Sun Java Enterprise System 5 Release Notes for UNIX

Monitoring Console Interface Issues

New host certificate is not displayed for verification (6467360)

When adding a new host to be monitored, the Monitoring Console uses SSL to secure the connection, but does not show the certificate presented by the selected host. Because the Monitoring Console transmits the host's root password to the node agent, there is a vulnerability to an attacker forging the IP address of the intended host and receiving the password. The risk of this happening is very low because most node agents run on hosts already within a secure network.

Solution If your node agent hosts are not within a secure network, you should verify their authenticity before adding them as new hosts in the Monitoring Console. To verify the authenticity of a host, log in to the host and make sure you recognize its configuration and its file system. For a UNIX host, you can log in with ssh to view the certificate information.

Application Server refers to application instance (6495539, 6388513)

Objects contained in a product are referred to in Monitoring Console as an “application server.” This terminology should not be confused with Sun Java System Application Server.

Solution In the context of the Monitoring Console, an application server refers to the running instance of an installed Java ES component.

Slow response time in Monitoring Console (6490794, 6438443)

Displaying and switching pages in the Monitoring Console can take up to 30 seconds in some cases.

Solution Run the Monitoring Console on a powerful host with no other applications.

Monitoring Console does not display host or domain names (6444357, 6446325, 6496542)

Labels in the left-hand tree do not include host or domain names, only component names. This can make it difficult to identify similar components on different hosts. Similarly, when creating a monitoring rule and selecting the monitored component, instances of the same component on different hosts may be indistinguishable.

Solution Look for host identifiers in the detailed views of the monitored component. Some components include their process ID in their instance name, so you need to know the process ID of the instance on each host.

No simple way to disable monitoring of a particular component (6446505)

The Monitoring Console cannot enable or disable monitoring on a per-component basis.

Solution You must enable and disable the monitoring of a component through each component's own mechanism. For instructions, see the component–specific sections in Chapter 2, Enabling and Configuring the Monitoring Framework, in Sun Java Enterprise System 5 Monitoring Guide.

Console does not always reflect when a monitored component is stopped (6487785)

When a monitored component crashes or is stopped normally, its monitored objects may not be removed from the node agent and remain visible in the left-hand tree of the Monitoring Console. Similarly, if you stop an entire node agent, the host node may not be removed from the left-hand tree. This issue occurs intermittently.

Solution When you stop or restart a server instance, you may need to restart the node agent, the master agent and the Monitoring Console. If you stop a host and its node agent, you may need to restart the master agent and the Monitoring Console. The procedure To Restart a Node Agent in Sun Java Enterprise System 5 Monitoring Guide describes how to do both.

Monitoring rules and alarms are not deleted with their host (6474032)

When a host is removed from the Monitoring Console, the monitoring rules and alarms associated with its monitored components are not deleted automatically. This allows persistency of the rules and alarm states if you add the same host again.

Solution If you do not plan on adding that host again, use the Rule dialog to find and delete all rules associated with the host. Alarms that exist when the host is removed may be acknowledged but will remain in the Monitoring Console because the monitored attribute that triggered the alarm can no longer be accessed. To avoid leaving alarms in the acknowledged state, resolve all alarm conditions in a monitored component and acknowledge the alarms in the Monitoring Console before removing the host.

Less Severe Monitoring Console Issues

The following list tracks other known issues with the Monitoring Console.

6366190

Various tables are not sorted by default

6375583

Host linked from “Objects Using This Installed Product” should not be unknown object

6388558

Using the AppServer plug-in, the “objects contained by this server” should not include children of children

6390983

Enable and disable functionality is not working correctly in the table of hosts

6396891

Caption and description fields displayed for Statistics and Settings objects but not for base objects

6495587

Selecting an object and clicking on Monitoring Rule->New should not require the user to select the object again

6405363

The names of JVM objects listed for a given host are inconsistent

6405949

CMM_Cluster objects created by Application Server are not displayed anywhere

6412408

List of observable objects in the New Rule dialog is not clear

6429231

Object and Operational Status of Portal, Web, and Application Server objects display as unknown

6388513

Enterprise Java Beans deployed in Application Server should have more descriptive names

6434184

The names of attributes in Application Server monitoring objects are impossible to use

6434241

Internal Application Server configuration changes not reflected in the Monitoring Console