
                    sb.append("\t\t"+metricEntry.getKey() + " => " + metricEntry.getValue()).append(EOL);
                }
            }
        }
        writeToFile(sb.toString());
    }
}

The report method receives a list of snapshots. By default each sample is immediately reported (i.e. the list will contain a single snapshot), but users may configure the sampler to batch multiple samples into each report. The MetricRegistrySnapshot contains mapping of metrics tags to metrics groups - since each metric is registered with tags, the samples are grouped by those tags to simplify the report. Finally, each MetricGroupSnapshot contains mappings from metrics names to metrics values.

Note that some methods and fields were omitted from this snippet for brevity. The full implementation is available here:

package com.gigaspaces.demo;

import com.gigaspaces.metrics.MetricReporterFactory;
import java.util.Properties;

public class FileReporterFactory extends MetricReporterFactory<FileReporter> {
    private String path;

    @Override
    public FileReporter create() throws Exception {
        return new FileReporter(this);
    }

    @Override
    public void load(Properties properties) {
        super.load(properties);
        path = properties.getProperty("path");
        if (path == null) {
            throw new RuntimeException("Property [path] must be provided when using file reporter");
        }
    }

    public String getPath() {
        return path;
    }
}
package com.gigaspaces.demo;

import com.gigaspaces.metrics.*;
import java.io.File;
import java.io.FileWriter;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.logging.Logger;

public class FileReporter extends MetricReporter {
    private static final Logger logger = Logger.getLogger(FileReporter.class.getName());
    private static final String EOL = System.getProperty("line.separator");

    private final Date date = new Date();
    private final SimpleDateFormat dateFormatter = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss,SSS");
    private final File file;

    protected FileReporter(FileReporterFactory factory) {
        super(factory);
        this.file = new File(factory.getPath()).getAbsoluteFile();
    }

    @Override
    public void report(List<MetricRegistrySnapshot> snapshots) {
        StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
        sb.append("Reported at " + formatDateTime(System.currentTimeMillis())).append(EOL);
        for (MetricRegistrySnapshot snapshot : snapshots) {
            sb.append("Sample taken at " + formatDateTime(snapshot.getTimestamp())).append(EOL);

            for (Map.Entry<MetricTagsSnapshot, MetricGroupSnapshot> groupEntry : snapshot.getGroups().entrySet()) {
                sb.append("\tTags: " + groupEntry.getKey()).append(EOL);
                for (Map.Entry<String, Object> metricEntry : groupEntry.getValue().getMetricsValues().entrySet()) {
                    sb.append("\t\t"+metricEntry.getKey() + " => " + metricEntry.getValue()).append(EOL);
                }
            }
        }
        writeToFile(sb.toString());
    }

    private String formatDateTime(long timestamp) {
        date.setTime(timestamp);
        return dateFormatter.format(date);
    }

    private void writeToFile(String text) {
        FileWriter fw = null;
        try {
            fw = new FileWriter(file, true);
            fw.write(text);
        } catch (IOException e) {
            logger.warning("Failed to write report to file");
        }
        if (fw != null) {
            try {
                fw.close();
            } catch (IOException e) {
                logger.warning("Failed to close FileWriter");
            }
        }
    }
}

Usage

Now that we have a custom reporter implementation we need to configure the system to use it. This is done via the metrics.xml configuration file (located under XAP_HOME/config/metrics by default), at the reporters element. For example, to create a file reporter named myReporter which writes results to c:\gigaspaces\metrics-output.txt:

<metrics-configuration>
    <reporters>
        <reporter name="myReporter" factory-class="com.gigaspaces.metrics.reporters.FileReporterFactory">
            <property name="path" value="c:\gigaspaces\metrics-output.txt"/>
        </reporter>
    </reporters>
</metrics-configuration>

Basically we’re telling the metrics manager which class should be used to instantiate the reporter and which parameters to provide along.

In addition, we’ll need to include the compiled FileReporter and FileReporterFactory classes in the product’s class path. The easiest way to accomplish this is under XAP_HOME/lib/optional/metrics, which is automatically included in the class path.