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UGReportActivityInformation
There are two ways in which activity information can be collected for further processing by the Runtime Governance server.
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Integrating an 'activity collector' into the execution environment. This will intercept activities and automatically report them to the Runtime Governance server.
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Manually report the activity information to the Runtime Governance server through a publicly available API (e.g. REST service)
This section will explain how to use both approaches.
This section describes how activities can be collected from different execution environments.
To instrument a switchyard application, that is deployed as a war, is simply a case of including a maven dependency and configuring a manifest property within the built war file.
The maven dependency added to the pom.xml for the SwitchYard project is:
<dependency> <groupId>org.overlord.rtgov.integration</groupId> <artifactId>rtgov-switchyard</artifactId> <version>${rtgov.version}</version> </dependency>
and the following build plugin, to include the dependency between the SwitchYard application and the Overlord Runtime Governance infrastructure:
<build> <plugins> ... <plugin> <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId> <configuration> <!-- Java EE 6 doesn't require web.xml, Maven needs to catch up! --> <failOnMissingWebXml>false</failOnMissingWebXml> <webResources> <resource> <directory>target/switchyard_xml</directory> </resource> </webResources> <archive> <manifestEntries> <Dependencies>deployment.overlord-rtgov.war</Dependencies> </manifestEntries> </archive> </configuration> </plugin> </plugins> </build>
To enable the Runtime Governance infrastructure, and the user policies/rules that are defined within it, to make the most effective use of the activities that are reported, it is necessary to process some certain events to extract relevant information for use in:
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correlating activity events to a particular business transaction instance
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highlighting important properties that may need to be used in business policies
This section explains how information processors can be configured and deployed along side the business applications they are monitoring.
The Information Processor can be defined as an object model or specified as a JSON representation for packaging in a suitable form, and subsequently de-serialized when deployed to the governed execution environment.
The following is an example of the JSON representation of a list of Information Processors. This particular example accompanies the Order Management sample:
[{ "name":"OrderManagementIP", "version":"1", "typeProcessors":{ "{urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0}submitOrder":{ "contexts":[{ "type":"Conversation", "evaluator":{ "type":"xpath", "namespaces":{ "orders":"urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0" }, "expression":"/orders:submitOrder/order/orderId" } }], "properties":[{ "name":"customer", "evaluator":{ "type":"xpath", "namespaces":{ "orders":"urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0" }, "expression":"/orders:submitOrder/order/customer" } }] }, "java:org.switchyard.quickstarts.demos.orders.OrderAck":{ "contexts":[{ "type":"Conversation", "evaluator":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"orderId" } }], "properties":[{ "name":"customer", "evaluator":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"customer" } },{ "name":"total", "evaluator":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"total" } }] }, "{urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0}makePayment":{ "properties":[{ "name":"customer", "evaluator":{ "type":"xpath", "namespaces":{ "orders":"urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0" }, "expression":"/orders:makePayment/orders:payment/orders:customer" } },{ "name":"amount", "evaluator":{ "type":"xpath", "namespaces":{ "orders":"urn:switchyard-quickstart-demo:orders:1.0" }, "expression":"/orders:makePayment/orders:payment/orders:amount" } }] }, "java:org.switchyard.quickstarts.demos.orders.Receipt":{ "properties":[{ "name":"customer", "evaluator":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"customer" } },{ "name":"amount", "evaluator":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"amount" } }] }, "java:org.switchyard.quickstarts.demos.orders.ItemNotFoundException":{ "script":{ "type":"mvel", "expression":"activity.fault = \"ItemNotFound\"" } } } }]
This example illustrates the configuration of a single Information Processor with the top level elements:
Field | Description |
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name |
The name of the Information Processor. |
version |
The version of the Information Processor. If multiple versions of the same named Information Processor are installed, only the newest version will be used. Versions can be expressed using three schemes: Numeric - i.e. simply define the version as a number Dot Format - i.e. 1.5.1.Final Any alpha, numeric and symbols. |
typeProcesors |
The map of type processors - one per type, with the type name being the map key. |
When comparing versions, for example when determining whether a newly deployed Information Processor has a higher version than an existing one with the same name, then initially the versions will be compared as numeric values. If either are not numeric, then they will be compared using dot format, with each field being compared first as numeric values, and if not based on lexical comparison. If both fields don’t have a dot, then they will just be compared lexically.
Type Processor
The type processor element is used to configure how context and property information can be obtained from information of the type associated with the key.
