jboss-5.1.0.GA auto start on boot - jboss5.x

I was given the task of installing jboss-5.1.0.GA on a remote ubuntu 10.4 Lts server. With all those resources out there I was able to run jboss successfully but my problem was that I wasn't able to get auto start on boot work so that jboss would be running on the server.
I followed a couple of tutorials that said me create a separate user called jboss and to copy the jboss_init_Redhat.sh to the /etc/init.d/jboss (jboss home, java path ,jboss user and the binding to 0.0.0.0 is all set) and used /etc/init.d/jboss start
but I can't get to see the Jboss page at the Ip on a browser.,
If i do a ./run.sh -b 0.0.0.0 ==> the server is up ...
Can some body shed some light on this issue????

If you want to run JBoss AS on given interface using jboss_init_redhat.sh script look at these line:
#if JBOSS_HOST specified, use -b to bind jboss services to that address
JBOSS_BIND_ADDR=${JBOSS_HOST:+"-b $JBOSS_HOST"}
You should just define new variable before these line:
JBOSS_HOST="0.0.0.0"
You should also check shutdown command (especially when you run your server on some other address then 127.0.0.1 or 0.0.0.0), it should know how to find your server:
JBOSS_CMD_STOP=${JBOSS_CMD_STOP:-"java -classpath $JBOSSCP org.jboss.Shutdown --shutdown -s jnp://${JBOSS_HOST}:1099"}

Related

Having issue with Tomcat when I run in a eclipse

I am novice in java I have installed Tomcat and it runs fine in a browser but when I run in a eclipse its showing error like
Several ports (8005, 8282, 8009) required by Tomcat v7.0 Server at localhost are already in use. The server may already be running in another process, or a system process may be using the port. To start this server you will need to stop the other process or change the port number(s).
I would like to mention one thing I am not authorized to login with admin account I have tried lot to stop the already running stuff through command prompt and i followed this link Deployment error: Starting of tomcat fail
however I am getting the same error is there any way to solve this issue.
Thank You.
Some other process is using one or more of the ports needed by tomcat (8005, 8282, 8009). Probably an old instance of tomcat. Kill it, then try again.
You can run netstat -abn on windows or netstat -apn on Linux to figure out which process is listening to these ports.

Netbeans IDE8 Glassfish 4, GlassFish Server: Administrator port is occupied by null

I just downloaded Netbeans IDE7 with the Glassfish 4.
I just made a project to test it out and see how it goes, and I got this error right from the start:
Could not start GlassFish Server: DAS port is occupied while server is not running
[location]: Deployment error: Could not start GlassFish Server: DAS port is occupied while server is not running
See the server log for details.
BUILD FAILED (total time: 1 second)
I have reinstalled it three times, with the Glassfish and without and then later add it to Netbeans, i changed the domain.xml name="admin-listener" port="4848" to something different
i did this cmd code netstat -aon | find ":80" | find "LISTENING" and closed the programm.
i ran as administrator i think i did almost everyting but it wont simply run, and it keeps returning to the same error
usually i would have given up but this software is required for a school project.
i will try everything.
i hope someone can help me.
Thx in advance
You have to find the process that has taken the port you need. You can try finding it by running the terminal with the command:
netstat -aon | find ":80" | find "LISTENING"
Find the information you need and than kill the process with specific PID in Task Manager.
I hope you find this useful,
Thanks.
A few points:
Why not download NetBeans 8 that also includes GlassFish 4?
Assuming that you have successfully figured out that no other process is listening on port 4848, then Which version of the JDK are you using? Can you try JDK 7 if you are using JDK 8?
Looks like you are not alone - see NetBeans bug 237477.
Note that this isn't the only problem. I run on a Mac and can use the asadmin start command successfully on the remote server. IF I try to start it from NetBeans, it gives me this message.
One hint might be that the domain.xml file is set so that the listening port is 9090, the properties screen for the remote server, which I entered 9090 for, tells me the HTTP port is 23043. I can't edit it. Everytime I try to create that remote server it sets it to this value. The server will run fine if I start it by hand on the remote server, but NetBeans doesn't think it is running.
This occurs because I had to select domain2 because NetBeans says domain1 is already registered on my local machine. I wanted to have a local domain1 and a remote domain1 that are identical so I can test locally, and then deploy remotely.
This error message could be misleading, because it is the same when IP adress of glassfish server in netbeans settings is wrong (not port).
By my experience with this over win 8.1 + Netbeans 8.0 + Glassfish 4.0
The problem resides in permission of folder in windows that block the server execution
I solve the problem changing the permission of the glassfish/domain/domain1 folder for xxxx/user to totalcontrol
If this not solve your problem, try launch the server over console:
asadmin start-domain --verbose
And read the exceptions to try solve the problem.
-EDIT:
Reading other post to try help:
like this: Glassfish server started failed in netbeans 6.9
Or check your firewall:
allow >> C:\Program
Files\glassfish-X.X\glassfish\modules\glassfish.jar
In my case when using the command
netstat -aon | find ":4848" | find "LISTENING"
I noticed that one process was occupying this port. When checked what it was I noticed it was VMWare NAT controller, because I previously had configured a network adapter to listen to this port.
Just stopped all VMWare related services (in my case I didn't need them for development purposes), and solved the problem.
Go to Task Manager -> Services -> Stop Process whose PID IS 3136,2268,2468 ,23.... and near Range in PID. All processes near to the web server's PID.
It works for me on Windows 8.1 pro & Windows 7.
I had the same error message.
Turned out it was caused because my firewall blocked port 4848
May be late but I solved this issue by deleting the app server from the Netbeans and by adding it again. In my case Netbeans 8.2 and Payara 4.1 instead of Glassfish.
If you changed the host of Glassfish server then set it to localhost it should work.

