Event Routing 10.11 | Communicating between Software AG Products Using Event Routing | Event Routing for Developers | Monitoring Event Routing Data | Common Attributes for All Service MBeans
 
Common Attributes for All Service MBeans
The following table lists the names of the attributes that are common for all service Mbeans and the respective attribute descriptions:
Name
Description
usage
String. The usage of the Event Routing service. Possible values are:
*Source only - you can subscribe to services of this type, but you cannot send events to them.
*Destination only - you can send events to services of this type, but you cannot subscribe to them.
*Source and Destination - you can send events and subscribe to services of this type.
reliability
String. The reliability setting of the service. Possible values are:
*reliable
*best-effort
status
String. The status of the service after an event was sent through it to the destination server or another type of endpoint. The value of this attribute is updated every time an event is sent from the queue to the destination service or another endpoint, depending on whether the server/ endpoint has acknowledged the event with success or failure. Possible values are:
*green when the service is functioning correctly.
*red when the service is unavailable.
Note:
If the destination server or endpoint becomes unavailable, but no events have been sent for a long time, the status will still be green. In case you are monitoring a Universal Messaging service, use this parameter in conjunction with connected, connectTime, and disconnectTime to determine whether the Universal Messaging server is available.
statusDetails
String. An explanation of the current status. Possible values are:
*green when the service is functioning correctly.
*red when the service is unavailable. Provides the message of the last error which occurred while trying to deliver events to the destination server or another type of endpoint denoted by the service.
receivedEvents
Long. The number of events received by all subscribers to this service since its activation. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty. Otherwise, the value will be:
*Growing at a steady pace, when the service is functioning correctly.
*Growing slowly, when the service is slow.
*Not growing for a long period of time, when the service is unavailable.
Note:
In case you are monitoring a Universal Messaging service, use this parameter in conjunction with connected, connectTime, and disconnectTime to determine whether the Universal Messaging server is available.
activeDurableSubscribersCount
Integer. The number of active durable subscribers to this service. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty.
activeDurableSubscribersIds
List<String>. The identifiers of the active durable subscribers to this service. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty.
inactiveDurableSubscribersCount
Integer. The number of inactive (closed but still subscribed) durable subscribers to this service. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty.
inactiveDurableSubscribersIds
List<String>. The identifiers of the inactive (closed but still subscribed) durable subscribers to this service. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty.
nonDurableSubscribersCount
Integer. The number of non-durable subscribers to this service. If the service usage is Destination only, the value of this attribute will be empty.
sentEvents
Long. The number of events sent to the service. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty. The value of this attribute is:
*Growing if the service is functioning correctly.
*Growing up to the point when the on-disk queue is full, if the service is reliable. This is most probably due to a slow or unavailable service.
acknowledgedSentEvents
Long. The number of events sent through this service and successfully acknowledged by the messaging server, database, or another type of endpoint it represents. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty. Otherwise, the value will be:
*Growing at a steady pace, when the service is functioning correctly.
*Growing slowly, when the service is slow.
*Not growing for a long period of time, when the service is unavailable.
lastSendingTime
Instant. The time of sending the last event to the messaging server, database, or another type of endpoint it represents. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty. Otherwise, the value will be:
*A few milliseconds or seconds before the current time, when the service is functioning correctly or when the service is slow.
*Before the current time, when the service is unavailable.
Note:
This reading denotes the time an event was last sent to the destination service. It does not contain information about whether or when the event was acknowledged by the service. For such information, see the lastCompletedAcknowledgementTime and lastFailedAcknowledgementTime attributes.
lastCompletedAcknowledgementTime
Instant. The last time an event sent through this service was acknowledged with success by the destination server. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty. Otherwise, the value will be:
*A few milliseconds or seconds before the current time and shortly after lastSendingTime, when the service is functioning correctly.
*Before lastSendingTime, when the service is slow or unavailable.
lastFailedAcknowledgementTime
Instant. The last time an event sent through this service was acknowledged with failure by the destination server. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty. Otherwise, the value will be:
*empty or pointing to a long time before the current time, when the service is functioning correctly.
*empty or pointing to a recent moment in the past, when the service is slow. The delivery of an event might fail due to a slow connection to the destination server, in which case the event must be redelivered.
*After lastSendingTime and a few milliseconds or seconds before the current time (depending on the redelivery interval and the response timeout of the service), when the service is unavailable.
regularDeliveryInterruptionsCount
Integer. The number of times the service has switched to redelivery mode because of failure to deliver an event to the destination server or another type of endpoint. The delivery of an event might fail due to a slow connection to the destination server, in which case the event must be redelivered. If the service usage is Source only, the value of this attribute will be empty.