This chapter describes the domain.xml configuration file in these sections:
Subelements must be defined in the order in which they are listed under each Subelements heading in this chapter unless otherwise noted.
The domain.xml file contains most of the Sun JavaTM System Application Server configuration. The encoding is UTF-8 to maintain compatibility with regular UNIX text editors. The domain.xml file is located in the domain configuration directory, which is typically domain-dir/config. This file is further described in the following sections:
Settings in the Application Server deployment descriptors override corresponding settings in the domain.xml file unless otherwise stated. For more information about the Application Server deployment descriptors, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide.
The sun-domain_1_1.dtd file defines the structure of the domain.xml file, including the elements it can contain and the subelements and attributes these elements can have. The sun-domain_1_1.dtd file is located in the install-dir/lib/dtds directory.
Do not edit the sun-domain_1_1.dtd file; its contents change only with new versions of the Application Server.
The sun-domain_1_1.dtd interface is unstable. An unstable interface might be experimental or transitional, and hence might change incompatibly, be removed, or be replaced by a more stable interface in the next release.
Elements or attributes that appear in the sun-domain_1_1.dtd file but are not described in this chapter are not implemented and should not be used.
For general information about DTD files and XML, see the XML specification.
In this manual, the term default is used in its broader sense, and not in the specific way it is used in the XML 1.0 standard. A default value is an initial value or the value used if no value is present in the XML file. A default value can be any of the following:
A value supplied by the XML parser when no value is found in the domain.xml file. The relevant element or attribute is optional.
A value supplied by the Application Server when no value is found in the domain.xml file and the XML parser doesn’t provide a value. The relevant element or attribute is optional.
An initial value supplied when the domain.xml file is created. The relevant element or attribute might or might not be optional.
Variables and variable references are needed for two reasons:
Parts of the Application Server share much configuration information but differ in specific details.
Parts of the configuration come from the system environment but must still be captured in the configuration.
Variable references appear in the domain.xml file as strings that begin with the characters ${ and end with the character }. For example, the string ${com.sun.enterprise.myVar} is a reference to the variable com.sun.enterprise.myVar .
Variables are defined both outside of and within domain.xml. Predefined variables that exist outside of domain.xml are defined as Java System Properties. Within domain.xml, a variable is defined using the system-property element or the jvm-options element.
The system-property element’s name attribute is the name of a variable; its value attribute is the definition of the variable. For example, the following system-property element defines a port-number variable with the value 6500:
<system-property name="port-number" value="6500"/>
Multiple system-property subelements are permitted within server, config, and domain elements.
A variable defined in the jvm-options element is a Java System Property with the -D flag. For example, the following jvm-options element defines a port-number variable with the value 5500:
<jvm-option>-Dport-number=5500</jvm-option>
Multiple definitions for the same variable are permitted. The Application Server determines the actual value of a variable by searching for its first definition in a strict hierarchy of the elements within domain.xml. The hierarchy is as follows:
server -> config -> jvm-options -> domain -> System
Implicit in this hierarchy is the notion of reference and containment. A variable referenced in a server element is only looked up:
In the config element that references that specific server
In the jvm-options subelements of the config element referenced by that server
One element references another when an attribute of the referencing element has the same value as an attribute of the referenced element. For example, the application-ref element references an application or module that is deployed to its parent server element. The application-ref element’s ref attribute has the same value as the name attribute of a lifecycle-module, j2ee-application, ejb-module, web-module, connector-module, or appclient-module element.
The referencing application-ref element might look like this:
<application-ref ref="MyServlet"/>
The referenced web-module element might look like this:
<web-module name="MyServlet" location="myservletdir"/>
The element hierarchy for the domain.xml file is as follows. To make the hierarchy more readable, elements having property as their last or only subelement are marked with a P, and the property subelements are not shown. Parent/child relationships between elements are shown, but not cardinality. For those details, see the element descriptions.
domain P . applications . . lifecycle-module P . . . description . . j2ee-application . . . description . . web-module . . . description . . ejb-module . . . description . . connector-module . . . description . . appclient-module . . . description . resources . . custom-resource P . . . description . . external-jndi-resource P . . . description . . jdbc-resource P . . . description . . mail-resource P . . . description . . persistence-manager-factory-resource P . . . description . . admin-object-resource P . . . description . . connector-resource P . . . description . . resource-adapter-config P . . jdbc-connection-pool P . . . description . . connector-connection-pool P . . . description . . . security-map . . . . principal . . . . user-group . . . . backend-principal . configs . . config P . . . http-service P . . . . http-listener P . . . . . ssl . . . . virtual-server P . . . iiop-service . . . . orb P . . . . ssl-client-config . . . . . ssl . . . . iiop-listener P . . . . . ssl . . . admin-service P . . . . das-config P . . . connector-service . . . web-container P . . . . session-config . . . . . session-manager . . . . . . manager-properties P . . . . . . store-properties P . . . . . session-properties P . . . ejb-container P . . . . ejb-timer-service P . . . mdb-container P . . . jms-service P . . . . jms-host P . . . log-service P . . . . module-log-levels P . . . security-service P . . . . auth-realm P . . . . jacc-provider P . . . . audit-module P . . . . message-security-config . . . . . provider-config P . . . . . . request-policy . . . . . . response-policy . . . transaction-service P . . . monitoring-service P . . . . module-monitoring-levels P . . . java-config P . . . . profiler P . . . . . jvm-options . . . . jvm-options . . . thread-pools . . . . thread-pool . . . alert-service P . . . . alert-subscription . . . . . listener-config P . . . . . filter-config P . . . system-property . . . . description . servers . . server P . . . application-ref . . . resource-ref . . . system-property . . . . description . system-property . . description
A B C D E F H I J L M O P R S T U V W
Defines an administered object for an inbound resource adapter.
The following table describes subelements for the admin-object-resource element.
Table 1–1 admin-object-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the admin-object-resource element.
Table 1–2 admin-object-resource Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the JNDI name for the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the fully qualified type of the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the name of the inbound resource adapter, as specified in the name attribute of a connector-module element. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether this resource is enabled at runtime. |
Properties of the admin-object-resource element are the names of setter methods of the adminobject-class specified in the adminobject element of the ra.xml file. Some of the property names can be specified in the adminobject element itself. For example, in jmsra, the resource adapter used to communicate with the Sun Java system Message Queue software, jmsra, Name and Description are valid properties.
For a complete list of the available properties (called administered object attributes in Sun Java System Message Queue), see the Sun Java System Message Queue 3.7 UR1 Administration Guide.
Determines whether the server instance is a regular instance, a domain administration server, or a combination. In the Platform Edition, there is only one server instance, and it is a combination.
The following table describes subelements for the admin-service element.
Table 1–3 admin-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Defines a domain administration server configuration. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the admin-service element.
Table 1–4 admin-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
das-and-server |
Specifies whether the server instance is a regular instance (server), a domain administration server (das), or a combination (das-and-server). For the Platform Edition, the default is the only value allowed. |
Configures the alert service, which allows you to register for and receive system status alerts.
The following table describes subelements for the alert-service element.
Table 1–5 alert-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Configures a subscription to system status alerts. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Configures a subscription to system status alerts.
The following table describes subelements for the alert-subscription element.
Table 1–6 alert-subscription Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Configures the listener class that listens for alerts from notification emitters. |
|
zero or one |
Configures the filter class that filters alerts from notification emitters. |
The following table describes attributes for the alert-subscription element.
Table 1–7 alert-subscription Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of this alert subscription. |
Specifies a deployed application client container (ACC) module.
The following table describes subelements for the appclient-module element.
Table 1–8 appclient-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the appclient-module element.
