This is the best link I have. Note that many of the links on that page are dead, but I
think most of the meat is still there.
http://www.eclipse.org/tptp/index.php
----- Original Message -----
Ha, yes it's been a couple of years now :) I'm enjoying Red
Hat a lot
and I hope you are too.
Thanks. I'll see what Google turns up with that. Maybe we could at least
get some ideas from it.
On 08/14/2013 11:51 AM, Rob Cernich wrote:
>> The problem with filtering comes in parsing the log file. While I have
>> had some success doing this with I tool I was playing with for Jesper,
>> once you get a stack trace you have to start making guesses. I tend to
>> agree with dmlloyd in that log files tend to be a one way write. You can
>> do some parsing with a best guess, but well we all know what happens
>> when we start assuming and guessing :)
>>
>> That said I do like the challenge of trying to parse log files. I did
>> start a project to do it in my spare time I just haven't found time to
>> put into working on it lately.
>>
> Hey James, long time since orientation...
>
> Eclipse used to have a project called TPTP which did some of this. It was
> architected with a "collector" that received events from various
"agents"
> associated with servers running in your system. I believe the events were
> typed as Common Base Events which included fields to help correlate events
> across multiple servers. I don't recall whether or not the source for the
> server components (collector and agent) was open sourced or not (the
> binaries were available from Eclipse). The Eclipse side provided tooling
> for viewing and analyzing these CBE messages, which included the
> capability for creating rules that could be used to diagnose common
> problems when applied across a set of events.
>
> Hope you've been enjoying your time at Red Hat!
>
> Rob
--
James R. Perkins
Red Hat JBoss Middleware