You can develop an administrative client program that utilizes WebSphere® Application Server administrative application programming interfaces
(APIs) and Java™ Management Extensions (JMX).
About this task
Product administrative APIs provide control of the operational aspects of your distributed system
as well as the ability to update your configuration. For information about the AdminClient
interface, view the application programming interfaces documentation.
See examples of MBean operations. For information on MBean programming, see MBean Java API
documentation. In this documentation, click .
This example shows how to get and use a NodeAgent MBean, which is not
available for your product. However, the description of how to get and put the NodeAgent MBean is
similar to what you would do for other MBeans that are available for your
product.
Procedure
- Create an AdminClient instance.
An administrative
client program needs to invoke methods on the AdminService object that is running in the application
server in the base installation.
The AdminClient class provides a proxy to the
remote AdminService object through one of the supported Java Management Extensions (JMX)
connectors.
- The following example shows how to create an AdminClient instance for the Simple Object Access
Protocol (SOAP) connector:
Properties connectProps = new Properties();
connectProps.setProperty(
AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE, AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE_SOAP);
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_HOST, "localhost");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_PORT, "8879");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.USERNAME, "test2");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.PASSWORD, "user24test");
AdminClient adminClient = null;
try
{
adminClient = AdminClientFactory.createAdminClient(connectProps);
}
catch (ConnectorException e)
{
System.out.println("Exception creating admin client: " + e);
}
- Set up a Properties object.
The example sets up a Properties object with the properties that
are required to get to your server. In this case, you use the SOAP connector to reach the server;
for the connector type, use the value: AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE_SOAP.
![[AIX Solaris HP-UX Linux Windows]](../images/ngdist.svg)
For simplicity, run the client program on the same machine as the
server; use localhost for the host name. To access a remote host instead of a
local host, use a network resolvable name for that host.
- Set the port number on which the server SOAP connector is listening.
In a single server
installation, the default port number for the application server SOAP connector is 8880.
- After the connection properties are set, use the AdminClientFactory class and the Properties
object to create an AdminClient object that is connected to your chosen server.
Depending on
factors such as your desired protocol and security environment, you might need to set other
properties. For example, if you enable security for your application client program, include the
javax.net.ssl.* properties. For more detailed information about the AdminClient interface, the
javax.net.ssl.* properties, and additional creation examples, refer to the AdminClient interface in
the application programming interfaces documentation.
- The following example shows how to create an AdminClient instance for the Remote Method
Invocation (RMI) connector. Some commands are split on multiple lines for printing
purposes.
Properties connectProps = new Properties();
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE, AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE_RMI);
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_HOST, "localhost");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_PORT, "2809");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.USERNAME, "test2");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.PASSWORD, "user24test");
System.setProperty("com.ibm.CORBA.ConfigURL",
"file:C:/AA/cf010839.26/profiles/AppSrv02/properties/sas.client.props");
System.setProperty("com.ibm.SSL.ConfigURL",
"file:C:/AA/cf010839.26/profiles/AppSrv02/properties/ssl.client.props");
AdminClient adminClient = null;
try
{
adminClient = AdminClientFactory.createAdminClient(connectProps);
}
catch (ConnectorException e)
{
System.out.println("Exception creating admin client: " + e);
}
Supported configurations: When you use the createAdminClient method within
application code that runs on an application server, such as within servlets and JavaServer Pages
(JSP) files, you must set the CACHE_DISABLED property to true. For
example:
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CACHE_DISABLED, "true");
- Set up a Properties object.
The example sets up a Properties object with the properties that
are required to get to your server. In this case, you use the Remote Method Invocation connector to
reach the server; for the connector type, use the value: AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE_RMI.
![[AIX Solaris HP-UX Linux Windows]](../images/ngdist.svg)
For simplicity, run the client program on the same machine as the
server; use localhost for the host name.To access a remote host instead of a
local host, use a network resolvable name for that host.
- Set the port number on which the server RMI connector is listening.
In a single server
installation, the default port number for the application server RMI connector is 2809. In a WebSphere Application Server Network Deployment installation, the default port number for the
deployment manager RMI connector is 9809.
- After the connection properties are set, use the AdminClientFactory class and the Properties
object to create an AdminClient object that is connected to your chosen server.
