* IN THE SOFTWARE.
*/
-import java.io.IOException;
-import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
/*
*/
import org.lttng.ust.agent.LTTngAgent;
-public class Hello
-{
+/**
+ * Example application using the LTTng-UST Java JUL agent.
+ *
+ * @author David Goulet
+ */
+public class Hello {
+
/* Of course :) */
private static final int answer = 42;
*/
private static LTTngAgent lttngAgent;
- public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception
- {
+ /**
+ * Application start
+ *
+ * @param args
+ * Command-line arguments
+ * @throws Exception
+ */
+ public static void main(String args[]) throws Exception {
/*
* For this example, a custom "hello" logger is created. Note that JUL
* has a default "global" that can also be used.
Logger helloLog = Logger.getLogger("hello");
/*
- * Get the LTTngAgent singelton reference. This will also initialize
+ * Get the LTTngAgent singleton reference. This will also initialize
* the Agent and make it register to the session daemon if available.
* When this returns, the Agent is registered and fully ready. If no
* session daemon is found, it will return and retry every 3 seconds in
* the background. TCP is used for communication.
*
- * Note that the LTTngAgent once registered is a seperate thread in
+ * Note that the LTTngAgent once registered is a separate thread in
* your Java application.
*/
lttngAgent = LTTngAgent.getLTTngAgent();
/*
* Again, this is highly recommended so the session daemon socket gets
- * cleaned up explicitely but it is not mandatory to do this step.
+ * cleaned up explicitly but it is not mandatory to do this step.
*/
lttngAgent.dispose();
}