Mule ESB: Is it possible to start 2 instances of the Mule ESB - mule

I created two sepaerate directories in which I installed the Standalone Mule ESB server:
/ee/mmc-distribution-mule-console-bundle-3.5.2-HF1
/ee2/mmc-distribution-mule-console-bundle-3.5.2-HF1
I start up the first server, and below is the status:
[root#x240perf2 mmc-distribution-mule-console-bundle-3.5.2-HF1]# ./status.sh
MMC is running as PID=1998.
Mule Enterprise Edition is running as PID=2619.
Then I try to start the second instance:
[root#x240perf2 mmc-distribution-mule-console-bundle-3.5.2-HF1]# ./startup.sh
Port 8585 is in use, please make it available and try again.
So apparently the port 8585 is being used by the original instnace
So I stop the first instnace, and start the second istance, which comes up successfully, as follows:
./startup.sh
Please enter the desired port for Mule [Default 7777]:
Starting MMC, please wait...
class com.sun.jersey.multipart.impl.MultiPartConfigProvider
class com.sun.jersey.multipart.impl.MultiPartReader
class com.sun.jersey.multipart.impl.MultiPartWriter
[11-13 16:49:19] WARN HttpSessionSecurityContextRepository [http-bio-8585-exec-1]: Failed to create a session, as response has been committed. Unable to store SecurityContext.
[11-13 16:49:32] WARN HttpMethodBase [http-bio-8585-exec-12]: Going to buffer response body of large or unknown size. Using getResponseBodyAsStream instead is recommended.
[11-13 16:49:38] WARN HttpSessionSecurityContextRepository [http-bio-8585-exec-12]: Failed to create a session, as response has been committed. Unable to store SecurityContext.
Nov 13, 2014 4:49:50 PM org.apache.catalina.core.StandardServer await
INFO: A valid shutdown command was received via the shutdown port. Stopping the Server instance.
Nov 13, 2014 4:49:50 PM org.apache.coyote.AbstractProtocol pause
INFO: Pausing ProtocolHandler ["http-bio-8585"]
But notice it seems to be using 8585 for tomcat (of which I know little about, except it some sort of app server, never used it)
I examined this site:
http://www.mulesoft.org/documentation/display/33X/Running+Multiple+Mule+Instances
but it does nto discuss the issue., and the page it points do does not seem current. Did I misunderstand something
Is it possible to run two separate instances of Mule ESB at the same time
and if so, how ? (how would I change the port its using, what file should I modify)
Thanks
Edit: my second post in response to answer:
(BTW: I am using Mule ESB standalone Enterprise Edition 3.5.2)
To make sure I did not have any apps that were running
on port 8585, I shutdown my original instance, and created two new instances, and made sure no apps were deployed to either instance.
I brought up the first instance without issue, but the second instance I brought up still gives me the port 8585 in use error (from startup.sh)
This site says that the MMC default port is 7777, but the tomcat default port on which it runs is 8585
http://www.mulesoft.org/documentation/display/current/Setting+Up+MMC-Mule+ESB+Communications
I used the following command to find all files within my second instance of por t 8585
find . -type f |xargs grep "8585
Other than log files I got two hits
startup.sh
and
/mmc-3.5.2-HF1/apache-tomcat-7.0.52/conf/server.xml
I did NOT find in either instance the $MULE_HOME/apps/mmc/mule-config.xml (probably because I have no apps deployed)
In the server.xml, the MMC apparently uses tomcat to
handle the MMC applicaiton, and server.xml contains
the following:
<Connector port="8585" protocol="HTTP/1.1"
So I guess I could change 8585 to 8586 at this point, but ...
The startup.sh has serveral (about 9 or 10) hardcode dreferences to 8585 to check that the MMC is running and take action if it is or is not running
So do I actually have to change the entire startup.sh to replace 8585 with 8586 i the second instance as well as change the server.xml port 8585 reference ?
Thanks

You can run as many instances as you want, as long they don't use the same ports. Looks like you are deploying something in port 8585, so in the second instance you have to select a different port.
Is that port being used in any application that you developed and deployed in the Mule runtime?
Also, if you are using the Mule runtime with the MMC agent activated, you also have to change the port for the agent in the second instance. I think you can do that in the /conf/wrapper.conf or by passing to the startup script the following parameter:
-Dmule.mmc.bind.port=7778
(or any port that is free).