Depending on
factors such as your desired protocol and security environment, you might need to set other
properties. For example, if you enable security for your application client program, you need to set
a system property to point to the ssl.client.props file and the sas.client.props file. If you run on
a local machine you can point to the actual location. If you run on a remote machine, you can copy
these properties files from the server machine and put them anywhere you want, specifying the path
to where you put the files.
You can specify a user name and password inside the
sas.client.props file, When you do, specify com.ibm.CORBA.loginSource=properties.
If you want to set the user name and password inside your client program, specify
com.ibm.CORBA.loginSource=none in the sas.client.props file.
- Find an MBean.
When you obtain an AdminClient instance, you can use it to access managed resources in the
administration servers and application servers. Each managed resource registers an MBean with the
AdminService through which you can access the resource. The MBean is represented by an ObjectName
instance that identifies the MBean. An ObjectName instance consists of a domain name followed by an
unordered set of one or more key properties. The syntax for the domain name follows:
[domainName]:property=value[,property=value]*
For
WebSphere Application Server, the domain name is
WebSphere and the key properties defined for administration are as
follows:
Table 1. Key property descriptions. Key properties include types, name,
cell, node, and process.
| Key Property |
Description |
| type |
The type of MBean. For example: Server, TraceService, Java virtual
machine (JVM). |
| name |
The name identifier for the individual instance of the
MBean. |
| cell |
The name of the cell that the MBean is running. |
| node |
The name of the node that the MBean is running. |
| process |
The name of the process that the MBean is running. |
Some MBeans in WebSphere Application Server use
additional key properties. An MBean without key properties can be registered with the MBean server
in a WebSphere Application Server process. However, such an MBean cannot
participate in the distributed enhancements that the product adds, for example, request routing,
distributed event notification, and so on.
If you know the complete set of key properties for
an ObjectName instance, you can use it to find the MBean it identifies. However, finding MBeans
without having to know all of their key properties is usually more practical and convenient. Use the
wildcard character asterisk (
*) for any key properties that you do not need to
match. The following table provides some examples of object names with wildcard key properties that
match single or multiple MBeans.
Table 2. Examples object names with wildcard key
properties. Include asterisks (*) to specify wildcard key properties.
| Object name |
Description |
| *:type=Server,* |
All MBeans of type Server |
| *:node=Node1,type=Server,* |
All MBeans of type Server on Node1 |
| *:type=JVM,process=server1,node=Node1,* |
The JVM MBean in the server named server1 node Node1 |
| *:process=server1,* |
All MBeans in all servers named server1 |
| *:process=server1,node=Node1,* |
All MBeans in the server named server1 on Node1 |
You can locate an MBean by querying for it with object names that match key
properties. The following example shows how to find the MBean for the node agent of node,
MyNode:
String nodeName = "MyNode";
String query = "WebSphere:type=NodeAgent,node=" + nodeName + ",*";
ObjectName queryName = new ObjectName(query);
ObjectName nodeAgent = null;
Set s = adminClient.queryNames(queryName, null);
if (!s.isEmpty())
nodeAgent = (ObjectName)s.iterator().next();
else
System.out.println("Node agent MBean was not found");
- Build an ObjectName instance with a query string that specifies the key properties of
type and node.
By using a wildcard for the remaining key properties, this pattern matches the object names for
all MBeans of the type NodeAgent on the node MyNode. Because only one node agent per node exists,
this information is sufficient to identify the MBean that you want.
- Give this ObjectName instance to the queryNames method of the AdminClient
interface.
The AdminClient interface performs the remote call to the AdminService interface to obtain the
set of MBean object names that match the query. The null second parameter to this method is a query
expression (QueryExp) object that you can use as an additional query over the MBeans that match the
ObjectName pattern in the first parameter.
- Use the set iterator to get the first and, in this case, only element.
The element is the MBean ObjectName instance of the node agent.
- Use the MBean.
What a particular MBean can do depends on the management
interface of that MBean. An MBean can declare:
- Attributes that you can obtain or set
- Operations that you can invoke
- Notifications for which you can register listeners
For the MBeans provided by
WebSphere Application Server, you can find
information about the interfaces they support in the MBean API documentation.
