I'm on a vista machine. I've started tomcat 5.5.27 with these options:
CATALINA_OPTS="-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9003 \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false"
When I connect via jconsole and added the following service url
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://localhost:9003/jmxrmi
it would not connect. Any ideas ?
On Ubuntu 10.04, using OpenJDK 6 and Tomcat 6.0.29, I was unable to activate JMX for a local jconsole session, no matter how many com.sun.management.jmxremote.* options I passed to java with CATALINA_OPTS. The problem was the -Djava.io.tmpdir setting, which defaults to $CATALINA_BASE/temp. I simply had to set:
CATALINA_TMPDIR="/tmp"
at the beginning of bin/catalina.sh and I was able to connect locally with jconsole, jmap, jps etc. There was no need for any com.sun.management.jmxremote.* settings at all.
Ok, I orignally supposed the URL given by op was wrong but it turns out no. So I can't answer.
Still, here are the basics:
For a simple connection through jconsole
.
If you know that the JMX Server you want to connect to has the RMI registry port at 9003 for example, connect using
localhost:9003
instead.
Otherwise, here's what I found out from the ground up:
Suppose you have the JMX Server (alias 'JMX Agent' alias 'the JVM you want to connect to') running on 'TARGET MACHINE' with the RMI registry port at 'RMI REGISTRY PORT' and the JMX RMI server port at 'JMX RMI SERVER PORT'.
Note:
- The RMI registry tells JMX clients where to find the JMX RMI server port; information can be obtained under key
jmxrmi
. - The RMI registry port is generally known as it is set through system properties at JVM startup.
- The JMX RMI server port is generally not known as the JVM chooses it at random (if no other precautions are taken).
The following URI will lead to success (tested)
service:jmx:rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<JMX_RMI_SERVER_PORT>/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
This looks nasty. Let's cut it apart.
This URI is an RFC2609 "Service Location Protocol URL" (well, it's really an URI, right?)
It is composed of:
service
- a constantjmx:rmi
- the service type composed of: abstract typejmx
and URL schemermi
- the rest - the sap (service access protocol specification)
sap is decomposed into:
//<TARGET_MACHINE>:<JMX_RMI_SERVER_PORT>
- ipsite/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
- URL part
A well-informed JMX client connects to the "ipsite" to do JMX-over-RMI exchanges; but what of the JMX client that doesn't KNOW that port? Patience...
URL part is decomposed into:
/jndi/
- This seems to tell the JMX client that it can get lookup information at the location that followsrmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
- Yep, we get information about the JMX RMI Server at the RMI registry, under the lookup keyjmxrmi
This is somewhat cart-before-horse, as one has to contact the RMI registry given by the latter part of the SLP URL first.
After scratching head, intuitively, let's try:
service:jmx:rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
Yes, that works! The JMX RMI server port is nicely obtained from the registry. On second thoughts, the target machine should also be obtained from the registry, thus:
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
Even better, that works, too!
References:
1 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/management/remote/rmi/package-summary.html
2 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/management/remote/JMXServiceURL.html
3 mx4j.sourceforge.net/docs/ch03s04.html
4 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/management/agent.html#gdevg
5 http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2609.txt
Are the processes run under the same user?
You can also check by running jps and jconsole (both in the JDK_HOME/bin directory)
This is also needed for OS X 10.7 aka Lion.
I answered a similar question here:java.rmi.ConnectException: Connection refused to host: 127.0.1.1;
I found many of the Q&A on this topic, not nothing was helping me - that's because my issue was more basic ( what can I say I am not a networking guru :) ). My ip address in /etc/hosts was incorrect. What I had tried included the following for CATALINA_OPTS:
CATALINA_OPTS="$CATALINA_OPTS -Djava.awt.headless=true -Xmx128M -server
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=7091
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=A.B.C.D" #howeverI put the wrong ip here!
export CATALINA_OPTS
My problem was that I had changed my ip address many months ago, but never updated my /etc/hosts file. it seems that by default the jconsole uses the hostname -i ip address in some fashion even though I was viewing local processes. The best solution was to simply change the /etc/hosts file.
The other solution which can work is to get your correct ip address from /sbin/ifconfig and use that ip address when specifying the ip address in, for example, a catalina.sh script:
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=A.B.C.D
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/743343/cannot-connect-to-tomcats-mbeanserver-via-jconsole-in-java6