Table 1–9 appclient-module Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The name of the ACC module. |
|
none |
The location of the ACC module in the Application Server file system. |
|
false |
(optional) Specifies whether the application has been deployed to a directory. |
References an application or module deployed to the server instance.
none
The following table describes attributes for the application-ref element.
Table 1–10 application-ref Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the application or module is enabled. |
all virtual servers |
(optional) In a comma-separated list, references id attributes of the virtual-server elements to which the web-module or the web modules within this j2ee-application are deployed. |
|
false |
(optional) If true, all load-balancers consider this application available to them. |
|
30 |
(optional) Specifies the time it takes this application to reach a quiescent state after having been disabled. |
|
none |
References the name attribute of a lifecycle-module, j2ee-application, ejb-module, web-module, connector-module, or appclient-module element. |
Contains deployed J2EE applications, J2EE modules, and Lifecycle modules.
The following table describes subelements for the applications element.
Table 1–11 applications Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed lifecycle module. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed J2EE application. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed EJB module. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed web module. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed connector module. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a deployed application client container (ACC) module. |
Subelements of an applications element can occur in any order.
Specifies an optional plug-in module that implements audit capabilities.
The following table describes subelements for the audit-module element.
Table 1–12 audit-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the audit-module element.
Table 1–13 audit-module Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of this audit module. |
|
none |
Specifies the Java class that implements this audit module. |
Defines a realm for authentication.
Authentication realms require provider-specific properties, which vary depending on what a particular implementation needs.
For more information about how to define realms, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide.
Here is an example of the default file realm:
<auth-realm name="file" classname="com.iplanet.ias.security.auth.realm.file.FileRealm"> <property name="file" value="domain-dir/config/keyfile"/> <property name="jaas-context" value="fileRealm"/> </auth-realm>
Which properties an auth-realm element uses depends on the value of the auth-realm element’s name attribute. The file realm uses file and jaas-context properties. Other realms use different properties.
The following table describes subelements for the auth-realm element.
Table 1–14 auth-realm Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the auth-realm element.
Table 1–15 auth-realm Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of this realm. |
|
none |
Specifies the Java class that implements this realm. |
The standard realms provided with Application Server have required and optional properties. A custom realm might have different properties.
The following table describes properties for the auth-realm element.
Table 1–16 auth-realm Properties
Specifies the user name and password required by the EIS.
none
The following table describes attributes for the backend-principal element.
Table 1–17 backend-principal Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the user name required by the EIS. |
|
none |
Specifies the password required by the EIS. |
Defines a configuration, which is a collection of settings that controls how a server instance functions.
The following table describes subelements for the config element.
Table 1–18 config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Configures the HTTP service. |
|
only one |
Configures the IIOP service. |
|
only one |
Determines whether the server to which the configuration applies is an administration server. |
|
zero or one |
Configures the connector service. |
|
only one |
Configures the web container. |
|
only one |
Configures the Enterprise JavaBeansTM (EJBTM) container. |
|
only one |
Configures the message-driven bean (MDB) container. |
|
zero or one |
Configures the Java Message Service (JMS) provider. |
|
only one |
Configures the system logging service. |
|
only one |
Configures the J2EE security service. |
|
only one |
Configures the transaction service. |
|
only one |
Configures the monitoring service. |
|
only one |
Configures the Java Virtual Machine (JVMTM). |
|
only one |
Configures thread pools. |
|
zero or one |
Configures the alert service. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a system property. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the config element.
Table 1–19 config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
server-config |
Specifies the name of the configuration. For the Platform Edition, the default is the only value allowed. |
|
true |
(optional) If true, any changes to the system (for example, applications deployed, resources created) are automatically applied to the affected servers without a restart being required. If false, such changes are only picked up by the affected servers when each server restarts. |
Contains configurations. In the Platform Edition, there is only one configuration.
The following table describes subelements for the configs element.
Table 1–20 configs Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Defines a configuration. |
Defines a connector connection pool.
The following table describes subelements for the connector-connection-pool element.
Table 1–21 connector-connection-pool Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Maps the principal received during servlet or EJB authentication to the credentials accepted by the EIS. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the connector-connection-pool element.
Table 1–22 connector-connection-pool Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the connection pool. A connector-resource element’s pool-name attribute refers to this name. |
|
none |
Specifies the name attribute of the deployed connector-module. If no name is specified during deployment, the name of the .rar file is used. If the resource adapter is embedded in an application, then it is app_name#rar_name . |
|
none |
Specifies a unique name, identifying a resource adapter’s connection-definition element in the ra.xml file. This is usually the connectionfactory-interface of the connection-definition element. |
|
8 |
(optional) Specifies the initial and minimum number of connections maintained in the pool. |
|
32 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of connections that can be created to satisfy client requests. |
|
60000 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time, in milliseconds, that the caller is willing to wait for a connection. If 0, the caller is blocked indefinitely until a resource is available or an error occurs. |
|
2 |
(optional) Specifies the number of connections to be created or destroyed to maintain the steady-pool-size. When the pool has no free connections, this number of connections is created, subject to the max-pool-size limit. Connections are destroyed periodically at the idle-time-out-in-seconds interval. An idle connection is one that has not been used for a period of idle-time-out-in-seconds. All the invalid and idle connections are removed, sometimes resulting in removing a number of connections greater than this value. |
|
300 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time that a connection can remain idle in the pool. After this amount of time, the pool can close this connection. |
|
false |
(optional) If true, closes all connections in the pool if a single validation check fails. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the transaction support for this connection pool. Overrides the transaction support defined in the resource adapter in a downward compatible way: supports a transaction level lower than or equal to the resource adapter’s, but not higher. Allowed values in descending order are:
|
Properties of the connector-connection-pool element are the names of setter methods of the managedconnectionfactory-class element in the ra.xml file. Properties of this element override the ManagedConnectionFactory JavaBean configuration settings.
The following table describes the connector-connection-pool properties of jmsra, the resource adapter used to communicate with the Sun Java System Message Queue software. For a complete list of the available properties (called administered object attributes in Sun Java System Message Queue), see theSun Java System Message Queue 3.7 UR1 Administration Guide.
Table 1–23 connector-connection-pool Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies a list of host/port combinations of the Sun Java System Message Queue. For JMS resources of the Type javax.jms.TopicConnectionFactory or javax.jms.QueueConnectionFactory. |
|
none |
Specifies the JMS Client Identifier to be associated with a Connection created using the createTopicConnection method of the TopicConnectionFactory class. For JMS resources of the Type javax.jms.TopicConnectionFactory . Durable subscription names are unique and only valid within the scope of a client identifier. To create or reactivate a durable subscriber, the connection must have a valid client identifier. The JMS specification ensures that client identifiers are unique and that a given client identifier is allowed to be used by only one active connection at a time. |
|
guest |
Specifies the user name for connecting to the Sun Java System Message Queue. For JMS resources of the Type javax.jms.TopicConnectionFactory or javax.jms.QueueConnectionFactory. |
|
guest |
Specifies the password for connecting to the Sun Java System Message Queue. For JMS resources of the Type javax.jms.TopicConnectionFactory or javax.jms.QueueConnectionFactory. |
|
ReconnectAttempts |
6 |
Specifies the number of attempts to connect (or reconnect) for each address in the imqAddressList before the client runtime moves on to try the next address in the list. A value of -1 indicates that the number of reconnect attempts is unlimited (the client runtime attempts to connect to the first address until it succeeds). |
ReconnectInterval |
30000 |
Specifies the interval between reconnect attempts in milliseconds. This applies to attempts on each address in the imqAddressList and on successive addresses in the list. If too short, this time interval does not give a broker time to recover. If too long, the reconnect might represent an unacceptable delay. |
ReconnectEnabled |
false |
If true, specifies that the client runtime attempts to reconnect to a message server (or the list of addresses in imqAddressList) when a connection is lost. |
AddressListBehavior |
priority |
Specifies whether connection attempts are in the order of addresses in the imqAddressList attribute (priority) or in a random order (random). If many clients are attempting a connection using the same connection factory, use a random order to prevent them from all being connected to the same address. |
AddressListIterations |
-1 |
Specifies the number of times the client runtime iterates through the imqAddressList in an effort to establish (or reestablish) a connection. A value of -1 indicates that the number of attempts is unlimited. |
All JMS administered object resource properties that worked with version 7 of the Application Server are supported for backward compatibility.
