Many web/mobile applications generate huge amount of event logs (c,f. login, logout, purchase, follow, etc). Analyzing these event logs can be quite valuable for improving services. However, collecting these logs easily and reliably is a challenging task.
Fluentd solves the problem by having: easy installation, small footprint, plugins, reliable buffering, log forwarding, etc.
- Fluentd website: http://github.com/fluent/fluentd
fluent-logger-java is a Java library, to record events via Fluentd, from Java application.
Java >= 1.6
You can download all-in-one jar file for Fluent Logger for Java.
wget http://central.maven.org/maven2/org/fluentd/fluent-logger/${logger.version}/fluent-logger-${logger.version}-jar-with-dependencies.jar
To use Fluent Logger for Java, set the above jar file to your classpath.
Fluent Logger for Java is released on Fluent Maven2 repository. You can configure your pom.xml or build.gradle as follows to use it:
Maven:
<dependencies>
...
<dependency>
<groupId>org.fluentd</groupId>
<artifactId>fluent-logger</artifactId>
<version>${logger.version}</version>
</dependency>
...
</dependencies>
Gradle:
dependencies {
compile 'org.fluentd:fluent-logger:'+loggerVersion
}
You can get latest source code using git.
git clone [email protected]:fluent/fluent-logger-java.git
cd fluent-logger-java
mvn assembly:assembly
You will get the fluent logger jar file in fluent-logger-java/target directory. File name will be fluent-logger-${logger.version}-jar-with-dependencies.jar. For more detail, see pom.xml.
Replace ${logger.version}
or loggerVersion
with the current version of Fluent Logger for Java.
The following program is a small example of Fluent Logger for Java.
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Map;
import org.fluentd.logger.FluentLogger;
public class Main {
private static FluentLogger LOG = FluentLogger.getLogger("app");
public void doApplicationLogic() {
// ...
Map<String, Object> data = new HashMap<String, Object>();
data.put("from", "userA");
data.put("to", "userB");
LOG.log("follow", data);
// ...
}
}
To create Fluent Logger instances, users need to invoke getLogger method in FluentLogger class like org.slf4j, org.log4j logging libraries. The method should be called only once. By default, the logger assumes fluent daemon is launched locally. You can also specify remote logger by passing the following options.
// for remote fluentd
private static FluentLogger LOG = FluentLogger.getLogger("app", "remotehost", port);
Then, please create the events like this. This will send the event to fluentd, with tag 'app.follow' and the attributes 'from' and 'to'.
Close method in FluentLogger class should be called explicitly when application is finished. The method closes socket connection with the fluentd.
FluentLogger.close();
Apache License, Version 2.0