Book Image

Learning Storm

By : Ankit Jain, Anand Nalya
Book Image

Learning Storm

By: Ankit Jain, Anand Nalya

Overview of this book

<p>Starting with the very basics of Storm, you will learn how to set up Storm on a single machine and move on to deploying Storm on your cluster. You will understand how Kafka can be integrated with Storm using the Kafka spout.</p> <p>You will then proceed to explore the Trident abstraction tool with Storm to perform stateful stream processing, guaranteeing single message processing in every topology. You will move ahead to learn how to integrate Hadoop with Storm. Next, you will learn how to integrate Storm with other well-known Big Data technologies such as HBase, Redis, and Kafka to realize the full potential of Storm.</p> <p>Finally, you will perform in-depth case studies on Apache log processing and machine learning with a focus on Storm, and through these case studies, you will discover Storm's realm of possibilities.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Learning Storm
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Monitoring the Storm cluster using Ganglia


Ganglia is a monitoring tool that is used to collect the metrics of different types of processes that run on a cluster. In most of the applications, Ganglia is used as the centralized monitoring tool to display the metrics of all the processes that run on a cluster. Hence, it is essential that you enable the monitoring of the Storm cluster through Ganglia.

Ganglia has three important components:

  • Gmond: This is a monitoring daemon of Ganglia that collects the metrics of nodes and sends this information to the Gmetad server. To collect the metrics of each Storm node, you will need to install the Gmond daemon on each of them.

  • Gmetad: This gathers the metrics from all the Gmond nodes and stores them in the round-robin database.

  • The Ganglia web interface: This displays the metrics information in a graphical form.

Storm doesn't have built-in support to monitor the Storm cluster using Ganglia. However, with jmxtrans, you can enable Storm monitoring using...