Specifies a deployed connector module.
The following table describes subelements for the connector-module element.
Table 1–24 connector-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the connector-module element.
Table 1–25 connector-module Attributes
Defines the connection factory object of a specific connection definition in a connector (resource adapter).
The following table describes subelements for the connector-resource element.
Table 1–26 connector-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the connector-resource element.
Table 1–27 connector-resource Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the JNDI name for the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the name of the associated connector connection pool, defined in a connector-connection-pool element. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether this resource is enabled at runtime. |
Configures the connector service.
none
The following table describes attributes for the connector-service element.
Table 1–28 connector-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
30 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time allowed during application server shutdown for the ResourceAdapter.stop() method of a connector module’s instance to complete. Resource adapters that take longer to shut down are ignored, and Application Server shutdown continues. |
Defines a custom resource, which specifies a custom server-wide resource object factory. Such object factories implement the javax.naming.spi.ObjectFactory interface.
The following table describes subelements for the custom-resource element.
Table 1–29 custom-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the custom-resource element.
Table 1–30 custom-resource Attributes
Defines a domain administration server configuration. The domain administration server runs the Administration Console.
The following table describes subelements for the das-config element.
Table 1–31 das-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the das-config element. For more information about deployment topics such as dynamic reloading and autodeployment, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide.
Table 1–32 das-config Attributes
Contains a text description of the parent element.
admin-object-resource, appclient-module, connector-connection-pool, connector-module, connector-resource, custom-resource, ejb-module, external-jndi-resource, j2ee-application, jdbc-connection-pool, jdbc-resource, lifecycle-module, mail-resource, persistence-manager-factory-resource, property, system-property, web-module
none - contains data
Defines a domain. This is the root element; there can only be one domain element in a domain.xml file.
none
The following table describes subelements for the domain element.
Table 1–33 domain Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains deployed J2EE applications, J2EE modules, and lifecycle modules. |
|
zero or one |
Contains configured resources. |
|
only one |
Contains configurations. |
|
only one |
Contains server instances. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a system property. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the domain element.
Table 1–34 domain Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
domain-dir/applications |
(optional) Specifies the absolute path where deployed applications reside for this domain. |
|
domain-dir/logs |
(optional) Specifies where the domain’s log files are kept. The directory in which the log is kept must be writable by whatever user account the server runs as. See the log-service description for details about logs. |
|
operating system default |
(optional) Specifies the domain’s language. |
Configures the EJB container. Stateless session beans are maintained in pools. Stateful session beans have session affinity and are cached. Entity beans associated with a database primary key are also cached. Entity beans not yet associated with a primary key are maintained in pools. Pooled entity beans are used to run ejbCreate() and finder methods.
The following table describes subelements for the ejb-container element.
Table 1–35 ejb-container Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Configures the EJB timer service. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the ejb-container element.
Table 1–36 ejb-container Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
32 |
(optional) Specifies the initial and minimum number of beans maintained in the pool. Must be 0 or greater and less than max-pool-size . Bean instances are removed from the pool and returned after use. The pool is replenished or cleaned up periodically to maintain this size. Applies to stateless session beans and entity beans. |
|
16 |
(optional) Specifies the number of beans to be removed when the pool-idle-timeout-in-seconds timer expires. A cleaner thread removes any unused instances. Must be 0 or greater and less than max-pool-size . The pool is not resized below the steady-pool-size. Applies to stateless session beans and entity beans. |
|
64 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of beans that can be created to satisfy client requests. A value of 0 indicates an unbounded pool. Applies to stateless session beans and entity beans. |
|
32 |
(optional) Specifies the number of beans to be:
|
|
512 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of beans in the cache. A value of 0 indicates an unbounded cache. Applies to stateful session beans and entity beans. |
|
600 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time that a bean can remain idle in the pool. After this amount of time, the pool can remove this bean. A value of 0 specifies that idle beans can remain in the pool indefinitely. Applies to stateless session beans and entity beans. |
|
600 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time that a bean can remain idle in the cache. After this amount of time, the container can passivate this bean. A value of 0 specifies that beans never become candidates for passivation. Applies to stateful session beans and entity beans. |
|
5400 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time that a bean can remain passivated before it is removed from the session store. A value of 0 specifies that the container does not remove inactive beans automatically. If removal-timeout-in-seconds is less than or equal to cache-idle-timeout-in-seconds, beans are removed immediately without being passivated. The session-store attribute of the server element determines the location of the session store. Applies to stateful session beans. |
|
nru |
(optional) Specifies how stateful session beans are selected for passivation. Allowed values are fifo, lru, and nru :
|
|
B |
(optional) Determines which commit option is used for entity beans. Legal values are B or C. |
|
domain-dir/session-store |
(optional) Specifies the directory where passivated stateful session beans and persisted HTTP sessions are stored in the file system. |
Specifies a deployed EJB module.
The following table describes subelements for the ejb-module element.
Table 1–37 ejb-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the ejb-module element.
Table 1–38 ejb-module Attributes
Configures the EJB timer service.
The following table describes subelements for the ejb-timer-service element.
Table 1–39 ejb-timer-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the ejb-timer-service element.
Table 1–40 ejb-timer-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
7000 |
(optional) Specifies the minimum time before an expiration for a particular timer can occur. This guards against extremely small timer increments that can overload the server. |
|
1 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of times the EJB timer service attempts to redeliver a timer expiration due for exception or rollback. |
|
jdbc/ __TimerPool |
(optional) Overrides the cmp-resource value specified in sun-ejb-jar.xml for the timer service system application (__ejb_container_timer_app ). |
|
5000 |
(optional) Specifies how long the EJB timer service waits after a failed ejbTimeout delivery before attempting a redelivery. |
Defines a resource that resides in an external JNDI repository. For example, a generic Java object could be stored in an LDAP server. An external JNDI factory must implement the javax.naming.spi.InitialContextFactory interface.
The following table describes subelements for the external-jndi-resource element.
Table 1–41 external-jndi-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the external-jndi-resource element.
Table 1–42 external-jndi-resource Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the JNDI name for the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the JNDI lookup name for the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the fully qualified type of the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the fully qualified name of the factory class, which implements javax.naming.spi.InitialContextFactory. For more information about JNDI, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether this resource is enabled at runtime. |
Configures the filter class that filters alerts from notification emitters. See also listener-config.
The following table describes subelements for the filter-config element.
Table 1–43 filter-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the filter-config element.
Table 1–44 filter-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the class name of the filter. |
Defines an HTTP listen socket.
The following table describes subelements for the http-listener element.
Table 1–45 http-listener Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Defines SSL parameters. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the http-listener element.
