Applications deployed on Fabric3 can take advantage of an injection-based monitoring and logging framework. The monitoring framework offers a number of benefits:

Using Monitoring

To use the monitoring framework in application code entails two things, creating a monitor interface and injecting the monitor in a component.

Define a Monitoring Interface.

The monitor interface is used for sending monitoring events. The interface defines operations for publishing events, monitoring levels and optional event message templates:

import org.fabric3.api.annotation.monitor.Severe;
import org.fabric3.api.annotation.monitor.Debug;

public inteface ComponentMonitor

   @Severe
   void error(String message, Throwable t);

   @Debug ("Received request {0}")
   void receivedRequest(String id);

}

The above interface defines an error event and a debug event. The debug event also specifies a formatted message that will be logged if the event is received. The following monitoring levels are supported:

By default, info and above are enabled at runtime.

Injecting the Monitor

A monitor is injected in a component using the org.fabric3.api.annotation.monitor.Monitor annotation:

import org.fabric3.api.annotation.monitor.Monitor;

public void TheComponent {

   @Monitor
   protected ComponentMonitor monitor;

   public void call(Message message) {
      monitor.receivedRequest(message.getId);
      try{
         validate(message));
      } catch (ValidationException e) {
         // bad message
         monitor.error("Invalid message", e)
      }

      // ...

   }

When an @Monitor annotation is encountered, the Fabric3 runtime will generate a monitor proxy and inject it based on the monitor interface. Depending on the current monitor level, events may be logged or ignored. In the above example, if the monitor level is set to severe, the receivedRequest() event will be dropped.

Configuration

 

Ring Buffer Support

 

Custom Destinations

 

Custom Appenders

 

Performance Considerations

By default, Fabric3 uses JDK proxies to implement monitor interfaces. For most code paths in an application, this should not introduce significant performance impact as there are optimizations to avoid object creation when events are discarded. However, for performance intensive code paths, JDK proxies may introduce too much overhead.