The Java Management Extensions (JMX) standard is gaining adoption within the J2EE community for the management of applications, as well as application servers and other infrastructure software. JMX ...
Let’s face it, configuration management of any application server can be a burden, and most projects don’t even have enough development cycles to include a configuration framework. Java Management ...
The Java Management Extensions (JMX) technology is a key part of both the Java 2 Platform's Standard Edition (J2SE) 5 and Enterprise Edition (J2EE). Support for this standard is now required in ...
Does O’Reilly’s new book explain what you need to know about JMX? Your email has been sent What is JMX and why would you want to use it? Find out whether this new book from O'Reilly might get you ...
Too often, developers lack the time to build management functionality into applications being rushed into production. It is a costly omission: Problems found in QA and testing, not to mention ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Slow-growing support for Sun Microsystems Inc.s Java ...
Sapient Corp. on Tuesday took a new technology for managing Java applications and released it to the open-source community. The technology, MC4J (Management Console for Java), is designed to simplify ...
NSClient4j is a pure Java API that provides simple and quick access to Windows Performance Monitor (WPM) statistics. These statistics prove invaluable for monitoring your Windows servers and providing ...
JDK 5.0 and JDK 6.0 include the Java Monitoring & Management Console tool, also known as JConsole. Read about JConsole's usage options, and find out how JConsole changed from JDK 5 to JDK 6. In ...
In the last article, we showed how you can use JConsole to manage a local application or just peer into the JVM for a view of how it is working. Useful as this is in development, out in the field, the ...