Table 1–46 http-listener Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The unique listener name. An http-listener name cannot begin with a number. |
|
none |
IP address of the listener. Can be in dotted-pair or IPv6 notation. Can be any (for INADDR_ANY) to listen on all IP addresses. Can be a hostname. |
|
none |
Port number on which the listener listens. Legal values are 1 - 65535. On UNIX, creating sockets that listen on ports 1 - 1024 requires superuser privileges. Configuring an SSL listener to listen on port 443 is standard. |
|
1 |
(optional) Number of acceptor threads for the listener, typically the number of processors in the machine. Legal values are 1 - 1024 . |
|
false |
(optional) Determines whether the listener runs SSL. To turn SSL2 or SSL3 on or off and set ciphers, use an ssl subelement. |
|
none |
References the id attribute of the default virtual-server for this particular listener. |
|
none |
Tells the server what to put in the host name section of any URLs it sends to the client. This affects URLs the server automatically generates; it doesn’t affect the URLs for directories and files stored in the server. If your server uses an alias, the server-name should be the alias name. If a colon and port number are appended, that port is used in URLs the server sends to the client. |
|
none |
(optional) If the listener is supporting non-SSL requests and a request is received for which a matching <security-constraint> requires SSL transport, the request is automatically redirected to the port number specified here. |
|
true |
(optional) If true, X-Powered-By headers are used according to the Servlet 2.4 and JSP 2.0 specifications. |
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the listener is active. |
The following table describes properties for the http-listener element. Any of these properties can be defined as an http-service property, so that it applies to all http-listener elements.
Table 1–47 http-listener Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
false |
If true, indicates that this http-listener element receives traffic from an SSL-terminating proxy server. Overrides the authPassthroughEnabled property of the parent http-service element. |
|
com.sun.enterprise.web.ProxyHandlerImpl |
Specifies the fully qualified class name of a custom implementation of the com.sun.appserv.ProxyHandler abstract class that this http-listener uses. Only used if the authPassthroughEnabled property of this http-listener and the parent http-service element are both set to true. Overrides the proxyHandler property of the parent http-service element. |
Defines the HTTP service.
The following table describes subelements for the http-service element.
Table 1–48 http-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
one or more |
Defines an HTTP listen socket. |
|
one or more |
Defines a virtual server. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes properties for the http-service element, which configure SSL for all http-listener subelements.
Table 1–49 http-service Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
true |
If true, enables the monitoring cache. |
|
5000 |
Specifies the interval between refreshes of the monitoring cache. |
|
10000 |
Specifies the number of SSL sessions to be cached. |
|
86400 |
Specifies the interval at which SSL3 sessions are cached. |
|
1048576 |
Specifies the maximum amount of data cached during the handshake phase. |
|
60 |
Specifies the timeout for the client certificate phase. |
|
100 |
Specifies the interval at which SSL2 sessions are cached. |
|
100 |
Specifies the keep-alive latency. |
|
100 |
Specifies the upper limit to the time slept after polling keep-alive connections for further requests. |
|
depends on operating system |
Specifies the maximum stack size of the native thread. |
|
false |
If true, indicates that the http-listener subelements receive traffic from an SSL-terminating proxy server, which is responsible for forwarding any information about the original client request (such as client IP address, SSL keysize, and authenticated client certificate chain) to the HTTP listeners using custom request headers. Each http-listener subelement can override this setting for itself. |
|
com.sun.enterprise.web.ProxyHandlerImpl |
Specifies the fully qualified class name of a custom implementation of the com.sun.appserv.ProxyHandler abstract class, which allows a back-end application server instance to retrieve information about the original client request that was intercepted by an SSL-terminating proxy server (for example, a load balancer). An implementation of this abstract class inspects a given request for the custom request headers through which the proxy server communicates the information about the original client request to the Application Server instance, and returns that information to its caller. The default implementation reads the client IP address from an HTTP request header named Proxy-ip, the SSL keysize from an HTTP request header named Proxy-keysize, and the SSL client certificate chain from an HTTP request header named Proxy-auth-cert. The Proxy-auth-cert value must contain the BASE-64 encoded client certificate chain without the BEGIN CERTIFICATE and END CERTIFICATE boundaries and with \n replaced with % d% a. Only used if authPassthroughEnabled is set to true. Each http-listener subelement can override the proxyHandler setting for itself. |
Defines an IIOP listen socket. To enable SSL for this listener, include an ssl subelement.
The following table describes subelements for the iiop-listener element.
Table 1–50 iiop-listener Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Defines SSL parameters. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the iiop-listener element.
Table 1–51 iiop-listener Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The listener name. An iiop-listener name cannot begin with a number. |
|
none |
IP address of the listener. Can be in dotted-pair or IPv6 notation, or just a name. |
|
1072 |
(optional) Port number for the listener. Legal values are 1 - 65535. On UNIX, creating sockets that listen on ports 1 - 1024 requires superuser privileges. |
|
false |
(optional) Determines whether the listener runs SSL. To turn SSL2 or SSL3 on or off and set ciphers, use an ssl element. |
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the listener is active. |
Defines the IIOP service.
The following table describes subelements for the iiop-service element.
Table 1–52 iiop-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Configures the ORB. |
|
zero or one |
Defines SSL parameters for the ORB. |
|
zero or more |
Defines an IIOP listen socket. |
The following table describes attributes for the iiop-service element.
Table 1–53 iiop-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
false |
(optional) If true, the server rejects unauthenticated requests and inserts an authentication-required bit in IORs sent to clients. |
Specifies a deployed J2EE application.
The following table describes subelements for the j2ee-application element.
Table 1–54 j2ee-application Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the j2ee-application element.
Table 1–55 j2ee-application Attributes
Specifies a Java Authorization Contract for Containers (JACC) provider for pluggable authorization.
The following table describes subelements for the jacc-provider element.
Table 1–56 jacc-provider Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the jacc-provider element.
Table 1–57 jacc-provider Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
default |
Specifies the name of the JACC provider. |
|
none |
Corresponds to and can be overridden by the system property javax.security.jacc.policy.provider . |
|
none |
Corresponds to and can be overridden by the system property javax.security.jacc.PolicyConfigurationFactory.provider . |
Specifies Java Virtual Machine (JVM) configuration parameters.
The following table describes subelements for the java-config element.
Table 1–58 java-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Configures a profiler for use with the Application Server. |
|
zero or more |
Contains JVM command line options. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the java-config element.
Table 1–59 java-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The path to the directory where the JDK is installed. |
|
false |
(optional) If true, the server starts up in debug mode ready for attachment with a JPDA-based debugger. |
|
-Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=n |
(optional) Specifies JPDA (Java Platform Debugger Architecture) options. A list of debugging options is available at http://java.sun.com/products/jpda/doc/conninv.html#Invocation. For more information about debugging, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide. |
|
-iiop -poa -alwaysgenerate -keepgenerated -g |
(optional) Specifies options passed to the RMI compiler at application deployment time. The -keepgenerated option saves generated source for stubs and ties. |
|
-g |
(optional) Specifies options passed to the Java compiler at application deployment time. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a prefix for the system classpath. Only prefix the system classpath to override system classes, such as the XML parser classes. Use this attribute with caution. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a suffix for the system classpath. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the classpath for the environment from which the server was started. This classpath can be accessed using System.getProperty("java.class.path") . |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a prefix for the native library path. The native library path is the automatically constructed concatenation of the Application Server installation relative path for its native shared libraries, the standard JRE native library path, the shell environment setting (LD_LIBRARY_PATH on UNIX), and any path specified in the profiler element. Since this is synthesized, it does not appear explicitly in the server configuration. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a suffix for the native library path. |
|
none |
(optional) A comma separated list of class names, each of which must implement the com.sun.appserv.BytecodePreprocessor interface. Each of the specified preprocessor classes is called in the order specified. |
|
true |
(optional) If false, the CLASSPATH environment variable is read and appended to the Application Server classpath. The CLASSPATH environment variable is added after the classpath-suffix, at the very end. For a development environment, this value should be set to false. To prevent environment variable side effects in a production environment, set this value to true. |
Defines the properties that are required for creating a JDBC connection pool.
