Version 139.1 by David Holt on 2010/11/26 21:48

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Pascal Robert 57.1 1 === Introduction ===
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David Holt 137.1 3 wotaskd and JavaMonitor were open sourced when WebObjects 5.4 was released in 2007. In 2008 and 2009, the source was modified and included in Project Wonder. This is the list of additions that were added to the Wonder versions of the tools.
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David Avendasora 121.1 5 === Statistics ===
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David Avendasora 113.1 7 If you call [[http://monitorhost:port/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/wa/statistics]], the answer send you back statistics, in JSON format, about instances, per application. Sample :
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David Avendasora 113.1 9 {{code}}
David Avendasora 77.1 10
Pascal Robert 57.1 11 (
12 {
13 "configuredInstances" = "2";
14 "maxSessions" = "0";
15 "maxAvgIdleTime" = "2.078";
16 "avgTransactions" = "44.0000";
17 "sumSessions" = "0";
18 "avgAvgTransactionTime" = "0.0985000";
19 "refusingInstances" = "0";
20 "avgSessions" = "0.0000";
21 "maxTransactions" = "88";
22 "applicationName" = "AjaxExample";
23 "avgAvgIdleTime" = "1.0390000";
24 "maxAvgTransactionTime" = "0.197";
25 "runningInstances" = "2";
26 "sumTransactions" = "88";
27 },
28 {
29 "configuredInstances" = "2";
30 "maxSessions" = "0";
31 "maxAvgIdleTime" = "325.443";
32 "avgTransactions" = "0.5000";
33 "sumSessions" = "0";
34 "avgAvgTransactionTime" = "0.00000";
35 "refusingInstances" = "0";
36 "avgSessions" = "0.0000";
37 "maxTransactions" = "1";
38 "applicationName" = "AjaxExample2";
39 "avgAvgIdleTime" = "162.7215000";
40 "maxAvgTransactionTime" = "0.0";
41 "runningInstances" = "2";
42 "sumTransactions" = "1";
43 }
44 )
45
David Avendasora 113.1 46 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 113.1 48 If JavaMonitor is configured with a password, and I hope you do, pass //pw=monitorpassword// as a argument to the query :
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David Avendasora 113.1 50 [[http://monitorhost:port/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/wa/statistics?pw=monitorpassword]]
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David Avendasora 121.1 52 === Direct Actions to many tasks ===
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David Avendasora 113.1 54 You can do most of the standard tasks you do in Monitor by calling direct actions. They are in a different query handler, ///admin//. They follow the same format and use the same query parameters. Those DA can be useful if you need to restart instances or other tasks within ant or other build/deployment systems.
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David Avendasora 113.1 56 //?type=all// : return details about all applications and instances
57 //?type=app&name=AppName// : return details about all instances of a specific application
58 //?type=ins&name=AppName-InstanceNo// : return details about one specific instance
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David Avendasora 97.1 60 For example, if you want to get details about all instances and applications, you call :
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David Avendasora 113.1 62 [[http://hostname:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/admin/info?type=all]]
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David Avendasora 113.1 64 To get details about the //AjaxExample// application :
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David Avendasora 113.1 66 [[http://hostname:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/admin/info?type=app&name=AjaxExample]]
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David Avendasora 97.1 68 And for a specific instance :
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David Avendasora 113.1 70 [[http://hostname:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/admin/info?type=ins&name=AjaxExample-1]]
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David Avendasora 113.1 72 The response for the direct actions will either send a JSON array or YES/NO. For example, the query //info// for all instances will return :
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David Avendasora 113.1 74 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 105.1 76 [Hudson Build Server for Wonder|http://webobjects.mdimension.com/hudson/job/Wonder54/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/dist/]
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David Avendasora 113.1 78 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 105.1 80 List of available direct actions :
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David Avendasora 113.1 82 ///info// : return details (number of deaths, state, etc.; see above), in JSON, about an instance.
83 ///running// : return YES if the instance is running, NO if not.
84 ///stopped// : return NO if the instance is running, YES if not.
85 ///bounce//: more on it later.
86 ///clearDeaths// : clear the number of deaths (same action as clicking the "Clear deaths" in JavaMonitor)
87 ///turnScheduledOn// : turn scheduling on for an application or instance. Call ///turnScheduledOff// to do the opposite.
