X-Git-Url: http://git.lttng.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fexamples%2Fjava-jul%2FHello.java;h=cb9f24b198fc7be376b9a2d91f541e9e9b4e0e4e;hb=1820ea46d07f578495ff6258102038355c1529dd;hp=7016cf4956bc90736d3eeeafc2a817bfa281b879;hpb=45a00b05b7e0fc627f98fa15775d451c595117a9;p=lttng-ust.git diff --git a/doc/examples/java-jul/Hello.java b/doc/examples/java-jul/Hello.java index 7016cf49..cb9f24b1 100644 --- a/doc/examples/java-jul/Hello.java +++ b/doc/examples/java-jul/Hello.java @@ -43,6 +43,21 @@ import org.lttng.ust.agent.jul.LttngLogHandler; * the Logger, those will continue logging events normally. *

* + *

+ * To obtain LTTng trace events, you should run the following sequence of + * commands: + *

+ * + * + * * @author Alexandre Montplaisir * @author David Goulet */ @@ -57,65 +72,23 @@ public class Hello { * @param args * Command-line arguments * @throws IOException - * @throws InterruptedException + * If the required native libraries cannot be found. You may + * have to specify "-Djava.library.path=..." on the "java" + * command line. */ - public static void main(String args[]) throws IOException, InterruptedException { + public static void main(String args[]) throws IOException { /* Instantiate a LTTngLogHandler object, and attach it to our logger */ Handler lttngHandler = new LttngLogHandler(); LOGGER.addHandler(lttngHandler); - /* - * Gives you time to do some lttng commands before any event is hit. - */ - Thread.sleep(5000); - - /* Trigger a tracing event using the JUL Logger created before. */ + /* Log events using the JUL Logger created before. */ LOGGER.info("Hello World, the answer is " + 42); + LOGGER.info("Another info event"); + LOGGER.severe("A severe event"); - /* - * From this point on, the above message will be collected in the trace - * if the event "Hello" is enabled for the JUL domain using the lttng - * command line or the lttng-ctl API. For instance: - * - * $ lttng enable-event -j Hello - */ - - /* - * A new logger is created here and fired after. Typically with JUL, you - * use one static Logger per class. This example here can represent a - * class being lazy-loaded later in the execution of the application. - * - * The agent has an internal timer that is fired every 5 seconds in - * order to enable events that were not found at first but might need to - * be enabled when a new Logger appears. Unfortunately, there is no way - * right now to get notified of that so we have to actively poll. - * - * Using the --all command for instance, it will make this Logger - * available in a LTTng trace after the internal agent's timer is fired. - * (lttng enable-event -j -a). - */ - Logger helloLogDelayed = Logger.getLogger("hello_delay"); - - /* - * Attach a handler to this new logger. - * - * Using the same handler as before would also work. - */ - Handler lttngHandler2 = new LttngLogHandler(); - helloLogDelayed.addHandler(lttngHandler2); - - System.out.println("Firing hello delay in 10 seconds..."); - Thread.sleep(10000); - helloLogDelayed.info("Hello World delayed..."); - - System.out.println("Cleaning Hello"); - - /* - * Do not forget to close() all handlers so that the agent can shutdown - * and the session daemon socket gets cleaned up explicitly. - */ + /* Cleanup */ + LOGGER.removeHandler(lttngHandler); lttngHandler.close(); - lttngHandler2.close(); } }