Jump To Close Expand all Collapse all Table of contents Administration and Configuration Guide 1. Introduction Expand section "1. Introduction" Collapse section "1. Introduction" 1.1. About Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 (JBoss EAP 6) 1.2. Features of JBoss EAP 6 1.3. About JBoss EAP 6 Operating Modes 1.4. About Standalone Servers 1.5. About Managed Domains 1.6. About the Domain Controller 1.7. About Domain Controller Failover 1.8. About Host Controller 1.9. About Server Groups 1.10. About JBoss EAP 6 Profiles 2. Application Server Management Expand section "2. Application Server Management" Collapse section "2. Application Server Management" 2.1. Start and Stop JBoss EAP 6 Expand section "2.1. Start and Stop JBoss EAP 6" Collapse section "2.1. Start and Stop JBoss EAP 6" 2.1.1. Start JBoss EAP 6 2.1.2. Start JBoss EAP 6 as a Standalone Server 2.1.3. Start JBoss EAP 6 as a Managed Domain 2.1.4. Start JBoss EAP 6 with an Alternative Configuration 2.1.5. Stop JBoss EAP 6 2.1.6. Reference of Switches and Arguments to pass at Server Runtime 2.2. Start and Stop Servers Expand section "2.2. Start and Stop Servers" Collapse section "2.2. Start and Stop Servers" 2.2.1. Start and Stop Servers Using the Management CLI 2.2.2. Start a Server Using the Management Console 2.2.3. Stop a Server Using the Management Console 2.3. Filesystem Paths Expand section "2.3. Filesystem Paths" Collapse section "2.3. Filesystem Paths" 2.3.1. Filesystem Paths 2.4. Configuration File History Expand section "2.4. Configuration File History" Collapse section "2.4. Configuration File History" 2.4.1. About JBoss EAP 6 Configuration Files 2.4.2. Configuration File History 2.4.3. Start the Server with a Previous Configuration 2.4.4. Save a Configuration Snapshot Using the Management CLI 2.4.5. Load a Configuration Snapshot Using the Management CLI 2.4.6. Delete a Configuration Snapshot Using Management CLI 2.4.7. List All Configuration Snapshots Using Management CLI 3. Management Interfaces Expand section "3. Management Interfaces" Collapse section "3. Management Interfaces" 3.1. Manage the Application Server 3.2. Management Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) 3.3. About the Management Console and Management CLI 3.4. The Management Console Expand section "3.4. The Management Console" Collapse section "3.4. The Management Console" 3.4.1. Management Console 3.4.2. Log in to the Management Console 3.4.3. Change the Language of the Management Console 3.4.4. Configure a Server Using the Management Console 3.4.5. Add a Deployment in the Management Console 3.4.6. Create a New Server in the Management Console 3.4.7. Change the Default Log Levels Using the Management Console 3.4.8. Create a New Server Group in the Management Console 3.5. The Management CLI Expand section "3.5. The Management CLI" Collapse section "3.5. The Management CLI" 3.5.1. About the Management Command Line Interface (CLI) 3.5.2. Launch the Management CLI 3.5.3. Quit the Management CLI 3.5.4. Connect to a Managed Server Instance Using the Management CLI 3.5.5. Get Help with the Management CLI 3.5.6. Use the Management CLI in Batch Mode 3.5.7. CLI Batch Mode Commands 3.5.8. Use Operations and Commands in the Management CLI 3.5.9. Reference of Management CLI Commands 3.5.10. Reference of Management CLI Operations 3.6. Management CLI Operations Expand section "3.6. Management CLI Operations" Collapse section "3.6. Management CLI Operations" 3.6.1. Display the Attributes of a Resource with the Management CLI 3.6.2. Display the Active User in the Management CLI 3.6.3. Display System and Server Information in the Management CLI 3.6.4. Display an Operation Description using the Management CLI 3.6.5. Display the Operation Names using the Management CLI 3.6.6. Display Available Resources using the Management CLI 3.6.7. Display Available Resource Descriptions using the Management