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| <!DOCTYPE document [ |
| <!ENTITY project SYSTEM "project.xml"> |
| ]> |
| <document url="manager-howto.html"> |
| |
| &project; |
| |
| <properties> |
| <author email="craigmcc@apache.org">Craig R. McClanahan</author> |
| <title>Manager App HOW-TO</title> |
| </properties> |
| |
| <body> |
| |
| <section name="Table of Contents"> |
| <toc/> |
| </section> |
| |
| <section name="Introduction"> |
| |
| <p>In many production environments, it is very useful to have the capability |
| to deploy a new web application, or undeploy an existing one, without having |
| to shut down and restart the entire container. In addition, you can request |
| an existing application to reload itself, even if you have not declared it |
| to be <code>reloadable</code> in the Tomcat 5 server |
| configuration file.</p> |
| |
| <p>To support these capabilities, Tomcat 5 includes a web application |
| (installed by default on context path <code>/manager</code>) that supports |
| the following functions:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>Deploy a new web application from the uploaded contents of a WAR file.</li> |
| <li>Deploy a new web application, on a specified context path, from the |
| server file system.</li> |
| <li>List the currently deployed web applications, as well as the |
| sessions that are currently active for those web apps.</li> |
| <li>Reload an existing web application, to reflect changes in the |
| contents of <code>/WEB-INF/classes</code> or <code>/WEB-INF/lib</code>. |
| </li> |
| <li>List the OS and JVM property values.</li> |
| <li>List the available global JNDI resources, for use in deployment |
| tools that are preparing <code><ResourceLink></code> elements |
| nested in a <code><Context></code> deployment description.</li> |
| <li>List the available security roles defined in the user database.</li> |
| <li>Start a stopped application (thus making it available again).</li> |
| <li>Stop an existing application (so that it becomes unavailable), but |
| do not undeploy it.</li> |
| <li>Undeploy a deployed web application and delete its document base |
| directory (unless it was deployed from file system).</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>A default Tomcat installation includes the manager. To add an instance of the |
| Manager web application <code>Context</code> to a new host install the |
| <code>manager.xml</code> context configuration file in the |
| <code>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/[enginename]/[hostname]</code> folder. Here is an |
| example: |
| <pre> |
| <Context privileged="true" |
| docBase="/usr/local/kinetic/tomcat5/server/webapps/manager"> |
| </Context> |
| </pre> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>If you have Tomcat configured to support multiple virtual hosts |
| (websites) you would need to configure a Manager for each.</p> |
| |
| <p>There are three ways to use the <strong>Manager</strong> web application. |
| <ul> |
| <li>As an application with a user interface you use in your browser. |
| Here is an example URL where you can replace <code>localhost</code> with |
| your website host name: <code>http://localhost/manager/html/</code> .</li> |
| <li>A minimal version using HTTP requests only which is suitable for use |
| by scripts setup by system administrators. Commands are given as part of the |
| request URI, and responses are in the form of simple text that can be easily |
| parsed and processed. See <a href="#Supported Manager Commands"> |
| Supported Manager Commands</a> for more information.</li> |
| <li>A convenient set of task definitions for the <em>Ant</em> |
| (version 1.4 or later) build tool. See |
| <a href="#Executing Manager Commands With Ant">Executing Manager Commands |
| With Ant</a> for more information.</li> |
| </ul> |
| </p> |
| |
| </section> |
| |
| <section name="Configuring Manager Application Access"> |
| |
| <blockquote><em> |
| <p>The description below uses the variable name $CATALINA_HOME |
| to refer to the directory into which you have installed Tomcat 5, |
| and is the base directory against which most relative paths are |
| resolved. However, if you have configured Tomcat 5 for multiple |
| instances by setting a CATALINA_BASE directory, you should use |
| $CATALINA_BASE instead of $CATALINA_HOME for each of these |
| references.</p> |
| </em></blockquote> |
| |
| <p>It would be quite unsafe to ship Tomcat with default settings that allowed |
| anyone on the Internet to execute the Manager application on your server. |
| Therefore, the Manager application is shipped with the requirement that anyone |
| who attempts to use it must authenticate themselves, using a username and |
| password that have the role <strong>manager</strong> associated with them. |
| Further, there is no username in the default users file |
| (<conf>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/tomcat-users.xml</conf>) that is assigned this |
| role. Therefore, access to the Manager application is completely disabled |
| by default.</p> |
| |
| <p>To enable access to the Manager web application, you must either create |
| a new username/password combination and associate the role name |
| <strong>manager</strong> with it, or add the <strong>manager</strong> role |
| to some existing username/password combination. Exactly where this is done |
| depends on which <code>Realm</code> implementation you are using:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>MemoryRealm</em> - If you have not customized your |
| <code>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml</code> to select a different one, |
| Tomcat 5 defaults to an XML-format file stored at |
| <code>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/tomcat-users.xml</code>, which can be |
| edited with any text editor. This file contains an XML |
| <code><user></code> for each individual user, which might |
| look something like this: |
| <source> |
| <user name="craigmcc" password="secret" roles="standard,manager" /> |
| </source> |
| which defines the username and password used by this individual to |
| log on, and the role names he or she is associated with. You can |
| add the <strong>manager</strong> role to the comma-delimited |
| <code>roles</code> attribute for one or more existing users, and/or |
| create new users with that assigned role.</li> |
| <li><em>JDBCRealm</em> - Your user and role information is stored in |
| a database accessed via JDBC. Add the <strong>manager</strong> role |
| to one or more existing users, and/or create one or more new users |
| with this role assigned, following the standard procedures for your |
| environment.</li> |