You can run as many as you want.
In MMC we can able to deploy and run many applications each applications has its own instance

Related

Weblogic 12c setting PermSize when using NodeManager

We have a Windows Server 2012 64bit + Weblogic 12c setup. The AdminServer requires a higher PermSize when being used with a 64bit OS, thus we need to modify the "setDomainEnv.cmd" (as described in other questions here on stackoverflow).
When starting the AdminServer through the usual "startWeblogic.cmd" script, it uses the settings in "setDomainEnv.cmd" that sets the PermSize etc. successfully, but when using NodeManager "startServer()" command, it does not.
I read something in the documentation about the fact that one can control the parameters that are loaded on startup of a managed server (with NodeManager), but I did not find the right way to do it.
I would hope that we can achieve a consistent behaviour when starting a managed server (and the AdminServer) through NodeManager or manually.
Any ideas?
UPDATE:
I checked what's going on when starting managed server and(!) in comparison what's going on when starting the AdminServer. Result: the AdminServer process (it starts a 'javaw.exe' instance in contrast to a 'java.exe' instance for a managed server) never get's passed ANY parameters set in the setDomainEnv.cmd script.. it's basically full of Oracle internal parameters.
To me all this looks completely messed up and inconsistent. In addition to this I found an issue reported by Oracle that mystically talks about setting environment variables when running on a 64bit OS (see headline "Developer ZIP Distribution Fails on Windows 64-bit and Linux 64-bit"):
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/E24329_01/doc.1211/e26593/issues.htm#WLSRN238
I have idea if this applies to my version or not, since the version I downloaded does not say "developer" version, it basically was the primary weblogic download for the latest release.
The question that comes to my mind is this: what is the expected way of starting the AdminServer if not using "startServer"? Is there a bug that nobody cares about, since it is usually done differently? I am really disappointed to how confusing this rather simple topic evolves when starting to read Oracle documentation: it simply does not say anything about it at all.
Command line that is triggered when starting the AdminServer through "startServer()" command:
C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\bin\javaw.exe -classpath "C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\lib\rt.jar;C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\lib\i18n.jar;C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\lib\tools.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\weblogic_sp.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\weblogic.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\oracle_common\modules\net.sf.antcontrib_1.1.0.0_1-0b3\lib\ant-contrib.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\modules\features\oracle.wls.common.nodemanager_2.0.0.0.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\oracle_common\modules\com.oracle.cie.config-wls-online_8.1.0.0.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\common\derby\lib\derbyclient.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\common\derby\lib\derby.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\xqrl.jar" "-Djava.runtime.name=Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment" -Dpython.cachedir=C:\Users\ADMINI~1\AppData\Local\Temp\2\wlstTempAdministrator -Djava.protocol.handler.pkgs=weblogic.utils|weblogic.utils|weblogic.utils -Djava.vm.version=24.65-b04 "-Djava.vm.vendor=Oracle Corporation" -Djava.vendor.url=http://java.oracle.com/ -Dpath.separator=; "-Djava.vm.name=Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM" -Dweblogic.RootDirectory=D:\Oracle\Middleware\user_projects\domains\test1234\. "-Djava.vm.specification.name=Java Virtual Machine Specification" -Djava.runtime.version=1.7.0_67-b01 -Djavax.rmi.CORBA.UtilClass=weblogic.iiop.UtilDelegateImpl -Djava.awt.graphicsenv=sun.awt.Win32GraphicsEnvironment -Djava.endorsed.dirs=C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\lib\endorsed -Dos.arch=amd64 -Djava.io.tmpdir=C:\Users\ADMINI~1\AppData\Local\Temp\2\ -Dline.separator=