The following table describes subelements for the jdbc-connection-pool element.
Table 1–60 jdbc-connection-pool Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the jdbc-connection-pool element.
Table 1–61 jdbc-connection-pool Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the connection pool. A jdbc-resource element’s pool-name attribute refers to this name. |
|
none |
Specifies the class name of the associated vendor-supplied data source. This class must implement java.sql.DataSource, java.sql.XADataSource , javax.sql.ConnectionPoolDatasource, or a combination. |
|
javax.sql. DataSource |
(optional) Specifies the interface the data source class implements. The value of this attribute can be javax.sql.DataSource, javax.sql.XADataSource , or javax.sql.ConnectionPoolDatasource. If the value is not one of these interfaces, the default is used. An error occurs if this attribute has a legal value and the indicated interface is not implemented by the data source class. |
|
8 |
(optional) Specifies the initial and minimum number of connections maintained in the pool. |
|
32 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of connections that can be created to satisfy client requests. |
|
60000 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time, in milliseconds, that the caller is willing to wait for a connection. If 0, the caller is blocked indefinitely until a resource is available or an error occurs. |
|
2 |
(optional) Specifies the number of connections to be created or destroyed to maintain the steady-pool-size. When the pool has no free connections, this number of connections is created, subject to the max-pool-size limit. Connections are destroyed periodically at the idle-time-out-in-seconds interval. An idle connection is one that has not been used for a period of idle-time-out-in-seconds. All the invalid and idle connections are removed, sometimes resulting in removing a number of connections greater than this value. |
|
300 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time that a connection can remain idle in the pool. After this amount of time, the pool can close this connection. |
|
default JDBC driver isolation level |
(optional) Specifies the transaction isolation level on the pooled database connections. Allowed values are read-uncommitted, read-committed , repeatable-read, or serializable. Applications that change the isolation level on a pooled connection programmatically risk polluting the pool, which can lead to errors. See is-isolation-level-guaranteed for more details. |
|
true |
(optional) Applicable only when transaction-isolation-level is explicitly set. If true, every connection obtained from the pool is guaranteed to have the desired isolation level. This might impact performance on some JDBC drivers. Only set this attribute to false if you are certain that the hosted applications do not return connections with altered isolation levels. |
|
false |
(optional) Specifies whether connections have to be validated before being given to the application. If a resource’s validation fails, it is destroyed, and a new resource is created and returned. |
|
auto-commit |
(optional) Legal values are as follows:
|
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the table name to be used to perform a query to validate a connection. This parameter is mandatory if and only if connection-validation-type is set to table. |
|
false |
(optional) If true, closes all connections in the pool if a single validation check fails. This parameter is mandatory if and only if is-connection-validation-required is set to true. |
Most JDBC 3.0 drivers allow use of standard property lists to specify the user, password, and other resource configuration information. Although properties are optional with respect to the Application Server, some properties might be necessary for most databases. For details, see the JDBC 3.0 Standard Extension API.
When properties are specified, they are passed to the vendor’s data source class (specified by the datasource-classname attribute) as is using setName(value) methods.
The user and password properties are used as the default principal if container managed authentication is specified and a default-resource-principal is not found in the application deployment descriptors.
The following table describes some common properties for the jdbc-connection-pool element.
Table 1–62 jdbc-connection-pool Properties
Property |
Description |
---|---|
Specifies the user name for this connection pool. |
|
Specifies the password for this connection pool. |
|
Specifies the database for this connection pool. |
|
Specifies the database server for this connection pool. |
|
Specifies the port on which the database server listens for requests. |
|
Specifies the communication protocol. |
|
Specifies the initial SQL role name. |
|
Specifies an underlying XADataSource, or a ConnectionPoolDataSource if connection pooling is done. |
|
Specifies a text description. |
|
Specifies the URL for this connection pool. Although this is not a standard property, it is commonly used. |
Defines a JDBC (javax.sql.DataSource) resource.
The following table describes subelements for the jdbc-resource element.
Table 1–63 jdbc-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the jdbc-resource element.
Table 1–64 jdbc-resource Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the JNDI name for the resource. |
|
none |
Specifies the name of the associated jdbc-connection-pool. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether this resource is enabled at runtime. |
Configures the host of the built-in Java Message Service (JMS) that is managed by the Application Server.
The following table describes subelements for the jms-host element.
Table 1–65 jms-host Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the jms-host element.
Table 1–66 jms-host Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the JMS host. |
|
machine-name |
(optional) Specifies the host name of the JMS host. |
|
7676 |
(optional) Specifies the port number used by the JMS provider. |
|
admin |
(optional) Specifies the administrator user name for the JMS provider. |
|
admin |
(optional) Specifies the administrator password for the JMS provider. |
Configures the built-in Java Message Service (JMS) that is managed by the Application Server.
The following table describes subelements for the jms-service element.
Table 1–67 jms-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a host. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the jms-service element.
Table 1–68 jms-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
60 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time the server instance waits at startup for its configured default JMS host to respond. If there is no response, startup is aborted. If set to 0, the server instance waits indefinitely. |
|
LOCAL |
(optional) Specifies the type of JMS service:
|
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the string of arguments supplied for startup of the corresponding JMS instance. |
|
none |
Specifies the name of the default jms-host. If type is set to LOCAL, this jms-host is automatically started at Application Server startup. |
|
60 |
(optional) Specifies the interval between reconnect attempts. |
|
3 |
(optional) Specifies the number of reconnect attempts. |
|
true |
(optional) If true, reconnection is enabled. The JMS service automatically tries to reconnect to the JMS provider when the connection is broken. When the connection is broken, depending on the message processing stage, the onMessage() method might not be able to complete successfully or the transaction might be rolled back due to a JMS exception. When the JMS service reestablishes the connection, JMS message redelivery semantics apply. |
|
random |
(optional) Specifies whether the reconnection logic selects the broker from the imqAddressList in a random or sequential (priority) fashion. |
|
3 |
(optional) Specifies the number of times the reconnection logic iterates over the imqAddressList if addresslist-behavior is set to PRIORITY. |
|
mq |
(optional) Specifies the scheme for establishing connection with the broker. For example, specify http for connecting to the broker over HTTP. |
|
jms |
(optional) Specifies the type of broker service. If a broker supports SSL, the type of service can be ssljms. |
The following table describes properties for the jms-service element.
Table 1–69 jms-service Properties
Contains JVM command line options, for example:
<jvm-options>-Xdebug -Xmx128m</jvm-options>
For information about JVM options, see http://java.sun.com/docs/hotspot/VMOptions.html.
none - contains data
Specifies a deployed lifecycle module. For more information about lifecycle modules, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide.
The following table describes subelements for the lifecycle-module element.
Table 1–70 lifecycle-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the lifecycle-module element.
Table 1–71 lifecycle-module Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The name of the lifecycle module. |
|
none |
The fully qualified name of the lifecycle module’s class file, which must implement the com.sun.appserv.server.LifecycleListener interface. |
|
value of application-root attribute of server element |
(optional) The classpath for the lifecycle module. Specifies where the module is located. |
|
none |
(optional) Determines the order in which lifecycle modules are loaded at startup. Modules with smaller integer values are loaded sooner. Values can range from 101 to the operating system’s MAXINT. Values from 1 to 100 are reserved. |
|
false |
(optional) Determines whether the server is shut down if the lifecycle module fails. |
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the lifecycle module is enabled. |
Configures the listener class that listens for alerts from notification emitters. For example:
<listener-config listener-class-name="com.sun.enterprise.admin.notification.MailAlert" subcribe-listener-with="LogMBean,ServerStatusMonitor" > <property name="recipients" value="Huey@sun.com,Dewey@sun.com" /> <property name="fromAddress" value="Louie@sun.com" /> <property name="subject" value="Help!" /> <property name="includeDiagnostics" value="false" /> <property name="mailSMTPHost" value="ducks.sun.com" /> </listener-config>
The following table describes subelements for the listener-config element.
