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Java EE 8 High Performance

You're reading from   Java EE 8 High Performance Master techniques such as memory optimization, caching, concurrency, and multithreading to achieve maximum performance from your enterprise applications.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788473064
Length 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Romain Manni-Bucau Romain Manni-Bucau
Author Profile Icon Romain Manni-Bucau
Romain Manni-Bucau
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Money – The Quote Manager Application 2. Looking Under the Cover – What is This EE Thing? FREE CHAPTER 3. Monitor Your Application 4. Application Optimization – Memory Management and Server Configuration 5. Scale Up – Threading and Implications 6. Be Lazy; Cache Your Data 7. Be Fault-Tolerant 8. Loggers and Performances – A Trade-Off 9. Benchmarking Your Application 10. Continuous Performance Evaluation 11. Another Book You May Enjoy

GlassFish ad hoc monitoring

Many servers have inbuilt monitoring capabilities. This depends highly on the server, but it can give some interesting insights without having to use another tool. This is precious when you don't control the machine or don't have the permissions to access/configure the server.

To illustrate this kind of monitoring, let's use our Java EE reference implementation: GlassFish.

Once started with the normal ./bin/asadmin start-domain command, you can activate monitoring with this additional command:

$ ./bin/asadmin enable-monitoring
Command enable-monitoring executed successfully.

Indeed, there is a symmetric command if you want to deactivate monitoring:

$./bin/asadmin disable-monitoring

You can list the monitors available with the get command:

$ ./bin/asadmin get server.monitoring-service.*
server.monitoring-service.module-monitoring-levels...
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