CLI 3.6.8. Reload the Application Server using the Management CLI 3.6.9. Shut the Application Server down using the Management CLI 3.6.10. Configure an Attribute with the Management CLI 3.7. The Management CLI Command History Expand section "3.7. The Management CLI Command History" Collapse section "3.7. The Management CLI Command History" 3.7.1. Use the Management CLI Command History 3.7.2. Show the Management CLI Command history 3.7.3. Clear the Management CLI Command history 3.7.4. Disable the Management CLI Command history 3.7.5. Enable the Management CLI Command history 3.8. Management Interface Audit Logging Expand section "3.8. Management Interface Audit Logging" Collapse section "3.8. Management Interface Audit Logging" 3.8.1. About Management Interface Audit Logging 3.8.2. Enable Management Interface Audit Logging from the Management CLI 3.8.3. About a Management Interface Audit Logging Formatter 3.8.4. About a Management Interface Audit Logging File Handler 3.8.5. About a Management Interface Audit Logging Syslog Handler 3.8.6. Enable Management Interface Audit Logging to a Syslog Server 3.8.7. Management Interface Audit Logging Options 3.8.8. Management Interface Audit Log Fields 4. User Management Expand section "4. User Management" Collapse section "4. User Management" 4.1. User Creation Expand section "4.1. User Creation" Collapse section "4.1. User Creation" 4.1.1. Add the User for the Management Interfaces 4.1.2. Pass Arguments to the User Management add-user Script 4.1.3. Add-user Command Arguments 4.1.4. Specify Alternate Properties Files for User Management Information 4.1.5. Add-user Script Command Line Examples 5. Network and Port Configuration Expand section "5. Network and Port Configuration" Collapse section "5. Network and Port Configuration" 5.1. Interfaces Expand section "5.1. Interfaces" Collapse section "5.1. Interfaces" 5.1.1. About Interfaces 5.1.2. Configure Interfaces 5.2. Socket Binding Groups Expand section "5.2. Socket Binding Groups" Collapse section "5.2. Socket Binding Groups" 5.2.1. About Socket Binding Groups 5.2.2. Configure Socket Bindings 5.2.3. Network Ports Used By JBoss EAP 6 5.2.4. About Port Offsets for Socket Binding Groups 5.2.5. Configure Port Offsets 5.3. IPv6 Expand section "5.3. IPv6" Collapse section "5.3. IPv6" 5.3.1. Configure JVM Stack Preferences for IPv6 Networking 5.3.2. Configure the Interface Declarations for IPv6 Networking 5.3.3. Configure JVM Stack Preferences for IPv6 Addresses 6. Datasource Management Expand section "6. Datasource Management" Collapse section "6. Datasource Management" 6.1. Introduction Expand section "6.1. Introduction" Collapse section "6.1. Introduction" 6.1.1. About JDBC 6.1.2. JBoss EAP 6 Supported Databases 6.1.3. Types of Datasources 6.1.4. The Example Datasource 6.1.5. Deployment of -ds.xml files 6.2. JDBC Drivers Expand section "6.2. JDBC Drivers" Collapse section "6.2. JDBC Drivers" 6.2.1. Install a JDBC Driver with the Management Console 6.2.2. Install a JDBC Driver as a Core Module 6.2.3. JDBC Driver Download Locations 6.2.4. Access Vendor Specific Classes 6.3. Non-XA Datasources Expand section "6.3. Non-XA Datasources" Collapse section "6.3. Non-XA Datasources" 6.3.1. Create a Non-XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.3.2. Modify a Non-XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.3.3. Remove a Non-XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.4. XA Datasources Expand section "6.4. XA Datasources" Collapse section "6.4. XA Datasources" 6.4.1. Create an XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.4.2. Modify an XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.4.3. Remove an XA Datasource with the Management Interfaces 6.4.4. XA Recovery 6.5. Datasource Security Expand section "6.5. Datasource Security" Collapse section "6.5. Datasource Security" 6.5.1. About Datasource Security 