| <li><em>JNDIRealm</em> - Your user and role information is stored in |
| a directory server accessed via LDAP. Add the <strong>manager</strong> |
| role to one or more existing users, and/or create one or more new users |
| with this role assigned, following the standard procedures for your |
| environment.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>The first time you attempt to issue one of the Manager commands |
| described in the next section, you will be challenged to log on using |
| BASIC authentication. The username and password you enter do not matter, |
| as long as they identify a valid user in the users database who possesses |
| the role <strong>manager</strong>.</p> |
| |
| <p>In addition to the password restrictions the manager web application |
| could be restricted by the remote IP address or host by adding a |
| <code>RemoteAddrValve</code> or <code>RemoteHostValve</code>. Here is |
| an example of restricting access to the localhost by IP address: |
| <pre> |
| <Context privileged="true"> |
| <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteAddrValve" |
| allow="127\.0\.0\.1"/> |
| </Context> |
| </pre> |
| </p> |
| </section> |
| |
| |
| <section name="Supported Manager Commands"> |
| |
| <p>All commands that the Manager application knows how to process are |
| specified in a single request URI like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| http://{host}:{port}/manager/{command}?{parameters} |
| </source> |
| <p>where <code>{host}</code> and <code>{port}</code> represent the hostname |
| and port number on which Tomcat is running, <code>{command}</code> |
| represents the Manager command you wish to execute, and |
| <code>{parameters}</code> represents the query parameters |
| that are specific to that command. In the illustrations below, customize |
| the host and port appropriately for your installation.</p> |
| |
| <p>Most commands accept one or more of the following query parameters:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><strong>path</strong> - The context path (including the leading slash) |
| of the web application you are dealing with. To select the ROOT web |
| application, specify "/". <strong>NOTE</strong> - |
| It is not possible to perform administrative commands on the |
| Manager application itself.</li> |
| <li><strong>war</strong> - URL of a web application archive (WAR) file, |
| pathname of a directory which contains the web application, or a |
| Context configuration ".xml" file. You can use URLs in any of the |
| following formats: |
| <ul> |
| <li><strong>file:/absolute/path/to/a/directory</strong> - The absolute |
| path of a directory that contains the unpacked version of a web |
| application. This directory will be attached to the context path |
| you specify without any changes.</li> |
| <li><strong>file:/absolute/path/to/a/webapp.war</strong> - The absolute |
| path of a web application archive (WAR) file. This is valid |
| <strong>only</strong> for the <code>/deploy</code> command, and is |
| the only acceptable format to that command.</li> |
| <li><strong>jar:file:/absolute/path/to/a/warfile.war!/</strong> - The |
| URL to a local web application archive (WAR) file. You can use any |
| syntax that is valid for the <code>JarURLConnection</code> class |
| for reference to an entire JAR file.</li> |
| <li><strong>file:/absolute/path/to/a/context.xml</strong> - The |
| absolute path of a web application Context configuration ".xml" |
| file which contains the Context configuration element.</li> |
| <li><strong>directory</strong> - The directory name for the web |
| application context in the Host's application base directory.</li> |
| <li><strong>webapp.war</strong> - The name of a web application war file |
| located in the Host's application base directory.</li> |
| </ul></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>Each command will return a response in <code>text/plain</code> format |
| (i.e. plain ASCII with no HTML markup), making it easy for both humans and |
| programs to read). The first line of the response will begin with either |
| <code>OK</code> or <code>FAIL</code>, indicating whether the requested |
| command was successful or not. In the case of failure, the rest of the first |
| line will contain a description of the problem that was encountered. Some |
| commands include additional lines of information as described below.</p> |
| |
| <p><em>Internationalization Note</em> - The Manager application looks up |
| its message strings in resource bundles, so it is possible that the strings |
| have been translated for your platform. The examples below show the English |
| version of the messages.</p> |
| |
| <blockquote><em> |
| <p><strong>WARNING:</strong> the legacy commands <code>/install</code> and |
| <code>/remove</code> are deprecated. |
| They are presently equivalent to <code>/deploy</code> and <code>/undeploy</code>, |
| but could be removed in a future release.</p> |
| </em></blockquote> |
| |
| <subsection name="Deploy A New Application Remotely"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Upload the web application archive (WAR) file that is specified as the |
| request data in this HTTP PUT request, install it into the <code>appBase</code> |
| directory of our corresponding virtual host, and start it using the war file |
| name without the .war extension as the path. The application can later be |
| undeployed (and the corresponding application directory removed) by use of the |
| <code>/undeploy</code>. To deploy the ROOT web application (the application |
| with a context path of "/"), name the war ROOT.war.</p> |
| |
| <p>The .WAR file may include Tomcat specific deployment configuration, by |
| including a Context configuration XML file in |
| <code>/META-INF/context.xml</code>.</p> |
| |
| <p>URL parameters include: |
| <ul> |
| <li><code>update</code>: When set to true, any existing update will be |
| undeployed first. The default value is set to false.</li> |
| <li><code>tag</code>: Specifying a tag name, this allows associating the |
| deployed webapp with a version number. The application version can |
| be later redeployed when needed using only the tag.</li> |
| </ul> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p><strong>NOTE</strong> - This command is the logical |
| opposite of the <code>/undeploy</code> command.</p> |
| |
| <p>If installation and startup is successful, you will receive a response |
| like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Deployed application at context path /foo |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Application already exists at path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context paths for all currently running web applications must be |