88 ///turnRefuseNewSessionsOn// : turn "Refuse new sessions" on, call //turnRefuseNewSessionsOff// to do the opposite.
89 ///turnAutoRecoverOn// : guess what? It activate "Auto recover" And guess again? ///turnAutoRecoverOff// do the opposite
90 ///forceQuit// : force quit an application, might be useful to call it from a monitoring system.
91 ///stop// : stop an application/instance the normal way.
92 ///start// : start an application/instance the normal way.
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David Avendasora 121.1 94 === Automatic archive of SiteConfig.xml ===
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David Avendasora 121.1 96 On every change you do to the configuration, a backup of SiteConfig.xml will be done in, by default, /Library/WebObjects/Configuration.
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98 === Bounce feature ===
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100 In the "list instances" page, you get a "Bounce" action link. This action only work if you have at least one active instance and one inactive. What it does is :
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102 * Find the inactive (eg : not started) instance and start it
103 * Find the active instances (minus the one started the step below) and enable "Refuse New Session"
104 * Bounce the active instances when the minimum session count is reached
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106 This feature, from my understanding, allow you to upload new versions of your app, start up the new version and refuse sessions for the instances running on the older version. I don't know how this will work if your new version use migrations to change your schema (eg : old instances might raise exceptions because of database schema changes), so try it out on a test server before and put your results here.
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108 === REST routes ===
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David Avendasora 113.1 110 On September 28th 2010, REST routes were added in JavaMonitor. Those routes + the direct actions explained in this document allow you to control almost everything remotely (make sure that your JavaMonitor installation is secure). As the direct actions, append //?pw=XXXX// to the URLs if JavaMonitor is password protected.
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David Avendasora 77.1 112 Examples of REST calls :
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David Avendasora 111.1 114 Fetching the details of all applications :
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116 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 109.1 118 curl -X GET http://127.0.0.1:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mApplications.json
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David Avendasora 113.1 120 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 122 Adding a new application :
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David Avendasora 113.1 124 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 109.1 126 curl -X POST -d "{id: 'AjaxExample',type: 'MApplication', name: 'AjaxExample',unixOutputPath: '/opt/Local/Library/WebObjects/Logs', unixPath: '/opt/Local/Library/WebObjects/Applications/AjaxExample.woa/AjaxExample'}" http://127.0.0.1:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mApplications.json
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David Avendasora 113.1 128 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 130 Adding a new instance :
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David Avendasora 113.1 132 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 134 curl -X GET http://127.0.0.1:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mApplications/AjaxExample/addInstance&host=localhost
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David Avendasora 113.1 136 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 138 Delete an application :
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David Avendasora 113.1 140 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 105.1 142 curl -X DELETE http://127.0.0.1:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mApplications/AjaxExample.json
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David Avendasora 113.1 144 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 146 Delete an instance :
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David Avendasora 113.1 148 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 150 curl -X GET http://127.0.0.1:56789/cgi-bin/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mApplications/AjaxExample/deleteInstance?id=1
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David Avendasora 113.1 152 {{/code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 154 Adding a new host :
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David Avendasora 113.1 156 {{code}}
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David Avendasora 111.1 158 curl -X POST -d "{id: 'otherserver.com',type: 'MHost', osType: 'MACOSX',address: '192.168.20.5', name: 'otherserver.com'}" http://127.0.0.1:56789/apps/WebObjects/JavaMonitor.woa/ra/mHosts.json
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David Avendasora 113.1 160 {{/code}}
David Holt 137.1 161
162 === Misc ===
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164 The community's improved versions of **wotaskd.woa** and **JavaMonitor.woa** are now available as full Wonder applications. You can download them pre-built from the [[Hudson Wonder build server>>http://webobjects.mdimension.com/hudson/job/Wonder54/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/dist/]].
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166 Alternatively you can build them from Wonder source and embed the frameworks or copy the frameworks into the //appserver// user home (on OS X 10.5, it's in ///var/empty//).
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168 If you build everything from Wonder source, you can run :
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170 {{code}}
171 ant deployment.tools -Dwonder.patch=54 -Ddeployment.standalone=true
172 {{/code}}
173
174 Please note that you have to build the Wonder before calling //ant deployment.tools//, if you get classpath errors when building the deployment tools, first run:
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176 {{code}}
177 ant frameworks
178 {{/code}}