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Article donated by: Hernan Cunico

This article is an attempt to cover as many administrative tasks as possible, common and not so common tasks. This article is grouped in four main sections having a similar flow to what you would find while using the Geronimo Administration Console, this way should be easier for you to familiarize on both tasks and console.

This article is organized in the following sections:

Administering the Apache Geronimo Server

Covered in this section are the most common, every day, server related administrative tasks you may deal with. Subsequent sections will focus on configuring services, managing applications and configuring security.

Changing the Web container [Jetty or Tomcat]

When you download and build Apache Geronimo from source code (from the trunk) you would get a directory structure similar to this one:

  • applications
  • assemblies
  • configs
  • docs_nopublish
  • etc
  • modules
  • openejb
  • plugins
  • sandbox
  • xdocs

If you look under the assemblies directory you will find the following subdirectories:

  • j2ee-installer
  • j2ee-jetty-server
  • j2ee-tomcat-server

We will focus on the last two directories that, as you may expect, contain self-contained images of Apache Geronimo configured to use either of these two Web containers.

Depending on whether you want to use Jetty or Tomcat you will change to the respective directory (j2ee-jetty-server or j2ee-tomcat-server), the internal subdirectory structure will be the same. Once in the Web container specific directory, change directory once again to target/geronimo-1.0-SNAPSHOT. This directory is your self-contained, totally complete, Apache Geronimo server. You may copy this directory to a different location. This directory is being referenced as <geronimo_home> throughout these series of articles.

So, selecting the Web container is no longer a matter of changing configuration files but rather choosing a directory structure for the different assemblies. Within this structure you will find a /bin directory, the next section explains the commands located in this directory and how to start and stop the server.

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Starting and stopping the server

There are two command line ways to start the server. From a command line window or terminal change directory to <geronimo_home>/bin. From there you can either type:

java -jar server.jar

or simply

startup

Refer to the Startup section for all the options for this command.

To stop the server you will have to open a new command line window or terminal, change directory to <geronimo_home>/bin and run the shutdown command. You will be prompted for username and password. Refer to the Shutdown section for all the options for this command.

If the server is already running you have the option of using the Geronimo Administration Console to shutdown the server remotely. With the server up and running open a Web browser and point to the following URL to access the console:

http://localhost:8080/console

Log in to the Geronimo Administration Console and click on Shutdown on the Console Navigation panel on the left.

When you click on the Shutdown button in the Server Manager portlet, you will be prompted one more time to confirm the server shutdown. Click OK to confirm and shutdown the server. No need to mention that the connection from the Administration Console will be lost and you will need to restart the server from a terminal or command line window.

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Configure log level

As explained in the Geronimo Administration Console section, the Administration Console provides four portlets for configuring and viewing the server's logs, these portlets are the Log Manager, Server Log Viewer, Derby Log Viewer and Web Access Log Viewer.

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Log Manager

The Log Manager portlet options are illustrated in the following figure. From this portlet you can specify the location of the log configuration file. By default this value is set to var/log/server-log4j.properties.

Other value you can modify in from this portlet is the Refresh Period. This value tells Geronimo how often (in seconds) it should check for any changes to the configuration file. By default this value is set to 60 seconds.

From this portlet you can also change the Log Level. By default this value is set to INFO, the possible values you can choose from are All, DEBUG, INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL, TRACE and OFF.

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Server Log Viewer

The Server Log Viewer portlet options are illustrated in the following figure. From this portlet you can view the Geronimo server logs as well as set filters for refining the results displayed.

The Reset link on the upper left corner will reset any filtering criteria you may have specified to the Geronimo Administration Console's defaults and will display the last 10 lines (if any) of the current Geronimo server log.

The Filter Results: area will let you specify different filtering criteria to further narrowing down your search. The File pull-down menu allows you to select the log file to view. The logs listed in this pull-down menu are ruled by the Configuration File (server-log4j.properties by default) specified in the #Log Manager portlet. The number of log files to choose from the File pull-down menu will depend on the number of log files defined in the server-log4j.properties configuration file.

Lines ..to.. lets you specify a range of line of log to analyze. Max Results limits the number of lines to be displayed. Level displays only those errors occurred for that Log Level. Containing text lets you enter a specific string to search through the server log. With Exceptions by clicking this checkbox will be displayed not just the error but also the exception, the stack trace display will be limited to the number lines set by the Max Results value.

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Derby Log Viewer

The Derby Log viewer portlet options are illustrated in the following figure. From this portlet you can view the Derby server logs as well as set filters for refining the results displayed.

The Reset link on the upper left corner will reset any filtering criteria you may have specified to the Geronimo Administration Console's defaults and will display the last 10 lines (if any) of the current Derby server log.

Similar to the #Server Log Viewer portlet, the Filter Results: area will let you specify different filtering criteria to further narrowing down your search. Lines ..to.. lets you specify a range of line of log to analyze. Max Results limits the number of lines to be displayed and Containing text lets you enter a specific string to search through the server log.

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Web Access Log Viewer

The Web Access Log Viewer portlet options are illustrated in the following figure. From this portlet you can view the Web server logs as well as set filters for refining the results displayed.

The Reset link on the upper left corner will reset any filtering criteria you may have specified to the Geronimo Administration Console's defaults. In contrast with the other portlets, the Web Access Log Viewer will display all the lines in the log, it will just be limited by your Web browser display capabilities.

The Filter Results: area will let you specify different filtering criteria to further narrowing down your search. For the Web Access Log Viewer this area is divided in three main groups, Date, Identity and Requests.

  • Date:
    Lets you specify a date range. If the Ignore Dates checkbox is selected, filtering will not be done using the date. All log lines that match the other filtering criteria will be displayed regardless of the date.
  • Identity:
    Lets you specify Remote Address (i.e. 192.168.0.1) and Authenticated User (i.e. system).
  • Request:
    Lets you specify the Request Method from and the Requested URI. You can select the Requested Method from a drop-down menu, the possible values are ANY, POST and GET. To filter by Requested URI just enter a URI, for example http://localhost:8080/console/login.jsp.

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Performance monitoring

Adding new listeners for the Web containers

Configuring the EJB server engine

Configuring J2EE connectors

CORBA/IIOP

Configuring the UDDI server

Configuring Services

Adding files to the Geronimo repository

Configuring database pools

Configuring JMS

Connection factories, queues, topics and destinations.

Configuring JavaMail

Administering applications

Installing and removing applications

include hot deployment and redeployment

Starting and stopping application modules

Administering security

Adding security realms

Importing certificates

Configure LDAP

Configuring SSL

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