| unique. Therefore, you must undeploy the existing web |
| application using this context path, or choose a different context path |
| for the new one. The <code>update</code> parameter may be specified as |
| a parameter on the URL, with a value of <code>true</code> to avoid this |
| error. In that case, an undeploy will be performed on an existing |
| application before performing the deployment.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to start the new web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details, but likely explanations include |
| problems parsing your <code>/WEB-INF/web.xml</code> file, or missing |
| classes encountered when initializing application event listeners and |
| filters.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="Deploy A New Application from a Local Path"> |
| |
| <p>Deploy and start a new web application, attached to the specified context |
| <code>path</code> (which must not be in use by any other web application). |
| This command is the logical opposite of the <code>/undeploy</code> command.</p> |
| |
| <p>There are a number of different ways the deploy command can be used.</p> |
| |
| <h3>Deploy a version of a previously deployed webapp</h3> |
| |
| <p>This can be used to deploy a previous version of a web application, which |
| has been deployed using the <code>tag</code> attribute. Note that the work |
| directory for the manager webapp will contain the previously deployed WARs; |
| removing it would make the deployment fail. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?path=/footoo&tag=footag |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3>Deploy a Directory or WAR by URL</h3> |
| |
| <p>Deploy a web application directory or ".war" file located on the Tomcat |
| server. If no <code>path</code> is specified, the directory name or the war file |
| name without the ".war" extension is used as the path. The <code>war</code> |
| parameter specifies a URL (including the <code>file:</code> scheme) for either |
| a directory or a web application archive (WAR) file. The supported syntax for |
| a URL referring to a WAR file is described on the Javadocs page for the |
| <code>java.net.JarURLConnection</code> class. Use only URLs that refer to |
| the entire WAR file.</p> |
| |
| <p>In this example the web application located in the directory |
| <code>/path/to/foo</code> on the Tomcat server is deployed as the |
| web application context named <code>/footoo</code>. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?path=/footoo&war=file:/path/to/foo |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>In this example the ".war" file <code>/path/to/bar.war</code> on the |
| Tomcat server is deployed as the web application context named |
| <code>/bar</code>. Notice that there is no <code>path</code> parameter |
| so the context path defaults to the name of the web application archive |
| file without the ".war" extension. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?war=jar:file:/path/to/bar.war!/ |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3>Deploy a Directory or War from the Host appBase</h3> |
| |
| <p>Deploy a web application directory or ".war" file located in your Host |
| appBase directory. The directory name or the war file name without the ".war" |
| extension is used as the path.</p> |
| |
| <p>In this example the web application located in a sub directory named |
| <code>foo</code> in the Host appBase directory of the Tomcat server is |
| deployed as the web application context named <code>/foo</code>. Notice |
| that the context path used is the name of the web application directory. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?war=foo |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>In this example the ".war" file <code>bar.war</code> located in your |
| Host appBase directory on the Tomcat server is deployed as the web |
| application context named <code>/bar</code>. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?war=bar.war |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3>Deploy using a Context configuration ".xml" file</h3> |
| |
| <p>If the Host deployXML flag is set to true you can deploy a web |
| application using a Context configuration ".xml" file and an optional |
| ".war" file or web application directory. The context <code>path</code> |
| is not used when deploying a web application using a context ".xml" |
| configuration file.</p> |
| |
| <p>A Context configuration ".xml" file can contain valid XML for a |
| web application Context just as if it were configured in your |
| Tomcat <code>server.xml</code> configuration file. Here is an |
| example: |
| <source> |
| <Context path="/foobar" docBase="/path/to/application/foobar"> |
| |
| <!-- Link to the user database we will get roles from --> |
| <ResourceLink name="users" global="UserDatabase" |
| type="org.apache.catalina.UserDatabase"/> |
| |
| </Context> |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>When the optional <code>war</code> parameter is set to the URL |
| for a web application ".war" file or directory it overrides any |
| docBase configured in the context configuration ".xml" file.</p> |
| |
| <p>Here is an example of deploying an application using a Context |
| configuration ".xml" file. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?config=file:/path/context.xml |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>Here is an example of deploying an application using a Context |
| configuration ".xml" file and a web application ".war" file located |
| on the server. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/deploy?config=file:/path/context.xml&war=file:/path/bar.war&path=/bar |
| </source> |
| </p> |
| |
| <h3>Deployment Notes</h3> |
| |
| <p>If the Host is configured with unpackWARs=true and you deploy a war |
| file, the war will be unpacked into a directory in your Host appBase |
| directory.</p> |
| |
| <p>If the application war or directory is installed in your Host appBase |
| directory and either the Host is configured with autoDeploy=true or |
| liveDeploy=true, the Context path must match the directory name or |
| war file name without the ".war" extension.</p> |
| |
| <p>For security when untrusted users can manage web applications, the |
| Host deployXML flag can be set to false. This prevents untrusted users |
| from deploying web applications using a configuration XML file and |
| also prevents them from deploying application directories or ".war" |
| files located outside of their Host appBase.</p> |
| |
| |
| <h3>Deploy Response</h3> |
| |
| <p>If installation and startup is successful, you will receive a response |