Table 1–72 listener-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the listener-config element.
Table 1–73 listener-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the class name of the listener. The com.sun.appserv.admin.notification.MailAlert class is provided with the Application Server, but a custom listener can be used. |
|
none |
Specifies a comma-separated list of notification emitters to which the listener listens. The LogMBean and ServerStatusMonitor notification emitters are provided with the Application Server, but custom emitters can be used. |
Configures the server log file, which stores messages from the default virtual server. Messages from other configured virtual servers also go here, unless the log-file attribute is explicitly specified in the virtual-server element. The default name is server.log.
Other log files are configured by other elements:
A virtual server log file stores messages from a virtual-server element that has an explicitly specified log-file attribute. See virtual-server.
The transaction log files store transaction messages from the default virtual server. The default name of the directory for these files is tx. See transaction-service.
The following table describes subelements for the log-service element.
Table 1–74 log-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Specifies log levels. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the log-service element.
Table 1–75 log-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
server.log in the directory specified by the log-root attribute of the domain element |
(optional) Overrides the name or location of the server log. The file and directory in which the server log is kept must be writable by the user account under which the server runs. An absolute path overrides the log-root attribute of the domain element. A relative path is relative to the log-root attribute of the domain element. If no log-root value is specified, it is relative to domain-dir/config . |
|
false |
(optional) If true, uses the UNIX syslog service to produce and manage logs. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a custom log handler to be added to end of the chain of system handlers to log to a different destination. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies a log filter to do custom filtering of log records. |
|
false |
(optional) Deprecated and ignored. |
|
2000000 |
(optional) Log files are rotated when the file size reaches the specified limit. |
|
0 |
(optional) Enables time-based log rotation. The valid range is 60 minutes (1 hour) to 14400 minutes (10*24*60 minutes or 10 days). If the value is zero, the files are rotated based on the size specified in log-rotation-limit-in-bytes. If the value is greater than zero, log-rotation-timelimit-in-minutes takes precedence over log-rotation-limit-in-bytes . |
|
false |
(optional) Deprecated and ignored. |
Defines a JavaMail (javax.mail.Session) resource.
The following table describes subelements for the mail-resource element.
Table 1–76 mail-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the mail-resource element.
Table 1–77 mail-resource Attributes
You can set properties for the mail-resource element and then get these properties in a JavaMail Session object later. Every property name must start with a mail- prefix. The Application Server changes the dash (-) character to a period (.) in the name of the property, then saves the property to the MailConfiguration and JavaMail Session objects. If the name of the property doesn’t start with mail-, the property is ignored.
For example, to define the property mail.password in a JavaMail Session object, first edit domain.xml as follows:
... <mail-resource jndi-name="mail/Session" ...> <property name="mail-password" value="adminadmin"/> </mail-resource> ...
After getting the JavaMail Session object, get the mail.password property to retrieve the value adminadmin, as follows:
String password = session.getProperty("mail.password");
Specifies session manager properties.
The following table describes subelements for the manager-properties element.
Table 1–78 manager-properties Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the manager-properties element.
Table 1–79 manager-properties Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none; state is not preserved across restarts |
(optional) Specifies the absolute or relative path to the directory in which the session state is preserved between application restarts, if preserving the state is possible. A relative path is relative to the temporary directory for this web application. |
|
60 |
(optional) Specifies the time between checks for expired sessions. Set this value lower than the frequency at which session data changes. For example, this value should be as low as possible (1 second) for a hit counter servlet on a frequently accessed web site, or you could lose the last few hits each time you restart the server. |
|
-1 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of sessions that can be in cache, or -1 for no limit. After this, an attempt to create a new session causes an IllegalStateException to be thrown. |
|
internal class generator |
(optional) Not implemented. Do not use. |
Configures the message-driven bean (MDB) container.
The following table describes subelements for the mdb-container element.
Table 1–80 mdb-container Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the mdb-container element.
Table 1–81 mdb-container Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
10 |
(optional) Specifies the initial and minimum number of beans maintained in the pool. |
|
2 |
(optional) Specifies the number of beans to be created if a request arrives when the pool is empty (subject to the max-pool-size limit), or the number of beans to remove if idle for more than idle-timeout-in-seconds . |
|
60 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of beans that can be created to satisfy client requests. |
|
600 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum time that a bean can remain idle in the pool. After this amount of time, the bean is destroyed. A value of 0 means a bean can remain idle indefinitely. |
The following table describes properties for the mdb-container element.
Table 1–82 mdb-container Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
1 |
Specifies the maximum number of RuntimeException occurrences allowed from a message-driven bean’s onMessage() method when container-managed transactions are used. Deprecated. |
Specifies configurations for message security providers.
The following table describes subelements for the message-security-config element.
Table 1–83 message-security-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
one or more |
Specifies a configuration for one message security provider. |
The following table describes attributes for the message-security-config element.
Table 1–84 message-security-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the message layer at which authentication is performed. The value must be SOAP. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the server provider that is invoked for any application not bound to a specific server provider. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the client provider that is invoked for any application not bound to a specific client provider. |
Controls the level of messages logged by server subsystems to the server log. Allowed values of each subsystem attribute are, from highest to lowest: FINEST , FINER, FINE, CONFIG, INFO, WARNING, SEVERE, and OFF. Each value logs all messages for all lower values. The default value is INFO, which logs all INFO, SEVERE , and WARNING messages.
The following table describes subelements for the module-log-levels element.
Table 1–85 module-log-levels Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the module-log-levels element.
Table 1–86 module-log-levels Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
root |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the default level of messages logged by the entire Application Server installation. |
server |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the default level of messages logged by the server instance. |
ejb-container |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the EJB container. |
cmp-container |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the CMP subsystem of the EJB container. |
mdb-container |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the MDB container. |
web-container |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the web container. |
classloader |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the classloader hierarchy. |
configuration |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the configuration subsystem. |
naming |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the naming subsystem. |
security |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the security subsystem. |
jts |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the Java Transaction Service. |
jta |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the Java Transaction API. |
admin |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the Administration Console subsystem. |
deployment |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the deployment subsystem. |
verifier |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the deployment descriptor verifier. |
jaxr |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the XML registry. |
jaxrpc |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the XML RPC module. |
saaj |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the SOAP with Attachments API for Java module. |
corba |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the ORB. |
javamail |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the JavaMail subsystem. |
jms |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the Java Message Service. |
connector |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the connector subsystem. |
jdo |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the Java Data Objects module. |
cmp |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the CMP subsystem. |
util |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the utility subsystem. |
resource-adapter |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the resource adapter subsystem. |
synchronization |
INFO |
(optional) Specifies the level of messages logged by the synchronization subsystem. |
Controls the level of monitoring of server subsystems. Allowed values of each subsystem attribute are LOW, HIGH, and OFF.
The following table describes subelements for the module-monitoring-levels element.
Table 1–87 module-monitoring-levels Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
thread-pool |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the thread pool subsystem. |
orb |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the ORB. |
ejb-container |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the EJB container. |
web-container |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the web container. |
transaction-service |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the transaction service. |
http-service |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the HTTP service. |
jdbc-connection-pool |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the JDBC connection pool subsystem. |
connector-connection-pool |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the connector connection pool subsystem. |
connector-service |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the connector service. |
jms-service |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the JMS service. |
jvm |
OFF |
(optional) Specifies the level of monitoring of the JVM. |
Configures the monitoring service.
The following table describes subelements for the monitoring-service element.