The
following example invokes one of the operations available on the NodeAgent MBean that you located
previously. The following example starts the
MyServer application server:
String opName = "launchProcess";
String signature[] = { "java.lang.String" };
String params[] = { "MyServer" };
try
{
adminClient.invoke(nodeAgent, opName, params, signature);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
System.out.println("Exception invoking launchProcess: " + e);
}
The
AdminClient.invoke method is a generic means of invoking any operation on any MBean. The parameters
are:
- The object name of the target MBean,
nodeAgent
- The name of the operation,
opName
- An object array that contains the operation parameters,
params
- A string array that contains the operation signature,
signature
The launchProcess operation in the example has a single parameter which is a string that
identifies the server to start.
The invoke method returns an object instance, which the
calling code can use to cast to the correct return type for the invoked operation. The launchProcess
operation is declared void so that you can ignore the return value in this
example.
- Register for events.
In addition to managing resources, the JMX API also supports application monitoring for specific
administrative events. Certain events produce notifications, for example, when a server starts.
Administrative applications can register as listeners for these notifications. The WebSphere Application Server provides a full implementation of the JMX
notification model, and provides additional function so you can receive notifications in a
distributed environment. For a complete list of the notifications emitted from product MBeans, refer
to the com.ibm.websphere.management.NotificationConstants class in the MBean API documentation.
The following example shows how an object can register for event notifications that are emitted
from an MBean using the ObjectName node agent:
adminClient.addNotificationListener(nodeAgent, this, null, null);
In this example, the first parameter is the ObjectName for the node agent MBean. The second
parameter identifies the listener object, which must implement the NotificationListener interface.
In this case, the calling object is the listener. The third parameter is a filter that you can use
to indicate which notifications you want to receive. When you leave this value as
null, you receive all notifications from this MBean. The final parameter is a
handback object that you can use to set the JMX API to return to you when it emits a
notification.
Another enhanced feature that Application Server provides is the ability to register as a
notification listener of multiple MBeans with one call. This registration is done through the
addNotificationListenerExtended method of the AdminClient interface, an extension of the standard
JMX addNotificationListener method. This extension method even lets you register for MBeans that are
not currently active. This registration is important in situations where you want to monitor events
from resources that can be stopped and restarted during the lifetime of your administrative client
program.
- Handle the events.
Objects receive JMX event notifications through the handleNotification method, which is defined
by the NotificationListener interface and which any event receiver must implement. The following
example is an implementation of the handleNotification method that reports the notifications that it
receives:
public void handleNotification(Notification n, Object handback)
{
System.out.println("***************************************************");
System.out.println("* Notification received at " + new Date().toString());
System.out.println("* type = " + ntfyObj.getType());
System.out.println("* message = " + ntfyObj.getMessage());
System.out.println("* source = " + ntfyObj.getSource());
System.out.println(
"* seqNum = " + Long.toString(ntfyObj.getSequenceNumber()));
System.out.println("* timeStamp = " + new Date(ntfyObj.getTimeStamp()));
System.out.println("* userData = " + ntfyObj.getUserData());
System.out.println("***************************************************");
}
Results
The administrative client can handle event notifications that are emitted from an MBean.
Avoid trouble: If a client program registers a notification listener
through an RMI or JSR160RMI connector and the ORB thread does not stop running, and thus prevents
the Java virtual machine from exiting, add a System.exit() statement to the client
program. The ORB starts a thread to handle notification propagation to the client. This thread does
not automatically exit with the client main thread unless the main thread has a
System.exit() statement. Place a System.exit() statement in a
location in the client program that enables the ORB thread and main thread to stop processing. For
example, place the System.exit() statement in a catch or
finally clause of the client program main try block.
Example: Administrative client program
This example shows how to connect to the node agent server, which is not
available for your product. However, you can connect to your server by changing the host and port
values. Substitute your server for the node agent server references. Since the NodeAgent MBean is
not available for your product, substitute the queryNames string to search for another
MBean.