| like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Deployed application at context path /foo |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Application already exists at path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context paths for all currently running web applications must be |
| unique. Therefore, you must undeploy the existing web |
| application using this context path, or choose a different context path |
| for the new one. The <code>update</code> parameter may be specified as |
| a parameter on the URL, with a value of <code>true</code> to avoid this |
| error. In that case, an undeploy will be performed on an existing |
| application before performing the deployment.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Document base does not exist or is not a readable directory</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The URL specified by the <code>war</code> parameter must identify a |
| directory on this server that contains the "unpacked" version of a |
| web application, or the absolute URL of a web application archive (WAR) |
| file that contains this application. Correct the value specified by |
| the <code>war</code> parameter.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to start the new web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details, but likely explanations include |
| problems parsing your <code>/WEB-INF/web.xml</code> file, or missing |
| classes encountered when initializing application event listeners and |
| filters.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid application URL was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The URL for the directory or web application that you specified |
| was not valid. Such URLs must start with <code>file:</code>, and URLs |
| for a WAR file must end in ".war".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context path must start with a slash character. To reference the |
| ROOT web application use "/".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Context path must match the directory or WAR file name:</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| If the application war or directory is installed in your Host appBase |
| directory and either the Host is configured with autoDeploy=true or |
| liveDeploy=true, the Context path must match the directory name or |
| war file name without the ".war" extension. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Only web applications in the Host web application directory can |
| be installed</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| If the Host deployXML flag is set to false this error will happen |
| if an attempt is made to deploy a web application directory or |
| ".war" file outside of the Host appBase directory. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="List Currently Deployed Applications"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/list |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>List the context paths, current status (<code>running</code> or |
| <code>stopped</code>), and number of active sessions for all currently |
| deployed web applications. A typical response immediately |
| after starting Tomcat might look like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Listed applications for virtual host localhost |
| /webdav:running:0 |
| /examples:running:0 |
| /manager:running:0 |
| /:running:0 |
| </source> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="Reload An Existing Application"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/reload?path=/examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Signal an existing application to shut itself down and reload. This can |
| be useful when the web application context is not reloadable and you have |
| updated classes or property files in the <code>/WEB-INF/classes</code> |
| directory or when you have added or updated jar files in the |
| <code>/WEB-INF/lib</code> directory. |
| </p> |
| <p><strong>NOTE:</strong> The <code>/WEB-INF/web.xml</code> |
| web application configuration file is not reread on a reload. |
| If you have made changes to your web.xml file you must stop |
| then start the web application. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p>If this command succeeds, you will see a response like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Reloaded application at context path /examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to restart the web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context path must start with a slash character. To reference the |
| ROOT web application use "/".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context exists for path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>There is no deployed application on the context path |
| that you specified.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| The <code>path</code> parameter is required. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Reload not supported on WAR deployed at path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| Currently, application reloading (to pick up changes to the classes or |
| <code>web.xml</code> file) is not supported when a web application is |
| deployed directly from a WAR file. It only works when the web application |
| is deployed from an unpacked directory. If you are using a WAR file, |
| you should <code>undeploy</code> and then <code>deploy</code> or |
| <code>deploy</code> with the <code>update</code> parameter the |
| application again to pick up your changes. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="List OS and JVM Properties"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/serverinfo |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Lists information about the Tomcat version, OS, and JVM properties.</p> |
| |
| <p>If an error occurs, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and |
| include an error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to enumerate the system properties. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="List Available Global JNDI Resources"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/resources[?type=xxxxx] |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>List the global JNDI resources that are available for use in resource |
| links for context configuration files. If you specify the <code>type</code> |
| request parameter, the value must be the fully qualified Java class name of |
| the resource type you are interested in (for example, you would specify |
| <code>javax.sql.DataSource</code> to acquire the names of all available |
| JDBC data sources). If you do not specify the <code>type</code> request |
| parameter, resources of all types will be returned.</p> |
| |