Table 1–89 monitoring-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Controls the level of monitoring of server subsystems. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Configures the ORB.
To enable SSL for outbound connections, include an ssl-client-config subelement in the parent iiop-service element.
The following table describes subelements for the orb element.
Table 1–90 orb Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the orb element.
Table 1–91 orb Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies a comma-separated list of thread-pool-id values defined in thread-pool elements used by the ORB. |
|
1024 |
(optional) GIOPv1.2 messages larger than this number of bytes are fragmented. |
|
1024 |
(optional) The maximum number of incoming connections on all IIOP listeners. Legal values are integers. |
Defines a persistence manager factory resource for container-managed persistence (CMP).
The following table describes subelements for the persistence-manager-factory-resource element.
Table 1–92 persistence-manager-factory-resource Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the persistence-manager-factory-resource element.
Table 1–93 persistence-manager-factory-resource Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the JNDI name for the resource. |
|
com.sun.jdo.spi.persistence.support.sqlstore.impl.PersistenceManagerFactoryImpl |
(optional) Deprecated. Do not specify this attribute for the built-in CMP implementation. |
|
none |
Specifies the jdbc-resource from which database connections are obtained. Must be the jndi-name of an existing jdbc-resource. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether this resource is enabled at runtime. |
Contains the principal of the servlet or EJB client.
none - contains data
Configures a profiler for use with the Application Server. For more information about profilers, see the Sun Java System Application Server Platform Edition 8.2 Developer’s Guide.
The following table describes subelements for the profiler element.
Table 1–94 profiler Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Contains profiler-specific JVM command line options. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Subelements of a profiler element can occur in any order.
The following table describes attributes for the profiler element.
Table 1–95 profiler Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the profiler. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the classpath for the profiler. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the native library path for the profiler. |
|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the profiler is enabled. |
Specifies a property. A property adds configuration information to its parent element that is one or both of the following:
Optional with respect to the Application Server
Needed by a system or object that the Application Server doesn’t have knowledge of, such as an LDAP server or a Java class
For example, an auth-realm element can include property subelements:
<auth-realm name="file" classname="com.sun.enterprise.security.auth.realm.file.FileRealm"> <property name="file" value="domain-dir/config/keyfile"/> <property name="jaas-context" value="fileRealm"/> </auth-realm>
Which properties an auth-realm element uses depends on the value of the auth-realm element’s name attribute. The file realm uses file and jaas-context properties. Other realms use different properties.
admin-object-resource, admin-service, alert-service, audit-module, auth-realm, config, connector-connection-pool, connector-resource, custom-resource, das-config, domain, ejb-container, ejb-timer-service, external-jndi-resource, filter-config, http-listener, http-service, iiop-listener, jacc-provider, java-config, jdbc-connection-pool, jdbc-resource, jms-host, jms-service, lifecycle-module, listener-config, log-service, mail-resource, manager-properties, mdb-container, module-log-levels, module-monitoring-levels, monitoring-service, orb, persistence-manager-factory-resource, profiler, provider-config, resource-adapter-config, security-service, server, session-properties, store-properties, transaction-service, virtual-server, web-container
The following table describes subelements for the property element.
Table 1–96 property Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the property element.
Table 1–97 property Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the property or variable. |
|
none |
Specifies the value of the property or variable. |
Specifies a configuration for one message security provider.
Although the request-policy and response-policy subelements are optional, the provider-config element does nothing if they are not specified.
Use property subelements to configure provider-specific properties. Property values are passed to the provider when its initialize method is called.
The following table describes subelements for the provider-config element.
Table 1–98 provider-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Defines the authentication policy requirements of the authentication provider’s request processing. |
|
zero or one |
Defines the authentication policy requirements of the authentication provider’s response processing. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the provider-config element.
Table 1–99 provider-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the provider ID. |
|
none |
Specifies whether the provider is a client, server , or client-server authentication provider. |
|
none |
Specifies the Java implementation class of the provider. Client authentication providers must implement the com.sun.enterprise.security.jauth.ClientAuthModule interface. Server authentication providers must implement the com.sun.enterprise.security.jauth.ServerAuthModule interface. Client-server providers must implement both interfaces. |
Defines the authentication policy requirements of the authentication provider’s request processing.
none
The following table describes attributes for the request-policy element.
Table 1–100 request-policy Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the type of required authentication, either sender (user name and password) or content (digital signature). |
|
none |
Specifies whether recipient authentication occurs before or after content authentication. Allowed values are before-content and after-content. |
Defines a connector (resource adapter) configuration. Stores configuration information for the resource adapter JavaBean in property subelements.
The following table describes subelements for the resource-adapter-config element.
Table 1–101 resource-adapter-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the resource-adapter-config element.
Table 1–102 resource-adapter-config Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
(optional) Not used. See resource-adapter-name. |
|
none |
(optional) Specifies the id of a thread-pool element. |
|
user |
(optional) Defines the type of the resource. Allowed values are:
|
|
none |
Specifies the name attribute of a deployed connector-module. If the resource adapter is embedded in an application, then it is app_name#rar_name. |
Properties of the resource-adapter-config element are the names of setter methods of the resourceadapter-class element in the ra.xml file, which defines the class name of the resource adapter JavaBean. Any properties defined here override the default values present in ra.xml.
References a resource deployed to the server instance.
none
The following table describes attributes for the resource-ref element.
Table 1–103 resource-ref Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
enabled |
true |
(optional) Determines whether the resource is enabled. |
none |
References the name attribute of a custom-resource, external-jndi-resource, jdbc-resource, mail-resource, persistence-manager-factory-resource, admin-object-resource resource-adapter-config, jdbc-connection-pool, or connector-connection-pool element. |
Contains configured resources, such as database connections, JavaMailTM sessions, and so on.
You must specify a Java Naming and Directory InterfaceTM (JNDI) name for each resource. To avoid collisions with names of other enterprise resources in JNDI, and to avoid portability problems, all names in an Application Server application should begin with the string java:comp/env.
The following table describes subelements for the resources element.
Table 1–104 resources Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Defines a custom resource. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a resource that resides in an external JNDI repository. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a JDBC (Java Database Connectivity) resource. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a JavaMail resource. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a persistence manager factory resource for CMP. |
|
zero or more |
Defines an administered object for an inbound resource adapter. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a connector (resource adapter) resource. |
|
zero or more |
Defines a resource adapter configuration. |
|
zero or more |
Defines the properties that are required for creating a JDBC connection pool. |
|
zero or more |
Defines the properties that are required for creating a connector connection pool. |
Subelements of a resources element can occur in any order.
Defines the authentication policy requirements of the authentication provider’s response processing.
none
The following table describes attributes for the response-policy element.
Table 1–105 response-policy Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the type of required authentication, either sender (user name and password) or content (digital signature). |
|
none |
Specifies whether recipient authentication occurs before or after content authentication. Allowed values are before-content and after-content. |
Maps the principal received during servlet or EJB authentication to the credentials accepted by the EIS.
The following table describes subelements for the security-map element.
Table 1–106 security-map Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
one or more |
Contains the principal of the servlet or EJB client. |
|
one or more |
Contains the group to which the principal belongs. |
|
only one |
Specifies the user name and password required by the EIS. |
The following table describes attributes for the security-map element.
Table 1–107 security-map Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies a name for the security mapping. |
Defines parameters and configuration information needed by the J2EE security service.
The following table describes subelements for the security-service element.
Table 1–108 security-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
one or more |
Defines a realm for authentication. |
|
one or more |
Specifies a Java Authorization Contract for Containers (JACC) provider for pluggable authorization. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies an optional plug-in module that implements audit capabilities. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies configurations for message security providers. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the security-service element.