6.6. Datasource Configuration Expand section "6.6. Datasource Configuration" Collapse section "6.6. Datasource Configuration" 6.6.1. Datasource Parameters 6.6.2. Datasource Connection URLs 6.6.3. Datasource Extensions 6.6.4. View Datasource Statistics 6.6.5. Datasource Statistics 6.7. Example Datasources Expand section "6.7. Example Datasources" Collapse section "6.7. Example Datasources" 6.7.1. Example PostgreSQL Datasource 6.7.2. Example PostgreSQL XA Datasource 6.7.3. Example MySQL Datasource 6.7.4. Example MySQL XA Datasource 6.7.5. Example Oracle Datasource 6.7.6. Example Oracle XA Datasource 6.7.7. Example Microsoft SQLServer Datasource 6.7.8. Example Microsoft SQLServer XA Datasource 6.7.9. Example IBM DB2 Datasource 6.7.10. Example IBM DB2 XA Datasource 6.7.11. Example Sybase Datasource 6.7.12. Example Sybase XA Datasource 7. Configuring Modules Expand section "7. Configuring Modules" Collapse section "7. Configuring Modules" 7.1. Introduction Expand section "7.1. Introduction" Collapse section "7.1. Introduction" 7.1.1. Modules 7.1.2. Global Modules 7.1.3. Module Dependencies 7.1.4. Subdeployment Class Loader Isolation 7.2. Disable Subdeployment Module Isolation for All Deployments 7.3. Add a module to all deployments 7.4. Reference Expand section "7.4. Reference" Collapse section "7.4. Reference" 7.4.1. Included Modules 7.4.2. Dynamic Module Naming 8. Global Valves Expand section "8. Global Valves" Collapse section "8. Global Valves" 8.1. About Valves 8.2. About Global Valves 8.3. About Authenticator Valves 8.4. Install a Global Valve 8.5. Configure a Global Valve 9. Application Deployment Expand section "9. Application Deployment" Collapse section "9. Application Deployment" 9.1. About Application Deployment 9.2. Deploy with the Management Console Expand section "9.2. Deploy with the Management Console" Collapse section "9.2. Deploy with the Management Console" 9.2.1. Manage Application Deployment in the Management Console 9.2.2. Deploy an Application Using the Management Console 9.2.3. Undeploy an Application Using the Management Console 9.3. Deploy with the Management CLI Expand section "9.3. Deploy with the Management CLI" Collapse section "9.3. Deploy with the Management CLI" 9.3.1. Manage Application Deployment in the Management CLI 9.3.2. Deploy an Application in a Managed Domain Using the Management CLI 9.3.3. Undeploy an Application in a Managed Domain Using the Management CLI 9.3.4. Deploy an Application in a Standalone Server Using the Management CLI 9.3.5. Undeploy an Application in a Standalone Server Using the Management CLI 9.4. Deploy with the Deployment Scanner Expand section "9.4. Deploy with the Deployment Scanner" Collapse section "9.4. Deploy with the Deployment Scanner" 9.4.1. Manage Application Deployment in the Deployment Scanner 9.4.2. Deploy an Application to a Standalone Server Instance with the Deployment Scanner 9.4.3. Undeploy an Application to a Standalone Server Instance with the Deployment Scanner 9.4.4. Redeploy an Application to a Standalone Server Instance with the Deployment Scanner 9.4.5. Reference for Deployment Scanner Marker Files 9.4.6. Reference for Deployment Scanner Attributes 9.4.7. Configure the Deployment Scanner 9.4.8. Configure the Deployment Scanner with the Management CLI 9.5. Deploy with Maven Expand section "9.5. Deploy with Maven" Collapse section "9.5. Deploy with Maven" 9.5.1. Manage Application Deployment with Maven 9.5.2. Deploy an Application with Maven 9.5.3. Undeploy an Application with Maven 9.6. Control the order of Deployed Applications on JBoss EAP 6 9.7. Deployment Descriptor Overrides 10. Securing JBoss EAP 6 Expand section "10. Securing JBoss EAP 6" Collapse section "10. Securing JBoss EAP 6" 10.1. About the Security Subsystem 10.2. About the Structure of the Security Subsystem 10.3. Configure the Security Subsystem 10.4. About Deep Copy Subject Mode 10.5. Enable