23
Original work by David Moran JMX Update Scott Molenaar [email protected] t 11/08/2004

JMX Update

  • Upload
    treva

  • View
    39

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

JMX Update. Scott Molenaar [email protected] 11/08/2004. Original Slides Created by. David Moran [email protected] 10/20/03. Agenda. Overview Managed Beans Services Remote API J2EE Management Implementations Future Directions Demo. Benefits. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

JMX Update

Scott Molenaar

[email protected]

11/08/2004

Page 2: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Original Slides Created by

David Moran

[email protected]

10/20/03

Page 3: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Agenda

OverviewManaged BeansServicesRemote APIJ2EE ManagementImplementationsFuture DirectionsDemo

Page 4: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Benefits

JMX is an API to for managing java applications.

Abstract the instrumentation for management information to a common interface to facilitate integrated management.

Distribute management by moving management functions to the agents.

Real-time deployment of services and updates.Possible to use to manage any application or

device (via JNI or SNMP etc..)

Page 5: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

JMX Architecture

Page 6: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

MBeanServer

The core of the agent. It provides a registry for MBeans.

Allows clients to discover and execute operations exposed by the MBeans

Makes available various services to facilitate management (I.e. monitoring, scheduling, etc)

Use “ObjectName” class to register objects with the MBeanServer

Page 7: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Instrument your resources as MBeans

MBean stands for “managed bean”MBeans can represent a physical device

or an application You decide which attributes and methods

you want to expose for management.Use design patterns similar to JavaBeansMBeans are exposed in an agent.

Page 8: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Standard MBeans

The simplest MBeanProvides a static representation of a

manageable resource.Implements a management interface of

attributes and methods that a device or application exposes for management.

Page 9: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Notifications

Can be used to inform registered listeners with important events or state changes.

Similar to the java event modelRegister once to all types of notificationsCan supply a filter to say which

notifications it is interested in.

Page 10: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Dynamic MBeans

Useful if the management interface is not stable.

The management interface is defined at runtime.

Developer is responsible for checking the validity of the invocations.

Page 11: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

DynamicMBean Interface<<Interface>>

DynamicMBean

getAttribute(String attribute)setAttribute(Attribute attribute)getAttributes (String[] attributes)setAttributes(AttibuteList attributes)getMBeanInfo()invoke(String actionName, Object[] params)

Page 12: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Model MBeans

Most flexible and thus most complicated MBeans

Extension of the dynamic MBeanDevelopers do not write an MBean class The agent must supply the

RequiredModelMBean and the Management Interface is defined outside of the Bean via setter methods.

Features include persistence, logging, and attribute caching.

Page 13: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Connectors/Adapters

A connector makes a Java Management Extensions (JMX) API MBean server accessible to remote Java technology-based clients.

Adapters are similar to connectors except they provide protocol translations (I.e. SNMP, HTML, etc.)

Page 14: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Agent Services

Mlet; (Management Applet) Dynamically adds class files to the server either locally or from a remote location.

Relation Service; Allows the definition of relationships between MBeans

Monitors: Observe MBean attributes and emit notifications when values change.

Timers: Emits user defined notifications at specific times.

Page 15: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

JMX Remote APIAdds remote capability to the JMX specMakes the JMX agent accessible from outside the JVM.Developed through the JCP JSR 160Standard support via RMIOptional support via TCP Sockets (JMXMP)API is as close as possible to the API defined by the

JMX API.Also support discovery/lookup services and defines

security between the client and server. As with RMI code must handle communication

exceptions

Page 16: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

J2EE Management

An MBean can get data directly from an EJB by invoking its access methods.

An MBean can receive data being pushed from an EJB.

Registers and Deletes an MBean with a JMX agent upon creation and destruction of an EJB

Page 17: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

J2EE Management Spec JSR77

This specification represents a model of the J2EE application server, and its subcomponents, that all J2EE-compliant application vendors are required to expose

Requires JMX Part of J2EE 1.4 specSpecifies the MEJB, which is a session bean, to

expose the agent to remote clients.

Page 18: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Available JMX Implementations Sun JDK1.5 JBOSS JBOSS-MX MX4J XMOJO Commercial implementations available;

Weblogic Adventnet XtreamJ WebSphere Tivioli

Page 19: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Future Directions

Use of metadata Persistence Reliable event handling Master-agent/sub-agent functionality Manageability for J2EE™ apps

Page 20: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

ExamplesMX4J - Dynamic MBean Example (CacheMBean)

MC4J Console

XMOJO - Model MBean Example (ServerInfo)XMOJO Web based console

JBoss – “XMBean” Example (CacheMBean)

JBoss Web based console & MC4J Console

JDK1.5 Standard MBeans and JConsole

Page 21: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

Books

JMX in ActionBenjamin G. Sullins, Mark WhipplePublisher: Manning Publications Company

JMX: Managing J2EE with Java Management ExtensionsMarc Fleury, Juha Lindfors

Publisher: Sams Java and JMX: Building Manageable Systems

Heather Kreger, Ward K. Harold, Leigh Williamson, Ward HaroldPublisher: Pearson Education

Java Management ExtensionsJ. Steven Perry

Publisher: O'Reilly & Associates, Incorporated JMX Programming

Mike JasnowskiPublisher: Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated

Page 22: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

References Sun JMX Page:

http://java.sun.com/products/JavaManagement JMX Forum [email protected] JBOSS MX:

http://www.jboss.org/developers/projects/jboss/jbossmx.jsp

AdventNet: www.adventnet.com http://www.gartner.com/reprints/adventnet/108841.html Interview with Chris Ebro

http://www.theserverside.com/events/library.jsp JSR77 Article

http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2002/03/27/jsr77.html Original Slides

http://www.trijug.org/downloads/JMXPresentation.ppt

Page 23: JMX Update

Original work by David Moran

References continued MX4J Page: http://mx4j.sourceforge.org MC4J Page: http://mc4j.sourceforge.org XMOJO Page: http://www.xmojo.org Jconsole page: http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/tooldocs/share/jconsole.html

Tutorial Page: http://www.admc.com/blaine/howtos/jmx/jmx.html

Article on JMX: http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/09/29/tigerjmx.html