Events: Difference between revisions
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"events" is Java library and a command line tool that parses various event stream sources (logs, Java runtimes), turns them into events streams and assists with analysis or makes it easy to feed into R. | "events" is Java library and a command line tool that parses various event stream sources (logs, Java runtimes), turns them into events streams and assists with analysis or makes it easy to feed into R. | ||
The project's artifact is an installable command line utility. | The project's artifact is an installable command line utility. Details on how to install it are available in the [[events User Manual#Installation|User Manual's Installation section]]. | ||
Conceptually, an <tt>events</tt> runtime can be seen as a pipeline that processes the input steam and produces an output stream. The input stream is handled by the ''initiator'' component, whose conversion logic is pluggable. The events thus generated are asynchronously sent into an ''event processor'', whose processing logic is pluggable as well. After processing, the resulted events - which can be of a different type than the events produced by the initiator - are asynchronously sent to the ''terminator'' component, which has a chance to convert the events for output or termination of the stream. | Conceptually, an <tt>events</tt> runtime can be seen as a pipeline that processes the input steam and produces an output stream. The input stream is handled by the ''initiator'' component, whose conversion logic is pluggable. The events thus generated are asynchronously sent into an ''event processor'', whose processing logic is pluggable as well. After processing, the resulted events - which can be of a different type than the events produced by the initiator - are asynchronously sent to the ''terminator'' component, which has a chance to convert the events for output or termination of the stream. |
Revision as of 21:31, 12 May 2016
Internal
Overview
"events" is Java library and a command line tool that parses various event stream sources (logs, Java runtimes), turns them into events streams and assists with analysis or makes it easy to feed into R.
The project's artifact is an installable command line utility. Details on how to install it are available in the User Manual's Installation section.
Conceptually, an events runtime can be seen as a pipeline that processes the input steam and produces an output stream. The input stream is handled by the initiator component, whose conversion logic is pluggable. The events thus generated are asynchronously sent into an event processor, whose processing logic is pluggable as well. After processing, the resulted events - which can be of a different type than the events produced by the initiator - are asynchronously sent to the terminator component, which has a chance to convert the events for output or termination of the stream.