Deep Copy Subject Mode 10.6. Security Domains Expand section "10.6. Security Domains" Collapse section "10.6. Security Domains" 10.6.1. About Security Domains 10.6.2. About Picketbox 10.6.3. About Authentication 10.6.4. Configure Authentication in a Security Domain 10.6.5. About Authorization 10.6.6. Configure Authorization in a Security Domain 10.6.7. About Security Auditing 10.6.8. Configure Security Auditing 10.6.9. About Security Mapping 10.6.10. Configure Security Mapping in a Security Domain 10.6.11. Use a Security Domain in Your Application 10.6.12. Java Authorization Contract for Containers (JACC) 10.6.13. Java Authentication SPI for Containers (JASPI) 10.7. Management Interface Security Expand section "10.7. Management Interface Security" Collapse section "10.7. Management Interface Security" 10.7.1. Default User Security Configuration 10.7.2. Overview of Advanced Management Interface Configuration 10.7.3. About LDAP 10.7.4. Use LDAP to Authenticate to the Management Interfaces 10.7.5. Disable the HTTP Management Interface 10.7.6. Remove Silent Authentication from the Default Security Realm 10.7.7. Disable Remote Access to the JMX Subsystem 10.7.8. Configure Security Realms for the Management Interfaces 10.8. Securing the Management Interfaces with Role-Based Access Control Expand section "10.8. Securing the Management Interfaces with Role-Based Access Control" Collapse section "10.8. Securing the Management Interfaces with Role-Based Access Control" 10.8.1. About Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) 10.8.2. Role-Based Access Control in the GUI and CLI 10.8.3. Supported Authentication Schemes 10.8.4. The Standard Roles 10.8.5. About Role Permissions 10.8.6. About Constraints 10.8.7. About JMX and Role-Based Access Control 10.8.8. Configuring Role-Based Access Control 10.8.9. Managing Roles 10.8.10. Configuring Constraints 10.8.11. Constraints Reference 10.9. Network Security Expand section "10.9. Network Security" Collapse section "10.9. Network Security" 10.9.1. Secure the Management Interfaces 10.9.2. Specify Which Network Interface JBoss EAP 6 Uses 10.9.3. Network Ports Used By JBoss EAP 6 10.9.4. Configure Network Firewalls to Work with JBoss EAP 6 10.10. Java Security Manager Expand section "10.10. Java Security Manager" Collapse section "10.10. Java Security Manager" 10.10.1. About the Java Security Manager 10.10.2. Run JBoss EAP 6 Within the Java Security Manager 10.10.3. About Java Security Manager Policies 10.10.4. Write a Java Security Manager Policy 10.10.5. Debug Security Manager Policies 10.11. Application Security Expand section "10.11. Application Security" Collapse section "10.11. Application Security" 10.11.1. Enabling/Disabling Descriptor Based Property Replacement 10.12. SSL Encryption Expand section "10.12. SSL Encryption" Collapse section "10.12. SSL Encryption" 10.12.1. Implement SSL Encryption for the JBoss EAP 6 Web Server 10.12.2. Generate a SSL Encryption Key and Certificate 10.12.3. SSL Connector Reference 10.13. Password Vaults for Sensitive Strings Expand section "10.13. Password Vaults for Sensitive Strings" Collapse section "10.13. Password Vaults for Sensitive Strings" 10.13.1. About Securing Sensitive Strings in Clear-Text Files 10.13.2. Create a Java Keystore to Store Sensitive Strings 10.13.3. Mask the Keystore Password and Initialize the Password Vault 10.13.4. Configure JBoss EAP 6 to Use the Password Vault 10.13.5. Store and Retrieve Encrypted Sensitive Strings in the Java Keystore 10.13.6. Store and Resolve Sensitive Strings In Your Applications 10.14. FIPS 140-2 Compliant Encryption Expand section "10.14. FIPS 140-2 Compliant Encryption" Collapse section "10.14. FIPS 140-2 Compliant Encryption" 10.14.1. About FIPS 140-2 Compliance 10.14.2. FIPS 140-2 Compliant Passwords 10.14.3. Enable FIPS 140-2 Cryptography for SSL on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 