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Akka Cookbook

You're reading from   Akka Cookbook Recipes for concurrent, fast, and reactive applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785288180
Length 414 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Vivek Mishra Vivek Mishra
Author Profile Icon Vivek Mishra
Vivek Mishra
Piyush Mishra Piyush Mishra
Author Profile Icon Piyush Mishra
Piyush Mishra
Héctor Veiga Ortiz Héctor Veiga Ortiz
Author Profile Icon Héctor Veiga Ortiz
Héctor Veiga Ortiz
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Diving into Akka FREE CHAPTER 2. Supervision and Monitoring 3. Routing Messages 4. Using Futures and Agents 5. Scheduling Actors and Other Utilities 6. Akka Persistence 7. Remoting and Akka Clustering 8. Akka Streams 9. Akka HTTP 10. Understanding Various Akka patterns 11. Microservices with Lagom

How to introduce logging with actors


Logging is the best way to debug an application for errors and information. In this recipe, we will look at how to introduce logging with actors. There are third-party libraries that provide logging to an application, such as sl4jLogger. In Akka, logging is not tied to a particular API, but we will go with ActorLogging, provided by Akka.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, we do not require any other API dependencies; just import the Hello-Akka project in the IDE.

How to do it…

  1. Create a file, say, Logging.scala, in the com.packt.chapter5 package.
  2. Add the following import to the file:
        import akka.actor.{Props, ActorSystem, ActorLogging, Actor}
  1. Create an actor, as follows, that uses logging:
        class LoggingActor extends Actor with ActorLogging {
          def receive = {
            case (a: Int, b: Int) => {
              log.info(s"sum of $a and $b is ${a + b}")
            }
            case msg => log.warning(s"i don't know what are...
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