"-Djava.vm.specification.vendor=Oracle Corporation" -Djava.naming.factory.url.pkgs=weblogic.jndi.factories:weblogic.corba.j2ee.naming.url "-Dos.name=Windows Server 2012 R2" -Dprod.props.file=D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\.product.properties -Dorg.omg.CORBA.ORBSingletonClass=weblogic.corba.orb.ORB -Djava.library.path=C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\bin;C:\Windows\Sun\Java\bin;C:\Windows\system32;C:\Windows;;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\native\win\x64;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\bin;D:\Oracle\Middleware\oracle_common\modules\org.apache.ant_1.9.2\bin;C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\bin;C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\bin;D:\Oracle\product\12.1.0\dbhome_1\BIN;C:\Windows\System32;C:\Windows;C:\Windows\System32\wbem;C:\Windows\System32\WINDOW~1\v1.0\;C:\PROGRA~2\VISUAL~1\bin;C:\PROGRA~1\doxygen\bin;C:\PROGRA~1\TORTOI~1\bin;C:\PROGRA~2\WINDOW~4\8.0\WINDOW~1\;C:\PROGRA~1\MICROS~1\110\Tools\Binn\;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\native\win\x64\oci920_8;. "-Djava.specification.name=Java Platform API Specification" -Djava.class.version=51.0 -Dorg.omg.CORBA.ORBClass=weblogic.corba.orb.ORB -Dos.version=6.3 -Djavax.rmi.CORBA.PortableRemoteObjectClass=weblogic.iiop.PortableRemoteObjectDelegateImpl -Djava.awt.printerjob=sun.awt.windows.WPrinterJob -Djava.specification.version=1.7 -Djava.class.path=C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\lib\tools.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\weblogic_sp.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\weblogic.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\oracle_common\modules\net.sf.antcontrib_1.1.0.0_1-0b3\lib\ant-contrib.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\modules\features\oracle.wls.common.nodemanager_2.0.0.0.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\oracle_common\modules\com.oracle.cie.config-wls-online_8.1.0.0.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\common\derby\lib\derbyclient.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\common\derby\lib\derby.jar;D:\Oracle\Middleware\wlserver\server\lib\xqrl.jar -Djava.vm.specification.version=1.7 -Dweblogic.management.GenerateDefaultConfig=false -Djava.home=C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre "-Djava.specification.vendor=Oracle Corporation" -Dawt.toolkit=sun.awt.windows.WToolkit "-Djava.vm.info=mixed mode" -Djava.version=1.7.0_67 -Djava.ext.dirs=C:\PROGRA~1\Java\JDK17~1.0_6\jre\lib\ext;C:\Windows\Sun\Java\lib\ext "-Djava.vendor=Oracle Corporation" -Djava.vendor.url.bug=http://bugreport.sun.com/bugreport/ -Dweblogic.store.DisableDiskScheduler=true -Dpython.verbose=warning weblogic.Server
UPDATE 2:
Start the AdminServer through node manager (nmStart('AdminServer')) creates a usual "java.exe" process and starts up the AdminServer with correct memory settings. But this is even more confusing: why is "startServer()" creating a separate process (javaw.exe) with entirely different settings? Why are my settings now totally different for AdminServer? What is the "correct" way of starting the AdminServer (development/production?). Two thumbs down on this environment.
UPDATE 3:
After repeating further tests the solution of getting "startServer()" to work is basically as follows: do not worry about the node manager settings at all, edit the "startWeblogic" script directly by adding additional java options inside of it (as usual by adding -D start parameters). The reason for all this is basically that the global settings (as used by node manager) are ignored completely, see my pasted command line output.
Check the nodemanager.properties file in your Oracle install ( e.g. /opt/ora/mw/wlserver_10.3/common/nodemanager/nodemanager.properties ) and verify that these options are set:
StartScriptName=startManagedWebLogic.sh
StartScriptEnabled=true
so the nodemanager is starting your servers with the appropriate scripts. You also have to option of setting server specific start attributes via the admin console - go to:
Servers -> Server Name -> Server Start tab -> Arguments
You can fill in server specific JVM args, like -XX:MaxPermSize=4096m in this field that will be used by the nodemanager. This may be a better/easier idea than hard coding it in the setDomainEnv script.
UPDATE
Attempt issuing an nmStart() command rather than a startServer() command for the AdminServer.
startServer allows you to start a server WITHOUT the nodemanager. It uses javaw.exe to effectively background the process
nmStart allows you to start the server WITH the nodemanager - which is why you get the correct memory settings. Because the process is started via a service, it is more or less automatically backgrounded, which is why you see the normal java.exe