| <p>Depending on whether the <code>type</code> request parameter is specified |
| or not, the first line of a normal response will be:</p> |
| <pre> |
| OK - Listed global resources of all types |
| </pre> |
| <p>or</p> |
| <pre> |
| OK - Listed global resources of type xxxxx |
| </pre> |
| <p>followed by one line for each resource. Each line is composed of fields |
| delimited by colon characters (":"), as follows:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Global Resource Name</em> - The name of this global JNDI resource, |
| which would be used in the <code>global</code> attribute of a |
| <code><ResourceLink></code> element.</li> |
| <li><em>Global Resource Type</em> - The fully qualified Java class name of |
| this global JNDI resource.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>If an error occurs, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and |
| include an error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to enumerate the global JNDI |
| resources. Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No global JNDI resources are available</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The Tomcat server you are running has been configured without |
| global JNDI resources.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| |
| <subsection name="List Available Security Roles"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/roles |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>List the security role names (and corresponding descriptions) that are |
| available in the <code>org.apache.catalina.UserDatabase</code> resource that |
| is linked to the <code>users</code> resource reference in the web.xml file |
| for the Manager web application. This would typically be used, for example, |
| by a deployment tool that wanted to create |
| <code><security-role-ref></code> elements to map security role names |
| used in a web application to the role names actually defined within the |
| container.</p> |
| |
| <p>By default, the <code>users</code> resource reference is pointed at the |
| global <code>UserDatabase</code> resource. If you choose to utilize a |
| different user database per virtual host, you should modify the |
| <code><ResourceLink></code> element in the default |
| <code>manager.xml</code> context configuration file to point at the global |
| user database resource for this virtual host.</p> |
| |
| <p>When this command is executed, the first line of the response will be:</p> |
| <pre> |
| OK - Listed security roles |
| </pre> |
| <p>followed by one line for each security role. Each line is composed of |
| fields delimited by colon characters (":") as follows:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Security Role Name</em> - A security role name that is known to Tomcat |
| in the user database.</li> |
| <li><em>Description</em> - Description of this security role (useful in |
| creating user interfaces for selecting roles.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>If an error occurs, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and |
| include an error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Cannot resolve user database reference</em> - A JNDI error prevented |
| the successful lookup of the <code>org.apache.catalina.UserDatabase</code> |
| resource. Check the Tomcat log files for a stack trace associated with |
| this error.</li> |
| <li><em>No user database is available</em> - You have not configured a resource |
| reference for the <code>users</code> resource that points at an |
| appropriate user database instance. Check your <code>manager.xml</code> |
| file and ensure that you have created an appropriate |
| <code><ResourceLink></code> or |
| <code><ResourceParams></code> element for this resource.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| |
| <subsection name="Session Statistics"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/sessions?path=/examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Display the default session timeout for a web application, and the |
| number of currently active sessions that fall within ten-minute ranges of |
| their actual timeout times. For example, after restarting Tomcat and then |
| executing one of the JSP samples in the <code>/examples</code> web app, |
| you might get something like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Session information for application at context path /examples |
| Default maximum session inactive interval 30 minutes |
| 30 - <40 minutes:1 sessions |
| </source> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| |
| <subsection name="Start an Existing Application"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/start?path=/examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Signal a stopped application to restart, and make itself available again. |
| Stopping and starting is useful, for example, if the database required by |
| your application becomes temporarily unavailable. It is usually better to |
| stop the web application that relies on this database rather than letting |
| users continuously encounter database exceptions.</p> |
| |
| <p>If this command succeeds, you will see a response like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Started application at context path /examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to start the web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context path must start with a slash character. To reference the |
| ROOT web application use "/".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context exists for path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>There is no deployed application on the context path |
| that you specified.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| The <code>path</code> parameter is required. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="Stop an Existing Application"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/stop?path=/examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Signal an existing application to make itself unavailable, but leave it |
| deployed. Any request that comes in while an application is |
| stopped will see an HTTP error 404, and this application will show as |
| "stopped" on a list applications command.</p> |
| |
| <p>If this command succeeds, you will see a response like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Stopped application at context path /examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to stop the web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context path must start with a slash character. To reference the |
