|
|
|
NAME
create-virtual-server - creates the named virtual server
SYNOPSIS
create-virtual-server --user admin_user [--passwordfile filename] [--host host_name] [--port port_number] [--secure|-s] [--terse=false] [--echo=false] [--interactive=true] [--help] [--target server] --hosts hosts [--httplisteners http_listeners] [--defaultwebmodule default_web_module] [--state on] [--logfile log_file] [--property (name=value)[:name=value]*] virtual_server_id
The create-virtual-server command creates the named
virtual server. Virtualization in the Application Server allows multiple URL
domains to be served by a single HTTP server process that is listening on
multiple host addresses. If the application is available at two virtual servers,
they still share the same physical resource pools.
This command is supported in remote mode only.
- -u --user
-
The authorized domain application server administrative username.
- -w --password
-
The --password option is deprecated. Use --passwordfile instead.
- --passwordfile
-
This option replaces the -- password option. Using the --password option on the command line or through the environment is
deprecated. The --passwordfile option specifies the name of a file containing the password entries in a specified format. The entry for the password must have the AS_ADMIN_ prefix followed by the password name in capital letters. For example, to specify the domain
application server password, use an entry with the following format: AS_ADMIN_PASSWORD=password, where password is the actual administrator password. Other passwords that can be specified include AS_ADMIN_MAPPEDPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_USERPASSWORD,
AS_ADMIN_SAVEDMASTERPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_MQPASSWORD, AS_ADMIN_ALIASPASSWORD, and so on.
- -H --host
-
The machine name where the domain application server is running. The default value is localhost.
- -p --port
-
The port number of the domain application server listening for administration requests. The default port number for Platform Edition is 4848. The default port number for Enterprise
Edition is 4849.
- -s --secure
-
If set to true, uses SSL/TLS to communicate with the domain application server.
- -t --terse
-
Indicates that any output data must be very concise, typically avoiding human-friendly sentences and favoring well-formatted data for consumption by a script. Default is false.
- -e --echo
-
Setting to true will echo the command line statement on the standard output. Default is false.
- -I --interactive
-
If set to true (default), only the required password options are prompted.
- -h --help
-
Displays the help text for the command.
- --target
-
In Enterprise Edition, specifies the target for which you
are creating the virtual server. Valid values are
-
server, which creates the virtual server
for the default server instance server and is the default
value
-
configuration_name, which creates
the virtual server for the named configuration
-
cluster_name, which creates the
virtual server for every server instance in the cluster
-
instance_name, which creates the
virtual server for a particular server instance
- --hosts
-
A comma-separated (,) list of values allowed in the host request
header to select the current virtual server. Each virtual server that is configured
to the same connection group must have a unique hosts value for that group.
- --httplisteners
-
A comma-separated (,) list of HTTP listener IDs. Required
only for a virtual server that is not the default virtual server.
- --defaultwebmodule
-
The standalone web module associated with this virtual server
by default.
- --state
-
Determines whether a virtual server is active (on) or inactive
(off or disabled). Default is active (on). When inactive, the virtual server
does not service requests.
- --logfile
-
Name of the file where log entries for this virtual server
are to be written. By default, this is the server log.
- --property
-
Optional attribute name/value pairs for configuring the virtual
server. The following properties are available:
Property | Definition |
docroot | Absolute path to root document directory for server. |
accesslog | Absolute path to server access logs. |
sso-enabled | If false, single sign-on is disabled for this virtual server, and users must
authenticate separately to every application on the virtual server. Single
sign-on across applications on the Application Server is supported by servlets
and JSP pages. This feature allows multiple applications that require the
same user sign-on information to share this information, rather than have
the user sign on separately for each application. Default is true. |
sso-max-inactive-seconds | Specifies the number of seconds after which a user's
single sign-on record becomes eligible for purging if no client activity is
received. Since single sign-on applies across several applications on the
same virtual server, access to any of the applications keeps the single sign-on
record active. Default is 300 seconds (5 minutes). Higher values provide
longer single sign-on persistence for users at the expense of more memory
use on the server. |
sso-reap-interval-seconds | Specifies the number of seconds between purges
of expired single sign-on records. Default is 60. |
-
virtual_server_id
-
Identifies the unique ID for the virtual server to be created. This
ID cannot begin with a number.
Example 1. Using the create-virtual-server command
The following command creates a virtual server named sampleServer:
asadmin> create-virtual-server --user admin1
--passwordfile passwords.txt --hosts pigeon,localhost sampleServer
Command create-virtual-server executed successfully.
- 0
-
command executed successfully
- 1
-
error in executing the command
delete-virtual-server(1), list-virtual-servers(1), create-http-listener(1)
J2EE SDK 1.4 | Go To Top | Last Changed 31 Jan 2005 |
Company Info
|
Contact
|
Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Use is subject to license terms.
|