Installing Multiple Instances Mule ESB

I have gone through the mule doc.
https://www.mulesoft.org/documentation-3.2/display/MULE2INTRO/Installing+Mule
I am trying to understand how to make multiple instances from a single esb server.
I have to make a cluster of the instance.
But I havent get any clear idea about doing this.
I am using a ubuntu OS.
I want to know that.
1) Do I have to make 2 directory which containing to 2 server.
2 if no Do I have to configure 1 server So that I can make as many instance as I can.
3 if yes Then please can some one help me with step.
I often set up multiple mule instances on Ubuntu linux in parallel, and I use parallel directories that contain the Mule standalone installation.
Here is a template upstart script I have used to run it on startup under the mule user. You should copy this file to /etc/init/mule-instance-name.conf, and create an associated file /etc/default/mule-instance-name in which you set the MULE_HOME environment variable to the directory where you installed that instance.
description "Run Mule ESB instance 1"
author "Ryan Hoegg"
setuid mule
setgid nogroup
# we need real ethernet before starting:
start on (local-filesystems and net-device-up IFACE!=lo)
stop on runlevel [016]
kill timeout 30
script
. /etc/default/mule-instance1
exec $MULE_HOME/bin/mule
end script

Unable to open debugger port in IntelliJ IDEA

I have a problem that I can not set up my application in debug mode with IntelliJ IDE, but run mode is OK.
My OS is Windows 7, IDE is IntelliJ IDEA, web container is Tomcat 6. I have tried for a long time, changed the HTTP port and the JMX port, but it did not work.
When I set up the app in debug mode with IntelliJ, it failed and the event log is:
16:05:35 Error running tomcat: Unable to open debugger port :
java.net.BindException "Address already in use: JVM_Bind".
the key to the issue is in debugger port. I was having the same problem, I was killing every process listening on port 8081 (my http port), 1099 (JMX port), tomcat shutdown port, every java.exe, and still nothing.
The thing is this debugger port is different. If you run the application, it will go through the port you have Tomcat configured for, 8080, 8081 or whatever. But if you run it in Debug mode, it goes through a different port.
If you go edit your Tomcat configuration from IntelliJ, the last tab is Startup/Connection. Here go see the configuration for Debug mode, and you'll see its port. Mine was 50473. I changed it to 50472, and everything started working again.
If you're on windows you can bypass the socket issue completely by switching to shared memory debugging.
For me, IntelliJ Event Log (right bottom corner) had below logs:
Error running EntitmentTooling-Debug: Cannot run program "/path-to/apache-tomcat-8.5.15/bin/catalina.sh" (in directory "path-to/apache-tomcat-8.5.15/bin"): error=13, Permission denied
Error running EntitmentTooling-Debug: Unable to open debugger port (127.0.0.1:58804): java.net.SocketException "Socket closed"
The command
$ chmod a+x /path-to/apache-tomcat-8.5.15/bin/catalina.sh
to sufficiently change privileges worked for me.
I have encountered the same error while using IntelliJ. Since I have started multiple instances of IntelliJ. While starting two instance it started properly. However, when starting another one, it was giving below error.
unable to open debugger port (127.0.0.1:debug-port-number) java.net.socketexception interrupted function call accept failed
There are basically two places you can check your ports related to debugging in IntelliJ
JMX port - you can find this is
In Startup/Configuration, there is debug option just click this.
What to Check: If IntelliJ is throwing above error, means issue is any of the above listed ports. To verify this open event log (its available in right corner down) and check the exact message. Event log will have message like below
11:19 PM Error running 'Tomcat-tp': Address localhost:1098 is already in use
