Thanks Michael. Yes, hook is a good way. Let me try it out!
Regards, Cheng Xuntao On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 11:59 PM, Michael Rose <[email protected]>wrote: > You add it as a task hook, e.x. > > Scala: > config.put(Config.TOPOLOGY_AUTO_TASK_HOOKS, > List(classOf[MetricsStormHooks].getName).asJava) > > Java: > List<Class<? extends ITaskHook>> taskHooks = new ArrayList<>(); > taskHooks.add(MetricsStormHooks.class.getName()); > config.put(Config.TOPOLOGY_AUTO_TASK_HOOKS, taskHooks); > > Michael Rose (@Xorlev <https://twitter.com/xorlev>) > Senior Platform Engineer, FullContact <http://www.fullcontact.com/> > [email protected] > > > On Fri, Dec 13, 2013 at 8:40 AM, Patricio Echagüe <[email protected]>wrote: > >> It seems to be that you just instantiate MetricsStorm and call >> initiateWebConsole(port). >> >> I also posted a while ago something similar. >> http://patricioechague.blogspot.com/2013/10/different-strategies-to-monitor-storm.html >> >> Sent from my Nexus 4. >> On Dec 13, 2013 3:33 AM, "Cheng Xuntao" <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Hi, all, >>> >>> I am a starter. I want to test Storm using the metrics ( >>> https://github.com/ooyala/metrics_storm). But I found no guide which I >>> do need! How to integrate the metrics into Storm or does the latest Storm >>> already included it? My question should be silly but I do appreciate your >>> help!! >>> >>> Thanks!! >>> >>> Best Regards, >>> Cheng Xuntao >>> >>> >