| ROOT web application use "/".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context exists for path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>There is no deployed application on the context path |
| that you specified.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| The <code>path</code> parameter is required. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| |
| <subsection name="Undeploy an Existing Application"> |
| |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/undeploy?path=/examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p><strong><font color="red">WARNING</font> - This command will delete any web |
| application artifacts that exist within <code>appBase</code> directory |
| (typically "webapps") for this virtual host</strong>. |
| This will delete the the application .WAR, if present, |
| the application directory resulting either from a deploy in unpacked form |
| or from .WAR expansion as well as the XML Context definition from |
| <code>$CATALINA_HOME/conf/[enginename]/[hostname]/</code> directory. |
| If you simply want to take an application |
| out of service, you should use the <code>/stop</code> command instead.</p> |
| |
| <p>Signal an existing application to gracefully shut itself down, and |
| remove it from Tomcat (which also makes this context path available for |
| reuse later). In addition, the document root directory is removed, if it |
| exists in the <code>appBase</code> directory (typically "webapps") for |
| this virtual host. This command is the logical opposite of the |
| <code>/deploy</code> command.</p> |
| |
| <p>If this command succeeds, you will see a response like this:</p> |
| <source> |
| OK - Undeployed application at context path /examples |
| </source> |
| |
| <p>Otherwise, the response will start with <code>FAIL</code> and include an |
| error message. Possible causes for problems include:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><em>Encountered exception</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>An exception was encountered trying to undeploy the web application. |
| Check the Tomcat 5 logs for the details.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>Invalid context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>The context path must start with a slash character. To reference the |
| ROOT web application use "/".</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context exists for path /foo</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| <p>There is no deployed application on the context path |
| that you specified.</p> |
| </blockquote></li> |
| <li><em>No context path was specified</em> |
| <blockquote> |
| The <code>path</code> parameter is required. |
| </blockquote></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="Server Status"> |
| |
| <p>From this link , you can view information about the server.</p> |
| |
| <p>First, you have the server and JVM version number, JVM provider, OS name |
| and number followed by the architecture type.</p> |
| |
| <p>Second, there is several information about the memory usage of the JVM |
| (available, total and max memory).</p> |
| |
| <p>Then, there is information about the Tomcat AJP and HTTP connectors. |
| The same information is available for both of them : |
| </p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><p>Threads information : Max threads, min and max spare threads, |
| current thread count and current thread busy.</p></li> |
| <li><p>Request information : Max processing time and processing time, |
| request and error count, bytes received and sent.</p></li> |
| <li><p>A table showing Stage, Time, Bytes Sent, Bytes Receive, Client, |
| VHost and Request. All existing threads are listed in the table. |
| Here is the list of the possible thread stages :</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><p><em>"Parse and Prepare Request"</em> : The request headers are |
| being parsed or the necessary preparation to read the request body (if |
| a transfer encoding has been specified) is taking place.</p></li> |
| <li><p><em>"Service"</em> : The thread is processing a request and |
| generating the response. This stage follows the "Parse and Prepare |
| Request" stage and precedes the "Finishing" stage. There is always at |
| least one thread in this stage (the server-status page).</p></li> |
| <li><p><em>"Finishing"</em> : The end of the request processing. Any |
| remainder of the response still in the output buffers is sent to the |
| client. This stage is followed by "Keep-Alive" if it is appropriate to |
| keep the connection alive or "Ready" if "Keep-Alive" is not |
| appropriate.</p></li> |
| <li><p><em>"Keep-Alive"</em> : The thread keeps the connection open to |
| the client in case the client sends another request. If another request |
| is recieved, the next stage will br "Parse and Prepare Requst". If no |
| request is received before the keep alive times out, the connection will |
| be closed and the next stage will be "Ready".</p></li> |
| <li><p><em>"Ready"</em> : The thread is at rest and ready to be |
| used.</p></li> |
| </ul> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| </subsection> |
| |
| </section> |
| |
| <section name="Executing Manager Commands With Ant"> |
| |
| <p>In addition to the ability to execute Manager commands via HTTP requests, |
| as documented above, Tomcat 5 includes a convenient set of Task definitions |
| for the <em>Ant</em> (version 1.4 or later) build tool. In order to use these |
| commands, you must perform the following setup operations:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>Download the binary distribution of Ant from |
| <a href="http://ant.apache.org">http://ant.apache.org</a>. |
| You must use version <strong>1.4</strong> or later.</li> |
| <li>Install the Ant distribution in a convenient directory (called |
| ANT_HOME in the remainder of these instructions).</li> |
| <li>Copy the file <code>server/lib/catalina-ant.jar</code> from your Tomcat 5 |
| installation into Ant's library directory (<code>$ANT_HOME/lib</code>). |
| </li> |
| <li>Add the <code>$ANT_HOME/bin</code> directory to your <code>PATH</code> |
| environment variable.</li> |
| <li>Configure at least one username/password combination in your Tomcat |
| user database that includes the <code>manager</code> role.</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>To use custom tasks within Ant, you must declare them first with a |
| <code><taskdef></code> element. Therefore, your <code>build.xml</code> |
| file might look something like this:</p> |
| |
| <table border="1"> |
| <tr><td><pre> |
| <project name="My Application" default="compile" basedir="."> |
| |
| <!-- Configure the directory into which the web application is built --> |
| <property name="build" value="${basedir}/build"/> |
