Thanks Adrian, Yes I saw the threshold idea in Java comments
Looks like an interesting tool BTW for the other statistics (I never used it), do you know if chained requests are taken into account? Still, can you confirm only if 1361722 and 1361724 the only commits? I guess there is no Jira? Jacques From: "Adrian Crum" <[email protected]> >I will create a Wiki page this weekend. > > The metric name can be anything - the example has a URL: prefix to help > distinguish request metrics from service metrics. You can put anything > you want there. > > The request-map can have an additional <response> element - which will > direct the servlet to an alternate view if the metric crosses a > threshold. I think the JavaDocs explain that. > > The basic idea is to put metrics in places where you anticipate heavy > loads or bottlenecks, then use a third-party reporting/monitoring tool > to read the metrics. > > -Adrian > > On 4/11/2013 8:36 AM, Jacques Le Roux wrote: >> Thanks Atul, >> >> So you mean you simply need to put a token (like webapp name) before the >> request name in this metric name? Did you try it with another request? >> I see it works on trunk demo and OOTB locally. But I can't get it to work on >> a custom app I have patched, so maybe I miss something I will wait Adrian's >> answer about that >> >> Jacques >> >> >> From: "Atul Vani" <[email protected]> >>> I think that's just the name, to recognize it among list of several >>> others, when there will be lots of them. A certain convention is used to >>> specify that it is for URL or any service. Then again same names request >>> mappings can exist in separate webapps, so a leading appname, in this case >>> 'webtools'. It can be changed to anything. >>> >>> On Thu, 11 Apr 2013 00:47:26 +0530, Jacques Le Roux >>> <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>>> Hi Adrian, >>>> >>>> Let me know if you will, else I might do it... >>>> >>>> BTW, are 1361722 and 1361724 the only commit? Is there a Jira? >>>> >>>> Could you explain just a bit more the request syntax, sorry but the OOTB >>>> example is a bit confusing. >>>> >>>> + <request-map uri="ViewMetrics"> >>>> + <security https="true" auth="true"/> >>>> + <metric name="URL: webtools/ViewMetrics" /><!-- Here for >>>> demonstration --> >>>> + <response name="success" type="view" value="ViewMetrics"/> >>>> + </request-map> >>>> >>>> What would it be for another than ViewMetrics? >>>> I mean why "URL: webtools/ViewMetrics"? >>>> >>>> Thanks >>>> >>>> Jacques >>>> >>>> >>>> From: "Jacques Le Roux" <[email protected]> >>>>> Great, thanks Adrian! >>>>> >>>>> Maybe a wiki page using http://markmail.org/message/x4lzvda66ju6gdg5 >>>>> would help to remember the commands? >>>>> >>>>> Jacques >>>>> >>>>> From: "Adrian Crum" <[email protected]> >>>>>> On 4/7/2013 6:38 PM, Adrian Crum wrote: >>>>>>> On 4/7/2013 12:11 PM, Jacques Le Roux wrote: >>>>>>>> Jacques Le Roux wrote: >>>>>>>>> From: "Adrian Crum" <[email protected]> >>>>>>>>>> Have you considered using the metrics feature? >>>>>>>>> Ha forgot to ask about it, now I see and remember this thread and I >>>>>>>>> will digg in http://markmail.org/message/x4lzvda66ju6gdg5 >>>>>>>>> >>>>>>>>> Of course, I'd not be against a brief briefing, or a link to >>>>>>>>> explain. >>>>>>>> What I mostly miss is where are the metrics in webtools? >>>>>>> Oops, I forgot to commit that part. I will take care of it. >>>>>>> >>>>>> Actually, I did commit it: >>>>>> >>>>>> https://localhost:8443/webtools/control/ViewMetrics >>>>>> >>>>>> -Adrian >>>>>> >>>>>> >>> >>> -- >>> Using Opera's revolutionary email client: http://www.opera.com/mail/ >>> >