Copy the contents to a file named
AdminClientExample.java. After changing the node name
and server name to the appropriate values for your configuration, you can compile and run it using
the instructions from
Creating a custom Java administrative client
program using WebSphere Application Server administrative Java
APIsimport java.util.Date;
import java.util.Properties;
import java.util.Set;
import javax.management.InstanceNotFoundException;
import javax.management.MalformedObjectNameException;
import javax.management.Notification;
import javax.management.NotificationListener;
import javax.management.ObjectName;
import com.ibm.websphere.management.AdminClient;
import com.ibm.websphere.management.AdminClientFactory;
import com.ibm.websphere.management.exception.ConnectorException;
public class AdminClientExample implements NotificationListener
{
private AdminClient adminClient;
private ObjectName nodeAgent;
private long ntfyCount = 0;
public static void main(String[] args)
{
AdminClientExample ace = new AdminClientExample();
// Create an AdminClient
ace.createAdminClient();
// Find a NodeAgent MBean
ace.getNodeAgentMBean("ellington");
// Invoke launchProcess
ace.invokeLaunchProcess("server1");
// Register for NodeAgent events
ace.registerNotificationListener();
// Run until interrupted
ace.countNotifications();
}
private void createAdminClient()
{
// Set up a Properties object for the JMX connector attributes
Properties connectProps = new Properties();
connectProps.setProperty(
AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE, AdminClient.CONNECTOR_TYPE_SOAP);
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_HOST, "localhost");
connectProps.setProperty(AdminClient.CONNECTOR_PORT, "8879");
// Get an AdminClient based on the connector properties
try
{
adminClient = AdminClientFactory.createAdminClient(connectProps);
}
catch (ConnectorException e)
{
System.out.println("Exception creating admin client: " + e);
System.exit(-1);
}
System.out.println("Connected to DeploymentManager");
}
private void getNodeAgentMBean(String nodeName)
{
// Query for the ObjectName of the NodeAgent MBean on the given node
try
{
String query = "WebSphere:type=NodeAgent,node=" + nodeName + ",*";
ObjectName queryName = new ObjectName(query);
Set s = adminClient.queryNames(queryName, null);
if (!s.isEmpty())
nodeAgent = (ObjectName)s.iterator().next();
else
{
System.out.println("Node agent MBean was not found");
System.exit(-1);
}
}
catch (MalformedObjectNameException e)
{
System.out.println(e);
System.exit(-1);
}
catch (ConnectorException e)
{
System.out.println(e);
System.exit(-1);
}
System.out.println("Found NodeAgent MBean for node " + nodeName);
}
private void invokeLaunchProcess(String serverName)
{
// Use the launchProcess operation on the NodeAgent MBean to start
// the given server
String opName = "launchProcess";
String signature[] = { "java.lang.String" };
String params[] = { serverName };
boolean launched = false;
try
{
Boolean b = (Boolean)adminClient.invoke(
nodeAgent, opName, params, signature);
launched = b.booleanValue();
if (launched)
System.out.println(serverName + " was launched");
else
System.out.println(serverName + " was not launched");
}
catch (Exception e)
{
System.out.println("Exception invoking launchProcess: " + e);
}
}
private void registerNotificationListener()
{
// Register this object as a listener for notifications from the
// NodeAgent MBean. Don't use a filter and don't use a handback
// object.
try
{
adminClient.addNotificationListener(nodeAgent, this, null, null);
System.out.println("Registered for event notifications");
}
catch (InstanceNotFoundException e)
{
System.out.println(e);
e.printStackTrace();
}
catch (ConnectorException e)
{
System.out.println(e);
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
public void handleNotification(Notification ntfyObj, Object handback)
{
// Each notification that the NodeAgent MBean generates will result in
// this method being called
ntfyCount++;
System.out.println("***************************************************");
System.out.println("* Notification received at " + new Date().toString());
System.out.println("* type = " + ntfyObj.getType());
System.out.println("* message = " + ntfyObj.getMessage());
System.out.println("* source = " + ntfyObj.getSource());
System.out.println(
"* seqNum = " + Long.toString(ntfyObj.getSequenceNumber()));
System.out.println("* timeStamp = " + new Date(ntfyObj.getTimeStamp()));
System.out.println("* userData = " + ntfyObj.getUserData());
System.out.println("***************************************************");
}
private void countNotifications()
{
// Run until killed
try
{
while (true)
{
Thread.currentThread().sleep(60000);
System.out.println(ntfyCount + " notification have been received");
}
}
catch (InterruptedException e)
{
}
}
}