| |
| <!-- Configure the context path for this application --> |
| <property name="path" value="/myapp"/> |
| |
| <!-- Configure properties to access the Manager application --> |
| <property name="url" value="http://localhost:8080/manager"/> |
| <property name="username" value="myusername"/> |
| <property name="password" value="mypassword"/> |
| |
| <!-- Configure the custom Ant tasks for the Manager application --> |
| <taskdef name="deploy" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.DeployTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="list" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.ListTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="reload" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.ReloadTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="resources" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.ResourcesTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="roles" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.RolesTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="start" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.StartTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="stop" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.StopTask"/> |
| <taskdef name="undeploy" classname="org.apache.catalina.ant.UndeployTask"/> |
| |
| <!-- Executable Targets --> |
| <target name="compile" description="Compile web application"> |
| <!-- ... construct web application in ${build} subdirectory, and |
| generated a ${path}.war ... --> |
| </target> |
| |
| <target name="deploy" description="Install web application" |
| depends="compile"> |
| <deploy url="${url}" username="${username}" password="${password}" |
| path="${path}" war="file:${build}${path}.war"/> |
| </target> |
| |
| <target name="reload" description="Reload web application" |
| depends="compile"> |
| <reload url="${url}" username="${username}" password="${password}" |
| path="${path}"/> |
| </target> |
| |
| <target name="undeploy" description="Remove web application"> |
| <undeploy url="${url}" username="${username}" password="${password}" |
| path="${path}"/> |
| </target> |
| |
| </project> |
| </pre></td></tr> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p>Now, you can execute commands like <code>ant deploy</code> to deploy the |
| application to a running instance of Tomcat, or <code>ant reload</code> to |
| tell Tomcat to reload it. Note also that most of the interesting values in |
| this <code>build.xml</code> file are defined as replaceable properties, so |
| you can override their values from the command line. For example, you might |
| consider it a security risk to include the real manager password in your |
| <code>build.xml</code> file's source code. To avoid this, omit the password |
| property, and specify it from the command line:</p> |
| <pre> |
| ant -Dpassword=secret deploy |
| </pre> |
| |
| <subsection name="Tasks output capture"> |
| |
| <p>Using <em>Ant</em> version <strong>1.6.2</strong> or later, |
| the Catalina tasks offer the option to capture their output in |
| properties or external files. They support directly the following subset of the |
| <code><redirector></code> type attributes: |
| </p> |
| |
| <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top"><b>Attribute</b></td> |
| <td valign="top"><b>Description</b></td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top"><b>Required</b></td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">output</td> |
| <td valign="top">Name of a file to which to write the output. If |
| the error stream is not also redirected to a file or property, it will |
| appear in this output.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">error</td> |
| <td valign="top">The file to which the standard error of the |
| command should be redirected.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">logError</td> |
| <td valign="top">This attribute is used when you wish to see |
| error output in Ant's log and you are redirecting output to a |
| file/property. The error output will not be included in the output |
| file/property. If you redirect error with the <i>error</i> or <i>errorProperty</i> |
| attributes, this will have no effect.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">append</td> |
| <td valign="top">Whether output and error files should be |
| appended to or overwritten. Defaults to <code>false</code>.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">createemptyfiles</td> |
| <td valign="top">Whether output and error files should be created |
| even when empty. Defaults to <code>true</code>.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">outputproperty</td> |
| <td valign="top">The name of a property in which the output of |
| the command should be stored. Unless the error stream is redirected to |
| a separate file or stream, this property will include the error output.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">errorproperty</td> |
| <td valign="top">The name of a property in which the standard |
| error of the command should be stored.</td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p>A couple of additional attributes can also be specified: |
| </p> |
| <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0"> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top"><b>Attribute</b></td> |
| <td valign="top"><b>Description</b></td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top"><b>Required</b></td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">alwaysLog</td> |
| <td valign="top">This attribute is used when you wish to see the |
| output you are capturing, appearing also in the Ant's log. It must not be |
| used unless you are capturing task output. |
| Defaults to <code>false</code>. |
| <em>This attribute will be supported directly by <code><redirector></code> |
| in Ant 1.6.3</em></td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top">failonerror</td> |
| <td valign="top">This attribute is used when you wish to avoid that |
| any manager command processing error terminates the ant execution. Defaults to <code>true</code>. |
| It must be set to <code>false</code>, if you want to capture error output, |
| otherwise execution will terminate before anything can be captured. |
| <br></br> |
| This attribute acts only on manager command execution, |
| any wrong or missing command attribute will still cause Ant execution termination. |
| </td> |
| <td align="center" valign="top">No</td> |
| </tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p>They also support the embedded <code><redirector></code> element |
| in which you can specify |
| its full set of attributes, but <code>input</code>, <code>inputstring</code> and |