11. Security Administration Reference Expand section "11. Security Administration Reference" Collapse section "11. Security Administration Reference" 11.1. Included Authentication Modules 11.2. Included Authorization Modules 11.3. Included Security Mapping Modules 11.4. Included Security Auditing Provider Modules 12. Subsystem Configuration Expand section "12. Subsystem Configuration" Collapse section "12. Subsystem Configuration" 12.1. Subsystem Configuration Overview 13. The Logging Subsystem Expand section "13. The Logging Subsystem" Collapse section "13. The Logging Subsystem" 13.1. Introduction Expand section "13.1. Introduction" Collapse section "13.1. Introduction" 13.1.1. Overview of Logging 13.1.2. Application Logging Frameworks Supported By JBoss LogManager 13.1.3. Configure Boot Logging 13.1.4. Default Log File Locations 13.1.5. Filter Expressions for Logging 13.1.6. About Log Levels 13.1.7. Supported Log Levels 13.1.8. About Log Categories 13.1.9. About the Root Logger 13.1.10. About Log Handlers 13.1.11. Types of Log Handlers 13.1.12. About Log Formatters 13.1.13. Log Formatter Syntax 13.2. Configure Logging in the Management Console 13.3. Logging Configuration in the CLI Expand section "13.3. Logging Configuration in the CLI" Collapse section "13.3. Logging Configuration in the CLI" 13.3.1. Configure the Root Logger with the CLI 13.3.2. Configure a Log Category in the CLI 13.3.3. Configure a Console Log Handler in the CLI 13.3.4. Configure a File Log Handler in the CLI 13.3.5. Configure a Periodic Log Handler in the CLI 13.3.6. Configure a Size Log Handler in the CLI 13.3.7. Configure a Async Log Handler in the CLI 13.3.8. Configure a syslog-handler 13.4. Logging Profiles Expand section "13.4. Logging Profiles" Collapse section "13.4. Logging Profiles" 13.4.1. About Logging Profiles 13.4.2. Create a new Logging Profile using the CLI 13.4.3. Configuring a Logging Profile using the CLI 13.4.4. Specify a Logging Profile in an Application 13.4.5. Example Logging Profile Configuration 13.5. Logging Configuration Properties Expand section "13.5. Logging Configuration Properties" Collapse section "13.5. Logging Configuration Properties" 13.5.1. Root Logger Properties 13.5.2. Log Category Properties 13.5.3. Console Log Handler Properties 13.5.4. File Log Handler Properties 13.5.5. Periodic Log Handler Properties 13.5.6. Size Log Handler Properties 13.5.7. Async Log Handler Properties 13.6. Sample XML Configuration for Logging Expand section "13.6. Sample XML Configuration for Logging" Collapse section "13.6. Sample XML Configuration for Logging" 13.6.1. Sample XML Configuration for the Root Logger 13.6.2. Sample XML Configuration for a Log Category 13.6.3. Sample XML Configuration for a Console Log Handler 13.6.4. Sample XML Configuration for a File Log Handler 13.6.5. Sample XML Configuration for a Periodic Log Handler 13.6.6. Sample XML Configuration for a Size Log Handler 13.6.7. Sample XML Configuration for a Async Log Handler 14. JVM Expand section "14. JVM" Collapse section "14. JVM" 14.1. About JVM Expand section "14.1. About JVM" Collapse section "14.1. About JVM" 14.1.1. About JVM Settings 14.1.2. Display the JVM Status in the Management Console 15. Web Subsystem Expand section "15. Web Subsystem" Collapse section "15. Web Subsystem" 15.1. Configure the Web Subsystem 15.2. Replace the Default Welcome Web Application 16. HTTP Clustering and Load Balancing Expand section "16. HTTP Clustering and Load Balancing" Collapse section "16. HTTP Clustering and Load Balancing" 16.1. Introduction Expand section "16.1. Introduction" Collapse section "16.1. Introduction" 16.1.1. About High-Availability and Load Balancing Clusters 16.1.2. Components Which Can Benefit from High Availability 16.1.3. Overview of HTTP Connectors 16.1.4. Worker Node 16.2. Connector Configuration Expand section "16.2. Connector Configuration" Collapse