11:19 PM Error running 'Tomcat-tp': Unable to open debugger port (127.0.0.1:51787): java.net.SocketException "Interrupted function call: accept failed"
Solution-1
Check the JMX port of current intelliJ which is not starting with the working one and verify if JMX ports are not duplicated within IntelliJ instance or any of the software which is running in your machine is not using this port.
Solution-2
If JMX is not duplicated then verify your debug port, check in all IntelliJ instance and do the changes.
Surely either JMX or Debug port is having issue just use unique JMX and Debug port and it will work.
Hope this will help someone.
This works for me consistently (it happens to me from time to time, when I do things such a restart tomcat when I am running the integration tests, for example)
1) Find the process that has the port 1099 open
sudo netstat -anp | grep tcp | grep 1099
cp6 0 0 :::1099 :::* LISTEN 9857/java
2) kill it
kill 9857
3) Start Tomcat.
I had same issue in windows 7 and IntellijIdea 14.
I killed the java processes by going CTRL+ALT+ESc, find java and kill it.
Now Re-Run, the application again it should be fine..
You can also do it with command line or shell(linux), but I found this easier for myself
I solved the issue by this way.
I tried to kill all the java.exe processes but it was useless.
Then I tried deleting the Tomcat server
I re-deployed the project and restarted the project and it worked.
See these links for more information:
Delete Tomcat
Add a new Tomcat
I had this exact message.
The reason was that some IDE (I use Eclipse and Intellij) failed to shutdown the tomcat server. Or maybe crashed before it could do so.
The solution was to navigate to C:\...\apache-tomcat-xxx\bin and run shutdown.
All the other solutions unfortunately did not work.
This is what worked for me . I simply changed the debugger port to some other port number.
Intelij-> preferences->Build, execution, deployment ->Debugger-> Built in server->port(change value )
It happens occasionally that when I restart my computer, everything is OK. Perhaps there is a port conflict.
Restart the computer works because instances of Java or Tomcat are killed during the restart. You can also consider killing the specific processes from Task Manager
This also happens if there is an issue in the context.xml file. In my case, I had accidentally changed the context value.
I have the same issue,because my computer's DNS miss 127.0.0.1 localhost.
When I add 127.0.0.1 localhost to my host file,it become ok.
While debug I got this issue: It worked with
tried changing my Tomcat http port 8082 to 8083(In debug
configurations on IntelliJ and in Tomcat->conf->server.xml also)
tried changing JMX port from 1099 to 1009.
tried changing debug port in Startup/Connection in debug
configurations
killed all java processes in TaskManager->Processes.
There are various reasons for this.
- There might be the problem with debugger port---Please change it to resolve( answered by T.M )
- There might be some issue with intellij cache --Invalidate cache and restart will solve it ( answered by feng smith )
- There might be problem with any other Port, like JMX, AJP --- Please change these port numbers as well.
I wanted to add this as comment but not enough rep
My fix was the change debug port from 54444 to 7070
None of above methods worked in my case i.e. changing port number in run configuration, machine restart, invalidate cache in IntelliJ, killing process shown in netstat (nestat -anob | findstr <port-number> and then tskill <pid>). The only thing that finally helped was starting and shutting down tomcat manually via startup.bat and shutdown.bat (you should use correspondig .sh files on linux and macOS).
The only thing that worked for me is to go to Task Manager on Windows, and end all the Java processes that is running by right click -> end Task.
Check "Run" configuration to see which port it is using (8081).
