vote up 2 vote down star
1

Here are the specs that I'm trying to implement in a nutshell:

1) Some Alerts have to be sent on certain events in the application.

2) These Alerts have Users subscribe to them.

3) And the Users have set their own Notification preferences (e.g. Email and/or SMS).

I have not been able to find an open source solution in Java so far.

Is JMX Notifications an option? The more I read about JMX, the more I feel that it is trying to achieve something different that my problem.

Any help would be useful.

flag

60% accept rate

5 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

JMX can be a mechanism to solve this problem, but it's not the complete solution.

JMX provides facilities and services to your programs to allow clients to access monitoring data as well as allowing clients to make control calls to the application.

As you mentioned, one aspect of JMX is the notification system. What this system provides is infrastructure to make it easy for your program to make alerts and notifications available to clients, and modern JVMs also provide a free JMX server to allow client to connect to your application remotely and subscribe to those events.

But its one thing to make a JMX alert, and it's another thing completely to act on it.

What you would need to do is have some JMX client, somewhere, "subscribe" to the JMX notifications of your programs, and then THAT client can act upon those notification by sending emails, or whatever.

The JMX client can be a remote client talking to your application via TCP, or it can be an internal JMX client within the program, running in a thread, say, and it can act on the notifications.

So, basically, JMX provides the plumbing and infrastructure for what you want to do, but doesn't take it "the last mile" to converting alerts in to emails.

As @fawce mentioned, there are some "generic" JMX clients of various sophistication that can act upon JMX data and may do what you want (I'm not familiar with them, so I can not say first hand), or you can code your own system to monitor the JMX data.

link|flag
Nagios is a generic monitoring application that is open source. It has "probes" that live on monitored systems, and it has a dispatcher to convert probe data to alerts (email, sms, IM, etc). It also logs all the alerts. Monju is a generic JMX-Probe for Nagios. – fawce Nov 20 '08 at 15:19
vote up -1 vote down

hi Anurag,

i also has the same issue like yours

can you please share your solution with me

thanks

Suresh

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I would suggest using JMX notifications and SNMP which should support your scenario, 2) and 3) being covered by the SNMP software.

You could also code it in Java yourself as long as you have access to a SMS gateway with some API. Using javax.mail is straightforward as long as you have access to a SMTP host allowing anonymous access. A flexible publish-subscribe mechanism for 2) can be used to connect 1) and 3).

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

If you mean JMX, there is a JBoss/Nagios bridge called monju that has a generlized JMX hook.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Do you mean JMS (instead of JMX)? JMS is an messaging API while JMX is a monitoring/administration API. Using JMS as the back end is a good way to implement the back-end messages, it will take care of decoupaging, load balancing, and persistency. But you still have to have a component that receives the messages and send them on to the user.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.