section "16.2. Connector Configuration" 16.2.1. Define Thread Pools for HTTP Connector in JBoss EAP 6 16.3. HTTPD Configuration Expand section "16.3. HTTPD Configuration" Collapse section "16.3. HTTPD Configuration" 16.3.1. About the Stand-Alone HTTPD 16.3.2. Install the Apache HTTPD included with JBoss EAP 6 (ZIP) 16.3.3. Install the Apache HTTPD in Red Hat Enterprise Linux with JBoss EAP 6 (RPM) 16.3.4. mod_cluster Configuration on httpd 16.3.5. Use an External HTTPD as the Web Front-end for JBoss EAP 6 Applications 16.3.6. Configure JBoss EAP 6 to Accept Requests From an External HTTPD 16.4. Clustering Expand section "16.4. Clustering" Collapse section "16.4. Clustering" 16.4.1. Use TCP Communication for the Clustering Subsystem 16.4.2. Configure the JGroups Subsystem to Use TCP 16.4.3. Disable Advertising for the mod_cluster Subsystem 16.5. Web, HTTP Connectors, and HTTP Clustering Expand section "16.5. Web, HTTP Connectors, and HTTP Clustering" Collapse section "16.5. Web, HTTP Connectors, and HTTP Clustering" 16.5.1. About the mod_cluster HTTP Connector 16.5.2. Configure the mod_cluster Subsystem 16.5.3. Install the mod_cluster Module Into Apache HTTPD or JBoss Enterprise Web Server HTTPD (ZIP) 16.5.4. Install the mod_cluster Module Into Apache HTTPD or JBoss Enterprise Web Server HTTPD (RPM) 16.5.5. Configure Server Advertisement Properties for Your mod_cluster-enabled HTTPD 16.5.6. Configure a mod_cluster Worker Node 16.5.7. Migrate Traffic between Clusters 16.6. Apache mod_jk Expand section "16.6. Apache mod_jk" Collapse section "16.6. Apache mod_jk" 16.6.1. About the Apache mod_jk HTTP Connector 16.6.2. Configure JBoss EAP 6 to Communicate with Apache Mod_jk 16.6.3. Install the Mod_jk Module Into the Apache HTTP Server (ZIP) 16.6.4. Install the Mod_jk Module Into the Apache HTTP Server (RPM) 16.6.5. Configuration Reference for Apache Mod_jk Workers 16.7. Apache mod_proxy Expand section "16.7. Apache mod_proxy" Collapse section "16.7. Apache mod_proxy" 16.7.1. About the Apache mod_proxy HTTP Connector 16.7.2. Install the Mod_proxy HTTP Connector Into Apache HTTPD 16.8. Microsoft ISAPI Expand section "16.8. Microsoft ISAPI" Collapse section "16.8. Microsoft ISAPI" 16.8.1. About the Internet Server API (ISAPI) HTTP Connector 16.8.2. Configure Microsoft IIS to Use the ISAPI Redirector 16.8.3. Configure the ISAPI Redirector to Send Client Requests to JBoss EAP 6 16.8.4. Configure ISAPI to Balance Client Requests Across Multiple JBoss EAP 6 Servers 16.9. Oracle NSAPI Expand section "16.9. Oracle NSAPI" Collapse section "16.9. Oracle NSAPI" 16.9.1. About the Netscape Server API (NSAPI) HTTP Connector 16.9.2. Configure the NSAPI Connector on Oracle Solaris 16.9.3. Configure NSAPI as a Basic HTTP Connector 16.9.4. Configure NSAPI as a Load-balancing Cluster 17. Messaging Expand section "17. Messaging" Collapse section "17. Messaging" 17.1. Introduction Expand section "17.1. Introduction" Collapse section "17.1. Introduction" 17.1.1. HornetQ 17.1.2. About Java Messaging Service (JMS) 17.1.3. Supported Messaging Styles 17.2. About Acceptors and Connectors 17.3. About Bridges 17.4. About Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) 17.5. Work with Large Messages 17.6. Configuration Expand section "17.6. Configuration" Collapse section "17.6. Configuration" 17.6.1. Configure the JMS Server 17.6.2. Configure JMS Address Settings 17.6.3. Configure Messaging with HornetQ 17.6.4. Configure Delayed Redelivery 17.6.5. Configure Dead Letter Addresses 17.6.6. Configure Message Expiry Addresses 17.6.7. Reference for HornetQ Configuration Attributes 17.6.8. Set Message Expiry 17.7. Persistence Expand section "17.7. Persistence" Collapse section "17.7. Persistence" 17.7.1. About Persistence in HornetQ 17.8. High Availability Expand section "17.8. High Availability" Collapse section "17.8. High Availability" 17.8.1. About HornetQ Shared Stores 17.8.2. About High-availability (HA) Failover 17.8.3. Deployments on HornetQ Backup Servers 17.9. Message Replication Expand section "17.9. Message Replication" Collapse section "17.9. Message Replication" 17.9.1. HornetQ Message Replication 17.9.2. Configuring the HornetQ Servers for Replication 18. Transaction Subsystem Expand section "18. Transaction Subsystem" Collapse section "18. Transaction Subsystem" 18.1. Transaction Subsystem Configuration Expand section "18.1. Transaction Subsystem Configuration" Collapse section "18.1. Transaction Subsystem Configuration" 18.1.1. Transactions Configuration Overview 18.1.2. Configure the Transaction Manager 18.1.3. Configure Your Datasource to Use JTA Transactions 18.1.4. Configure an XA Datasource 18.1.5. About Transaction Log Messages 18.1.6. Configure Logging for the Transaction Subsystem 18.2. Transaction Administration Expand section "18.2. Transaction Administration" Collapse section "18.2. Transaction Administration" 18.2.1. Browse and Manage Transactions 18.3. Transaction References Expand section "18.3. Transaction References" Collapse section "18.3. Transaction References" 18.3.1. JBoss Transactions Errors and Exceptions 18.3.2. JTA Clustering Limitations 18.4. ORB Configuration Expand section "18.4. ORB Configuration" Collapse section "18.4. ORB Configuration" 18.4.1. About Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) 18.4.2. Configure the ORB for JTS Transactions 18.5. JDBC Object Store Support Expand section "18.5. JDBC Object Store Support" Collapse section "18.5. JDBC Object Store Support" 18.5.1. JDBC Store for Transactions 19. Mail subsystem Expand section "19. Mail subsystem" Collapse section "19. Mail subsystem" 19.1. Use custom transports in mail subsystem 20. Enterprise JavaBeans Expand section "20. Enterprise JavaBeans" Collapse section "20. Enterprise JavaBeans" 20.1. Introduction Expand section "20.1. Introduction" Collapse section "20.1. Introduction" 20.1.1. Overview of Enterprise JavaBeans 20.1.2. Overview of Enterprise JavaBeans for Administrators 20.1.3. Enterprise Beans 20.1.4. Session Beans 20.1.5. Message-Driven Beans 20.2. Configuring Bean Pools Expand section "20.2. Configuring Bean Pools" Collapse section "20.2. Configuring Bean Pools" 20.2.1. Bean Pools 20.2.2. Create a Bean Pool 20.2.3. Remove a Bean Pool 20.2.4. Edit a Bean Pool 20.2.5. Assign Bean Pools for Session and Message-Driven Beans 20.3. Configuring EJB Thread Pools Expand section "20.3. Configuring EJB Thread Pools" Collapse section "20.3. Configuring EJB Thread Pools" 20.3.1. Enterprise Bean Thread Pools 20.3.2. Create a Thread Pool 20.3.3. Remove a Thread Pool 20.3.4. Edit a Thread Pool 20.4. Configuring Session Beans Expand section "20.4. Configuring Session Beans" Collapse section "20.4. Configuring Session Beans" 20.4.1. Session Bean Access Timeout 20.4.2. Set Default Session Bean Access Timeout Values 20.5. Configuring Message-Driven Beans Expand section "20.5. Configuring Message-Driven Beans" Collapse section "20.5. Configuring Message-Driven Beans" 20.5.1. Set Default Resource Adapter for Message-Driven Beans 20.6. Configuring the EJB3 Timer Service Expand section "20.6. Configuring the EJB3 Timer Service" Collapse section "20.6. Configuring the EJB3 Timer Service" 20.6.1. EJB3 Timer Service 20.6.2. Configure the EJB3 timer Service 20.7. Configuring the EJB Asynchronous Invocation Service Expand section "20.7. Configuring the EJB Asynchronous Invocation Service" Collapse section "20.7. Configuring the EJB Asynchronous Invocation Service" 20.7.1. EJB3 Asynchronous Invocation Service 20.7.2. Configure the EJB3 Asynchronous Invocation Service Thread Pool 20.8. Configuring the EJB3 Remote Invocation Service Expand section "20.8. Configuring the EJB3 Remote Invocation Service" Collapse section "20.8. Configuring the EJB3 Remote Invocation Service" 20.8.1. EJB3 Remote