Find all the other processes using that port lsof -t -i :8081
Kill the processes on that port. kill PROCESS_ID
Run Tomcat in Debug mode.
In my case, I wasted so much time on changing debugger port but it was not the issue. Since tomcat was not able to run on the port I chose in Run configuration, I was not able to debug my service.
In Server tab of Tomcat configuration in IntelliJ, change JMX port to another number.
Change debug port of your server configured in the Intelli J.
It will be fixed.
My assumption that this exception usually occurs when Tomcat is improperly closed and still holding the ports.
Usually it is enough to kill any process listening to 1099 port. For Window 10:
netstat -aon | find "1099"
taskkill /F /PID $processId
In my case I had another project open in IntelliJ, and had Tomcat running in debug mode in that project.
Stopping that instance of Tomcat resolved the issue.
In my case, there was a problem in server.xml for Tomcat/conf folder where I had extra comment tags under another comment tag. So I think, since there was some problem in server.xml, it was not able to start Tomcat. And moreover it copies the tomcat folder from your installation directory to C:\Users\username.IntelliJIdea2017.2\system\tomcat\Tomcat_service
This happens when you have application running on the same port number. One way to do this by killing the process forcefully. Open command prompt as an admin. Run command 'taskkill /IM "java.exe" /F'. This worked for me in Windows. Let me know if this works.
Probably you get the same error message if the standalone.xml in your standalone/configuration folder cannot be found. At least I have the same error when using a WildFly 14.0.1:
Just restart the Android studio before try these all. I face same right now and i fix it by this way.
Happy coding :)
For anyone who comes here with the similar message:
Unable to open debugger port (127.0.0.1:50470):
java.net.SocketException "Interrupted function call: accept failed"
This may be caused by something completely independent, i.e. it's not a port configuration. If you're running Tomcat, for instance, it may be that you have an invalid web.xml. Check your Event Log for any previous errors:
Cannot load C:\...\conf\web.xml: ParseError at [row,col]:[480,29]
Message: The element type "param-value" must be terminated by the matching end-tag "</param-value>".
I came in this scenario and as the above answers I tried to change the port like
Edit Configuration -> Startup/Connection -> debug -> change the Port
but it didn't solve my problem cause I was running my application in debug mode so once try to run the application as normal without debug.
it solved my problem!
This problem is sometimes just because of a misconfiguration.
Please, check if you have, for example, an SSL port number defined at your run configuration. If so, and if you don't have a right configuration for it at tomcat's server.xml, then it won't be possible to start your debug session correctly, and you will unfortunately have the same error. I think this can be shown as a different error. So, this is in my opinion an idea issue also..
The solution is, removing the SSL port number value from the run configuration of the IDE.
#intellij-idea
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/intellij-idea
This occurred to me, when I was running wildfly on intellij, and I switched the branch. I stopped wildfly, built the jar using maven, tried to re run Wildfly and got the error.
I tried changing port as mentioned in the accepted answer, but didn't work. I tried to find the process running on port, but netstat command didn't find it.
I tried restarting the OS, it also didn't help.
Then I checked the configuration folder of my Wildfly set up, that's when I realised
standalone.xml got replaced by standalone.xml.tmp
renaming it to standalone.xml helped me to resolve the error.
Running IntelliJ as Administrator in Windows did the magic for me:

Deploy & Debug remote Jetty with IntelliJ 12

I've been hacking and googling for a while now, and I've found several statck overflow threads that seemed like they were written for older versions of intellij, with various application servers. Usually they tell you to enter
java -Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,address=51887,suspend=n,server=y
One answer suggests using something like
-agentlib:jdwp:transport=dt_socket,address=51887,suspend=n,server=y
But then I get this:
Error occurred during initialization of VM
Could not find agent library: libjdwp:transport.jnilib (searched /Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/1.6.0_37-b06-434.jdk/Contents/Libraries:/System/Library/Java/Extensions:/Library/Java/Extensions:.)
Then after one or the other of the above they tell you something like "Edit Configurations> jetty > remote and enter localhost, 51887" (the port number varies)
However in 12, the page you land on after you select remote has a plethora of options, and is asking for JNDI ports, not jdwp ports on another tab it actually suggests the jdwp parameters above.
Researching the JNDI port bit, generally yields instructions to add args like this to your command line...
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote= \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=1099 \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false\
I've done that too and I can see port 1099 held by java (using lsof) and I can telnet to 1099, so I know the JVM is listening. (We'll try not to worry about the fact that that appears to say, open up a port by which anyone install arbitrary java code over the network to your computer without a password)
However, in Intellij whenever I try to deploy and debug it gives me the following message:
I can see java RMI communications over 1099 when I snoop port 1099 with wireshark (but they are illegible). Evidently, the communications are not satisfactory for Intellij, so I'm wondering if there's something I need to do to Jetty to get it to play nice. Note that changing the Jetty version is not presently an option, so let's not go there :).
I've also tried removing the artifact, disabling make, and trying to just connect the debugger, but it still gives me the same red baloon and error message, so evidently the JNDI (port 1099) part is required.
Does anyone see something I'm doing wrong, or know of something else I should do to get this to work?
(I'm wondering if it is something similar to this: http://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/IDEA-65746 jboss issue)
Edit: Thanks to this google groups post I've discovered that it is possible to get the debugger connected if you don't specify Edit Configurations> + > jetty > remote, but instead choose Edit Configurations > + > remote, but debug and deploy is what I'm after so that's only a half solution.
Jetty remote configuration requires several manual steps which are performed automatically when you start Jetty directly from IDEA using the local configuration instead.
If you absolutely must use the remote configuration, try the following steps:
In the Remote staging section of the Server tab of the IDEA Jetty remote run configuration:
specify Same file system for Type and Host
specify path to the <Jetty home>/contexts folder in the Local path field of the contexts section
(settings will differ if you have Jetty running on another machine than IDEA, but I assume it's the same machine in your case)
Pass the following VM parameters to the Jetty process:
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote=
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=<JNDI port>
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-DOPTIONS=jmx
<JNDI port> value should be the same as specified in the JNDI port field of the IDEA Jetty run configuration
Pass the following configuration files to the Jetty process (in the command line):
etc/jetty-jmx.xml
etc/jetty.xml
If you need to debug, you should also pass to Jetty process VM parameters taken from IDEA Jetty run configuration: Startup/Connection tab, select Debug list item under the To debug remote server JVM ...
Here is the sample command line to start Jetty process with all the required options:
java -Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,address=60208,suspend=n,server=y -DSTOP.PORT=0 -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote= -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=1099 -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false -Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false -DOPTIONS=jmx -Dfile.encoding=UTF-8 -classpath start.jar etc/jetty-jmx.xml etc/jetty.xml

Fail to start Apache Directory Server - Error 04450

While I was trying to start ApacheDS 1.5.7 on windows platform, An Error 04450 occurs and the apacheds-rolling.log contains:
[21:07:27] ERROR [org.apache.directory.shared.ldap.entry.DefaultServerAttribute] - ERR_04450 The value {0} is incorrect, it hasnt been added
[21:07:27] ERROR [org.apache.directory.server.Service] - Cannot start the server : reuseAddress can't be set while the acceptor is bound.
How can i fix this problem? Anybody could help me? many thanks!
The warning log message is a bit misleading, actually this is not a serious issue, the server should be running despite of this warning, this has been fixed a while back in the latest trunk code (which will be released as 2.0 instead of 1.5.8).
According to this post, the dc=example,dc=org context entry is not created by default anymore but no one has updated the documentation to reflect this. I installed 1.5.7 and it looks to me like the partition was created fine, but I'm getting the same error as described above. I suggest installing an older version.
The 2nd error message suggests that the port is already in use. Is there a chance that you already had another ApacheDS process running, or that another program is using the ports?
This isn't a domain controller perchance, is it? If so, the default LDAP ports 389 & 636 are already in use for Active Directory, so you'll need to choose another. However, I believe the defaults for ApacheDS are 10389 (LDAP) and 10636 (LDAPS), in which case they would typically be open on a Windows box.
You can check for processes on the ports with the netstat -abn command, and look through the list for the process listening on port 10389 or whichever custom port you chose.