WildFly and JMX: Difference between revisions

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The JMX bus can be accessed in three ways:
The JMX bus can be accessed in three ways:


# Using the Remoting connector. For more details, see [[Remoting_WildFly_Subsystem_Concepts#Remoting_and_JMX_Access|Remoting and JMX Access]].
# '''The preferred method''': using the Remoting connector. For more details, see [[Remoting_WildFly_Subsystem_Concepts#Remoting_and_JMX_Access|Remoting and JMX Access]].
# <font color=red>Activating the JVM's built-in JMX remote access.</font>. See [[Enabling JMX Access to a JVM]].
# <font color=red>Activating the JVM's built-in JMX remote access.</font>. See [[Enabling JMX Access to a JVM]].
# <font color=red>The attach API. This is visual VM uses. TODO</font>
# <font color=red>The attach API. This is visual VM uses. TODO</font>

Revision as of 03:08, 15 October 2016

Internal

Overview

Each WildFly instance includes a JMX bus with various JMX MBeans attached. The JMX MBeans expose management functionality, which can be used in monitoring or operations.

The JMX bus can be accessed in three ways:

  1. The preferred method: using the Remoting connector. For more details, see Remoting and JMX Access.
  2. Activating the JVM's built-in JMX remote access.. See Enabling JMX Access to a JVM.
  3. The attach API. This is visual VM uses. TODO