Custom events
The custom events extension
provides an API whereby a developer can create events for capturing arbitrary event data. The API also provides the ability to create the custom events at the application level, system level, or actor level. Please note that Akka Insights events use structured data, i.e. a map of key-values pairs, rather than message-based.
Why would one use custom events instead of a logging approach? One of the benefits of using the custom event approach is that it enables flexible rate limiting.
Custom event log levels
Events can be created at three different log levels:
- Error
- Warning
- Info
The selected log level is used whenever the event is used and is selected via one of the methods:
createInfoEvent
createWarningEvent
createErrorEvent
Developer API
Accessing CinnamonEvents
To start using the Cinnamon events API
you will first want to import the CinnamonEvents
and CinnamonEvent
classes:
- Scala
-
import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.{ CinnamonEvent, CinnamonEvents }
- Java
-
import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.CinnamonEvents; import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.CinnamonEvent;
Accessing CinnamonEvents from Akka Typed
For Akka Typed, there is a separate extension that can be used with typed actor systems or actor contexts.
First add the Cinnamon Akka Typed module dependency to your build file:
- sbt
-
libraryDependencies += Cinnamon.library.cinnamonAkkaTyped
- Maven
-
<dependency> <groupId>com.lightbend.cinnamon</groupId> <artifactId>cinnamon-akka-typed_2.13</artifactId> <version>2.19.4</version> </dependency>
- Gradle
-
dependencies { implementation group: 'com.lightbend.cinnamon', name: 'cinnamon-akka-typed_2.13', version: '2.19.4' }
Then import the typed extension for CinnamonEvents
:
- Scala
-
import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.CinnamonEvent import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.typed.CinnamonEvents
- Java
-
import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.typed.CinnamonEvents; import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.CinnamonEvent;
Creating system level custom events
System level custom events provide an excellent way to capture events at the ActorSystem
level. To create custom events at this level, you use CinnamonEvents
with the ActorSystem
and call the createEvent
follows:
- Scala
-
val systemLevelEvent: CinnamonEvent = CinnamonEvents(system).createWarningEvent("systemWarningLevelEvent")
- Java
-
CinnamonEvent systemWarningLevelEvent = CinnamonEvents.get(getSystem()).createWarningEvent("systemWarningLevelEvent");
Creating actor level custom events
Actor level custom events provide an excellent way to capture actor-specific behavior as events. To create custom events at this level, you use CinnamonEvents
with the ActorContext
and call the createEvent
follows:
- Scala
-
val actorLevelEvent: CinnamonEvent = CinnamonEvents(context).createInfoEvent("actorInfoLevelEvent")
- Java
-
CinnamonEvent actorInfoLevelEvent = CinnamonEvents.get(getContext()).createInfoEvent("actorInfoLevelEvent");
Creating application level custom events
Application level custom events are associated with the application as a whole, rather than with the actor system. See Cinnamon metadata for setting the application name. To create custom events at the application level, you first need to use the CinnamonEvents
extension with the ActorSystem
or with the ActorContext
, and then access the application-level metrics using the eventsForApplication
method. You can then call the to create createEvent
to custom application level events:
- Scala
-
val appEvents = CinnamonEvents(system).eventsForApplication() val applicationLevelEvent: CinnamonEvent = appEvents.createErrorEvent("applicationErrorLevelEvent")
- Java
-
CinnamonEvents appEvents = CinnamonEvents.get(getSystem()).eventsForApplication(); CinnamonEvent applicationErrorLevelEvent = appEvents.createErrorEvent("applicationErrorLevelEvent");
Using custom events
Using the custom events involves calling one of the methods supplied by the event class. The actorLevelEvent
created above is used in this example to create events on the actor level:
- Scala
-
actorLevelEvent.fire("key1" -> "value1", "key2" -> "value2")
- Java
-
actorInfoLevelEvent.fireWithData("key1", "value1", "key2", "value2");
One can also use respective Maps for Java or Scala when invoking the fire
method on an event. More information about the available methods can be found in the API documentation
.
Destroying custom events
When finished with the event(s), you should call destroy
. Calling destroy
will, in turn, invoke the underlying event backend to run any cleanup tasks if required.
- Scala
-
actorLevelEvent.destroy()
- Java
-
actorInfoLevelEvent.destroy();
Custom event example
Here is an example of an actor-level custom event to log particular messages that an actor might receive.
import com.lightbend.cinnamon.akka.{ CinnamonEvent, CinnamonEvents }
case class EventIn(id: Long)
case class EventOut(id: Long)
case object EventDone
class CustomerEventActor extends Actor {
val event: CinnamonEvent = CinnamonEvents(context).createInfoEvent("customerEvent")
def receive: PartialFunction[Any, Unit] = {
case EventIn(id) =>
event.fire("InEventId" -> s"ID-$id")
sender() ! EventIn(id)
case EventOut(id) =>
event.fire("OutEventId" -> s"ID-$id")
sender() ! EventOut(id)
case EventDone =>
event.destroy()
sender() ! EventDone
context.stop(self)
}
}