The fields associated with this component are:
Field | Description |
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contexts |
The list of context evaluators. |
properties |
The list of property evaluators. |
script |
An optional script that is used to do any other processing that may be required. |
Context Evaluator
The fields associated with this component are:
Field | Description |
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type |
The context type, e.g. Conversation, Endpoint or Message. |
expression |
The expression evaluator used to derived the context value. See further down for details. |
Property Evaluator
The fields associated with this component are:
Field | Description |
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name |
The property name being initialized. |
expression |
The expression evaluator used to derive the property value. See further down for details. |
Script
The script entry has the following fields:
Field | Description |
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type |
The type of script evaluator to use. Currently only support mvel. |
expression |
The expression to evaluate. |
The MVEL script evaluator is supplied two variables for its use:
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information - The information being processed
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activity - The activity event
An example of how this script can be used is shown in the example above, associated with the ItemNotFoundException. In this case, the message on the wire does not carry the fault name, so the information processor is used to set the 'fault' field on the activity event.
Expression Evaluator
In the context and property evaluator components, they reference an expression evaluator that is used to derive their value. The expression evaluator has the following fields:
Field | Description |
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type |
The type of expression evaluator to use. Currently only support mvel or xpath. |
expression |
The expression to evaluate. |
These expressions operate on the information being processed, to return a string value to be applied to the appropriate context or property.
JEE Container
The Information Processors are deployed within the JEE container as a WAR file with the following structure:
warfile | |-META-INF | |- beans.xml | |-WEB-INF | |-classes | | |-ip.json | | |-<custom classes/resources> | | | |-lib | |-ip-loader-jee.jar | |-<additional libraries>
The ip.json file contains the JSON representation of the Information Processor configuration.
The ip-loader-jee.jar acts as a bootstrapper to load and register the Information Processors.
If custom classes are defined, then the associated classes and resources can be defined in the WEB-INF/classes folder or within additional libraries located in the WEB-INF/lib folder.
A maven pom.xml that will create this structure is:
<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/maven-v4_0_0.xsd"> <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion> <groupId>....</groupId> <artifactId>....</artifactId> <version>....</version> <packaging>war</packaging> <name>....</name> <properties> <rtgov.version>....</rtgov.version> </properties> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.overlord.rtgov.activity-management</groupId> <artifactId>activity</artifactId> <version>${rtgov.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.overlord.rtgov.activity-management</groupId> <artifactId>ip-loader-jee</artifactId> <version>${rtgov.version}</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>javax</groupId> <artifactId>javaee-api</artifactId> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>junit</groupId> <artifactId>junit</artifactId> <scope>test</scope> </dependency> </dependencies> </project>
If deploying in JBoss Application Server, then the following fragment also needs to be included, to define the dependency on the core Overlord Runtime Governance modules:
..... <build> <finalName>....</finalName> <plugins> <plugin> <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId> <configuration> <failOnMissingWebXml>false</failOnMissingWebXml> <archive> <manifestEntries> <Dependencies>org.overlord.rtgov</Dependencies> </manifestEntries> </archive> </configuration> </plugin> </plugins> </build> .....
This section explains how activity information can be reported to, and queried from, the Activity Server via a RESTful service.
POST request to URL: <host>/overlord-rtgov/activity/store
The request contains the list of ActivityUnit objects encoded in JSON. For example,
[{ "id":"TestId1", "activityTypes":[{ "type":"RequestSent", "context":[{ "value":"12345" },{ "value":"abc123", "type":"Endpoint" },{ "value":"ABC123", "type":"Message" }], "content":"....", "serviceType":"{http://service}OrderService", "operation":"buy", "fault":"MyFault", "messageType":"{http://message}OrderRequest", "timestamp":1347028592880 },{ "type":"ResponseReceived", "context":[{ "value":"12345" },{ "value":"ABC124", "type":"Message" }], "content":"....", "serviceType":"{http://service}OrderService", "operation":"buy", "fault":"OutOfStock", "messageType":"{http://message}OutOfStock", "replyToId":"ABC123", "timestamp":1347028593010 }], "origin":{ "host":"Saturn", "port":"8010", "principal":"Fred", "node":"Saturn1", "thread":"Thread-1" } },{ ..... }]
POST request to URL: <host>/overlord-rtgov/activity/query
The request contains the JSON encoding of the Query Specification, which has the following properties:
Property | Description |
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id |
Optionally specifies the activity unit id that is required. |
fromTimestamp |
Optionally specifies the start date/time for the activity units required. If not specified, then the query will apply to activity units from the first one recorded. |
toTimestamp |
Optionally specifies the end date/time for the activity units required. If not specified, then the query will relate up to the most recently recorded activity units. |
expression |
An optional expression that can be used to specify the activity events of interest. |
format |
Optionally specifies the format of the expression. The value must be supported by the configured activity store. |
The response contains a list of ActivityType objects encoded in JSON, which would be similar in form to the example shown above when recording a list of activity units.
GET request to URL: <host>/overlord-rtgov/activity/unit?id=<unitId>
The <unitId> represents the identifier associated with the ActivityUnit that is being retrieved.