| <code>inputencoding</code> that, even if accepted, are not used because they have |
| no meaning in this context. |
| Refer to <a href="http://ant.apache.org">ant manual</a> for details on |
| <code><redirector></code> element attributes. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Here is a sample build file extract that shows how this output redirection support |
| can be used: |
| </p> |
| |
| <table border="1"> |
| <tr><td><pre> |
| <target name="manager.deploy" |
| depends="context.status" |
| if="context.notInstalled"> |
| <deploy url="${mgr.url}" |
| username="${mgr.username}" |
| password="${mgr.password}" |
| path="${mgr.context.path}" |
| config="${mgr.context.descriptor}"/> |
| </target> |
| |
| <target name="manager.deploy.war" |
| depends="context.status" |
| if="context.deployable"> |
| <deploy url="${mgr.url}" |
| username="${mgr.username}" |
| password="${mgr.password}" |
| update="${mgr.update}" |
| path="${mgr.context.path}" |
| war="${mgr.war.file}"/> |
| </target> |
| |
| <target name="context.status"> |
| <property name="running" value="${mgr.context.path}:running"/> |
| <property name="stopped" value="${mgr.context.path}:stopped"/> |
| |
| <list url="${mgr.url}" |
| outputproperty="ctx.status" |
| username="${mgr.username}" |
| password="${mgr.password}"> |
| </list> |
| |
| <condition property="context.running"> |
| <contains string="${ctx.status}" substring="${running}"/> |
| </condition> |
| <condition property="context.stopped"> |
| <contains string="${ctx.status}" substring="${stopped}"/> |
| </condition> |
| <condition property="context.notInstalled"> |
| <and> |
| <isfalse value="${context.running}"/> |
| <isfalse value="${context.stopped}"/> |
| </and> |
| </condition> |
| <condition property="context.deployable"> |
| <or> |
| <istrue value="${context.notInstalled}"/> |
| <and> |
| <istrue value="${context.running}"/> |
| <istrue value="${mgr.update}"/> |
| </and> |
| <and> |
| <istrue value="${context.stopped}"/> |
| <istrue value="${mgr.update}"/> |
| </and> |
| </or> |
| </condition> |
| <condition property="context.undeployable"> |
| <or> |
| <istrue value="${context.running}"/> |
| <istrue value="${context.stopped}"/> |
| </or> |
| </condition> |
| </target> |
| </pre></td></tr> |
| </table> |
| |
| <p><strong>WARNING:</strong> even if it doesn't make many sense, and is always a bad idea, |
| calling a Catalina task more than once, |
| badly set Ant tasks depends chains may cause that a task be called |
| more than once in the same Ant run, even if not intended to. A bit of caution should be exercised when you are |
| capturing output from that task, because this could lead to something unexpected: |
| <ul> |
| <li>when capturing in a property you will find in it only the output from the <em>first</em> call, because |
| Ant properties are immutable and once set they cannot be changed, |
| </li> |
| <li>when capturing in a file, each run will overwrite it and you will find in it only the <em>last</em> call |
| output, unless you are using the <code>append="true"</code> attribute, in which case you will |
| see the output of each task call appended to the file. |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| </p> |
| |
| </subsection> |
| |
| </section> |
| |
| <section name="Using the JMX Proxy Servlet"> |
| |
| <subsection name="What is JMX Proxy Servlet"> |
| The JMX Proxy Servlet is a lightweight proxy to get and set the |
| tomcat internals. (Or any class that has been exposed via an MBean) |
| Its usage is not very user friendly but the UI is |
| extremely help for integrating command line scripts for monitoring |
| and changing the internals of tomcat. You can do two things with the proxy: |
| get information and set information. For you to really understand the |
| JMX Proxy Servlet, you should have a general understanding of JMX. |
| If you don't know what JMX is, then prepare to be confused. |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="JMX Query command"> |
| This takes the form: |
| <source> |
| http://webserver/manager/jmxproxy/?qry=STUFF |
| </source> |
| Where <code>STUFF</code> is the JMX query you wish to perform. For example, |
| here are some queries you might wish to run: |
| <ul> |
| <li> |
| <code>qry=*%3Atype%3DRequestProcessor%2C* --> |
| type=RequestProcessor</code> which will locate all |
| workers which can process requests and report |
| their state. |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <code>qry=*%3Aj2eeType=Servlet%2c* --> |
| j2eeType=Servlet</code> which return all loaded servlets. |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <code>qry=Catalina%3Atype%3DEnvironment%2Cresourcetype%3DGlobal%2Cname%3DsimpleValue --> |
| Catalina:type=Environment,resourcetype=Global,name=simpleValue</code> |
| which look for a specific MBean by the given name. |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| You'll need to experiment with this to really understand its capabilites. |
| If you provide no <code>qry</code> parameter, then all of the MBeans will |
| be displayed. We really recommend looking at the tomcat source code and |
| understand the JMX spec to get a better understanding of all the queries |
| you may run. |
| </subsection> |
| |
| <subsection name="JMX Set command"> |
| Now that you can query an MBean, its time to muck with Tomcat's internals! |
| The general form of the set command is : |
| <source> |
| http://webserver/manager/jmxproxy/?set=BEANNAME&att=MYATTRIBUTE&val=NEWVALUE |
| </source> |
| So you need to provide 3 request parameters: |
| <ol> |
| <li><code>set</code>: The full bean name</li> |
| <li><code>att</code>: The attribute you wish to alter</li> |
| <li><code>val</code>: The new value </li> |
| </ol> |
| If all goes ok, then it will say OK, otherwise an error message will be |
| shown. For example, lets say we wish to turn up debugging on the fly for the |
| <code>ErrorReportValve</code>. The following will set debugging to 10. |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/jmxproxy/ |
| ?set=Catalina%3Atype%3DValve%2Cname%3DErrorReportValve%2Chost%3Dlocalhost&att=debug&val=10 |
| </source> |
| and my result is (YMMV): |
| <source> |
| Result: ok |
| </source> |
| |
| Here is what I see if I pass in a bad value. Here is the URL I used, |
| I try set debugging equal to 'cowbell': |
| <source> |
| http://localhost:8080/manager/jmxproxy/ |
| ?set=Catalina%3Atype%3DValve%2Cname%3DErrorReportValve%2Chost%3Dlocalhost&att=debug&val=cowbell |
| </source> |
| When I try that, my result is |
| <source> |
| Error: java.lang.NumberFormatException: For input string: "cowbell" |
| </source> |
| </subsection> |
| |
| |
| </section> |
| |
| |
| |
| </body> |
| |
| </document> |