Service 20.8.2. Configure the EJB3 Remote Service 20.9. Configuring EJB 2.x Entity Beans Expand section "20.9. Configuring EJB 2.x Entity Beans" Collapse section "20.9. Configuring EJB 2.x Entity Beans" 20.9.1. EJB Entity Beans 20.9.2. Container-Managed Persistence 20.9.3. Enable EJB 2.x Container-Managed Persistence 20.9.4. Configure EJB 2.x Container-Managed Persistence 20.9.5. CMP Subsystem Properties for HiLo Key Generators 21. Java Connector Architecture (JCA) Expand section "21. Java Connector Architecture (JCA)" Collapse section "21. Java Connector Architecture (JCA)" 21.1. Introduction Expand section "21.1. Introduction" Collapse section "21.1. Introduction" 21.1.1. About the Java EE Connector API (JCA) 21.1.2. Java Connector Architecture (JCA) 21.1.3. Resource Adapters 21.2. Configure the Java Connector Architecture (JCA) Subsystem 21.3. Deploy a Resource Adapter 21.4. Configure a Deployed Resource Adapter 21.5. Resource Adapter Descriptor Reference 21.6. View Defined Connection Statistics 21.7. Resource Adapter Statistics 21.8. Deploy the WebSphere MQ Resource Adapter 21.9. Configure a Generic JMS Resource Adapter for Use with a Third-party JMS Provider 22. Deploy JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2 Expand section "22. Deploy JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2" Collapse section "22. Deploy JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2" 22.1. Introduction Expand section "22.1. Introduction" Collapse section "22.1. Introduction" 22.1.1. About Amazon EC2 22.1.2. About Amazon Machine Instances (AMIs) 22.1.3. About JBoss Cloud Access 22.1.4. JBoss Cloud Access Features 22.1.5. Supported Amazon EC2 Instance Types 22.1.6. Supported Red Hat AMIs 22.2. Deploying JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2 Expand section "22.2. Deploying JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2" Collapse section "22.2. Deploying JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2" 22.2.1. Overview of Deploying JBoss EAP 6 on Amazon EC2 22.2.2. Non-clustered JBoss EAP 6 22.2.3. Clustered JBoss EAP 6 22.3. Establishing Monitoring with JBoss Operations Network (JON) Expand section "22.3. Establishing Monitoring with JBoss Operations Network (JON)" Collapse section "22.3. Establishing Monitoring with JBoss Operations Network (JON)" 22.3.1. About AMI Monitoring 22.3.2. About Connectivity Requirements 22.3.3. About Network Address Translation (NAT) 22.3.4. About Amazon EC2 and DNS 22.3.5. About Routing in EC2 22.3.6. About Terminating and Restarting with JON 22.3.7. Configure an Instance to Register with JBoss Operations Network 22.4. User Script Configuration Expand section "22.4. User Script Configuration" Collapse section "22.4. User Script Configuration" 22.4.1. Permanent Configuration Parameters 22.4.2. Custom Script Parameters 22.5. Troubleshooting Expand section "22.5. Troubleshooting" Collapse section "22.5. Troubleshooting" 22.5.1. About Troubleshooting Amazon EC2 22.5.2. Diagnostic Information A. Supplemental References Expand section "A. Supplemental References" Collapse section "A. Supplemental References" A.1. Download Files From the Red Hat Customer Portal A.2. Configure the Default JDK on Red Hat Enterprise Linux B. Revision History Legal Notice Settings Close Language: 简体中文 日本語 Français English Language: 简体中文 日本語 Français English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Language and Page Formatting Options Language: 简体中文 日本語 Français English Language: 简体中文 日本語 Français English Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF Format: Multi-page Single-page PDF 3.5.3. Quit the Management CLI Prerequisites Section 3.5.2, “Launch the Management CLI” Procedure 3.9. Quit the Management CLIRun the quit command From the Management CLI, enter the quit command: [domain@localhost:9999 /] quit Closed connection to localhost:9999 Report a bug Previous Next