GlassFish WAR file deployment to a non-default port

I am attempting to deploy a war file (Oracle's APEX Listener) to a GlassFish 3.1.2.2 server deployed on an RHEL server (I am also seeing the same issues on an Ubuntu server at home).
I used the following command to create the domain:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin create-domain --portbase 8100 myDomain
[I am also creating multiple domains on the same GlassFish server (one GF instance with multiple domains) using values of 8200, 8300, and 8400 for the portbase value and using different domain names.]
I then start the domain using:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin start-domain myDomain
Next, I attempt to deploy the APEX.WAR file using:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin deploy --contextroot apex apex.war
But, I get the following error:
Remote server does not listen for requests on [localhost:4848]. Is the server up? Unable to get remote commands. Closest matching local
command(s):
help Command deploy failed.
I have also used the following commands with the same result:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin deploy apex.war
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin deploy --target myDomain apex.war
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin deploy --target domain apex.war
And I get the same error each time.
I can deploy the file using the admin gui, but this is for a customer installation and I would really like to do as much as possible from the bash shell script I have created.
I am also installing the Java 1.7.0_45 JDK and modifying the $GLASSFISH_HOME/config/asenv.conf file to include AS_JAVA=
The error is actually correct because the admin port is 8148. But, how do I get GlassFish to "know" to use 8148 instead of 4848.
I have also tried this by:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin create-domain --adminport 8148
--domainproperties http.ssl.port=8152
but this gets the same results as above.
Thanks for reading this tome of a post and any info on how to fix this would be greatly appreciated!
/dave
You can specify the port to which asadmin should connect as a parameter like this:
asadmin --port 4949 start-domain
If this isn't enough you can even specify the hostname with --host.
Have a look at the official documentation to see all possible parameters.
i get the same error ,you should do like this:
$GLASSFISH_HOME/bin/asadmin --port 8148 deploy apex.war
and input username and password the default user is admin and password is adminadmin
good luck for you!

How can I specify run.bat options when running JBoss as a service?

In Windows Server 2008 R2, I can run JBoss successfully from the command line specifying options suchs as "-b 0.0.0.0". However, I want to run JBoss as a Windows service. I understand that I run /Path/To/JBoss/bin/service.bat install from the command line and this basically runs the start.bat whenever the computer starts. How do I configure the service to start with the command line arguments of -b 0.0.0.0?
Possible duplicate of How can I bind a JBoss AS 6 running as service to 0.0.0.0?
You could just hardcode -b 0.0.0.0 inside run.bat.
BTW, consider using Java Service Wrapper or YAJSW as RunJBossAsAServiceOnWindows wiki suggests. It allows to specify various service params in config.

Can't stop or restart JBoss AS 4.2.3 as a service in Fedora

i have a little issue with a Jboss AS 4.2.3 . I'm developing an application in Seam so i'm using Jboss as server. In the client company they have a Jboss AS 4.2.3 installed on Fedora and configured as a service, so it starts automatically on boot machine with PostgreSQL. So, if i run chkconfig --list i can see Jboss here as a service.
But the problem is when i try to restart, stop or start this service (i have root permissions) using this command:
service jboss stop/restart
But i don't know what happens that looks like it doesn't find the Jboss AS instance that's running because i get this message:
JOBSS_CMD_START = cd /opt/java/jboss/bin; /opt/java/jboss/bin/run.sh -c default
No JBossas is currently running
But it's running because if i enter localhost:8080 on a browser it loads the Jboss page. The server admin of the company doesn't know also why the service can't restart or stop or start and only i know that he followed this tutorial to install and configure JBoss AS:
thewiki4opentech.org/index.php/How_to_install_JBoss_AS_in_CentOS_/RedHat/_Fedora
Also, i tried with
/etc/init.d/jboss stop
And i get the same output. If i use
/opt/java/jboss/bin/start.sh -c default
It tries to start a second instance of Jboss AS but it gives me errors because is trying to use the same ports as already started Jboss instance.
And it's difficult to me because i'm connecting remotely using Teamviewer and i want to deploy an EAR but i can't because i can't restart the service to extract the ear. So i wanna ask you for help if you know why the Jboss AS that's running can't be stopped or started using service jboss stop.
As aditional info, i'm using the config to access Jboss apps from other machines (using 0.0.0.0) and the server has a static IP. The config of my hosts file is this:
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4
192.168.1.106 entertechserver.localdomain entertechserver
#::1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6
Regards.
Well, i think that i found the answer. The server admin copy the script run.sh to /etc/init.d/ but we saw that there's another script named jboss_init_redhat.sh that i think is optimized for redhat/fedora systems, so we used this script to copy to /etc/init.d/ and it works!! Now when i stop it gives me the next output:
JBOSS_CMD_START = cd /opt/java/jboss/bin; /opt/java/jboss/bin/run.sh -c default -b 0.0.0.0
waiting for processes to stop
Really i haven't seen the difference between both scripts yet but it will be intersting to take a look.
Regards.