WildFly and JMX: Difference between revisions

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[[Remoting_WildFly_Subsystem_Concepts#Remoting_and_JMX_Access]]


[[Enabling JMX Access to a JVM]]




jconsole
Visual VM
Data Dog
<font color=red>
The JMX bus can be accessed in three ways:
# '''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>The attach API. Is this what VisualVM uses when attaching to "Local"?. TODO</font>
# <font color=red>The attach API. Is this what VisualVM uses when attaching to "Local"?. TODO</font>


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Revision as of 16:23, 18 October 2016

Internal

Overview

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

For a WildFly instance running in standalone mode, there is just one JMX bus to access - the one of the standalone instance. However, for a WildFly instance running in domain mode, the procedure to access the JMX bus of the host controller is different from the procedure of to access the JMX bus of the server node.

Procedures

EAP 6 EAP 7
standalone mode instance standalone eap 6 standalone eap 7
domain mode - host controller host controller eat 6 host controller eat 7
domain mode - server node server node eap 6 server node eap 7


Remoting_WildFly_Subsystem_Concepts#Remoting_and_JMX_Access

Enabling JMX Access to a JVM


  1. The attach API. Is this what VisualVM uses when attaching to "Local"?. TODO