Table 1–109 security-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
file |
(optional) Specifies the active authentication realm (an auth-realm name attribute) for this server instance. |
|
none |
(optional) Used as the identity of the default security context when necessary and when no principal is provided. This attribute need not be set for normal server operation. |
|
none |
(optional) The password of the default principal. This attribute need not be set for normal server operation. |
|
ANYONE |
(optional) Used as the name for default, or anonymous, role. The anonymous role is always assigned to all principals. This role value can be used in J2EE deployment descriptors to grant access to anyone. |
|
false |
(optional) If true, additional access logging is performed to provide audit information. Audit information consists of:
|
|
default |
(optional) Specifies the name of the jacc-provider element to use for setting up the JACC infrastructure. Do not change the default value unless you are adding a custom JACC provider. |
|
default |
(optional) Specifies a space-separated list of audit provider modules used by the audit subsystem. The default value refers to the internal log-based audit module. |
Defines a server instance.
Server instances are not the same thing as virtual servers. Each server instance is a completely separate server that contains one or more virtual servers.
The following table describes subelements for the server element.
Table 1–110 server Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
References an application or module deployed to the server instance. |
|
zero or more |
References a resource deployed to the server instance. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a system property. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the server element.
Table 1–111 server Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the server instance. |
|
default config element’s name, server-config |
(optional) References the name of the config used by the server instance. For the Platform Edition, the default is the only value allowed. |
Contains server instances. In the Platform Edition, there is only one server instance.
The following table describes subelements for the servers element.
Table 1–112 servers Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Defines a server instance. |
Specifies session configuration information for the entire web container. Individual web applications can override these settings using the corresponding elements in their sun-web.xml files.
The following table describes subelements for the session-config element.
Table 1–113 session-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Specifies session manager configuration information. |
|
zero or one |
Specifies session properties. |
Specifies session manager information.
The session manager interface is unstable. An unstable interface might be experimental or transitional, and hence might change incompatibly, be removed, or be replaced by a more stable interface in the next release.
The following table describes subelements for the session-manager element.
Table 1–114 session-manager Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Specifies session manager properties. |
|
zero or one |
Specifies session persistence (storage) properties. |
Specifies session properties.
The following table describes subelements for the session-properties element.
Table 1–115 session-properties Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes properties for the session-properties element.
Table 1–117 session-properties Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
true |
Uses cookies for session tracking if set to true. |
|
true |
Enables URL rewriting. This provides session tracking via URL rewriting when the browser does not accept cookies. You must also use an encodeURL or encodeRedirectURL call in the servlet or JavaServerTM Pages (JSPTM) page. |
|
128 |
Specifies the number of bytes in this web module’s session ID. |
Defines SSL (Secure Socket Layer) parameters.
An ssl element is required inside an http-listener or iiop-listener element that has its security-enabled attribute set to on.
In Platform Edition, SSL is globally disabled.
http-listener, iiop-listener, ssl-client-config
none
The following table describes attributes for the ssl element.
Table 1–118 ssl Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
The nickname of the server certificate in the certificate database or the PKCS#11 token. In the certificate, the name format is tokenname:nickname. Including the tokenname: part of the name in this attribute is optional. |
|
false |
(optional) Determines whether SSL2 is enabled. If both SSL2 and SSL3 are enabled for a virtual-server, the server tries SSL3 encryption first. If that fails, the server tries SSL2 encryption. |
|
none |
(optional) A comma-separated list of the SSL2 ciphers used, with the prefix + to enable or - to disable, for example +rc4 . Allowed values are rc4, rc4export, rc2, rc2export, idea, des , desede3. |
|
true |
(optional) Determines whether SSL3 is enabled. The default is true . If both SSL2 and SSL3 are enabled for a virtual-server, the server tries SSL3 encryption first. If that fails, the server tries SSL2 encryption. |
|
none |
(optional) A comma-separated list of the SSL3 ciphers used, with the prefix + to enable or - to disable, for example +rsa_des_sha . Allowed SSL3 values are rsa_rc4_128_md5, rsa_3des_sha , rsa_des_sha, rsa_rc4_40_md5, rsa_rc2_40_md5, rsa_null_md5. Allowed TLS values are rsa_des_56_sha, rsa_rc4_56_sha. |
|
true |
(optional) Determines whether TLS is enabled. |
|
false |
(optional) Determines whether SSL3 client authentication is performed on every request, independent of ACL-based access control. |
Defines SSL parameters for the ORB when it makes outbound SSL connections and behaves as a client.
The following table describes subelements for the ssl-client-config element.
Table 1–119 ssl-client-config Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
only one |
Defines SSL parameters. |
Specifies session persistence (storage) properties.
The following table describes subelements for the store-properties element.
Table 1–120 store-properties Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
domain-dir/generated/jsp/j2ee-apps/appname/appname_war |
(optional) Specifies the absolute or relative pathname of the directory into which individual session files are written. A relative path is relative to the temporary work directory for this web application. |
|
60 |
(optional) Not implemented. Use the reap-interval-in-seconds attribute of the manager-properties element instead. |
Specifies a system property. A system property defines a common value for a setting at one of these levels, from highest to lowest: domain, server, or config. A value set at a higher level can be overridden at a lower level. Some system properties are predefined; see system-property. You can also create system properties using this element.
The following example shows the use of a predefined system property:
<log-service file="${com.sun.aas.instanceRoot}/logs/server.log"> <module-log-levels admin=INFO .../> </log-service>
The following example shows the creation and use of a system property:
<config name="config1"> ... <http-service> ... <http-listener id="ls1" host="0.0.0.0" port="${ls1-port}"/> ... </http-service> ... <system-property name="ls1-port" value="8080"/> </config>
The following table describes subelements for the system-property element.
Table 1–122 system-property Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the system-property element.
Table 1–123 system-property Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the name of the system property. |
|
none |
Specifies the value of the system property. |
The following table lists predefined system properties.
Table 1–124 Predefined System Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
com.sun.aas.installRoot |
depends on operating system |
Specifies the directory where the Application Server is installed. |
com.sun.aas.instanceRoot |
depends on operating system |
Specifies the top level directory for a server instance. |
com.sun.aas.hostName |
none |
Specifies the name of the host (machine). |
com.sun.aas.javaRoot |
depends on operating system |
Specifies the J2SE installation directory. |
com.sun.aas.imqLib |
depends on operating system |
Specifies the library directory for Sun Java System Message Queue. |
com.sun.aas.configName |
server-config |
Specifies the name of the config used by a server instance. |
com.sun.aas.instanceName |
server1 |
Specifies the name of the server instance. This property is not used in the default configuration, but can be used to customize configuration. |
com.sun.aas.domainName |
domain1 |
Specifies the name of the domain. This property is not used in the default configuration, but can be used to customize configuration. |
Defines a thread pool.
none
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Specifies the thread pool ID. |
|
0 |
(optional) Specifies the minimum number of threads in the pool. These are created when the thread pool is instantiated. |
|
200 |
(optional) Specifies the maximum number of threads the pool can contain. |
|
120 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time after which idle threads are removed from the pool. |
|
1 |
(optional) Specifies the total number of work queues serviced by this thread pool. |
Contains thread pools.
The following table describes subelements for the thread-pools element.
Table 1–126 thread-pools Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
one or more |
Defines a thread pool. |
Configures the Java Transaction Service (JTS).
The following table describes subelements for the transaction-service element.
Table 1–127 transaction-service Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the transaction-service element.
Table 1–128 transaction-service Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
false |
(optional) If true, the server instance attempts transaction recovery during startup. |
|
0 |
(optional) Specifies the amount of time after which the transaction is aborted. If set to 0, the transaction never times out. |
|
directory specified by the log-root attribute of the domain element |
(optional) Specifies the parent directory of the transaction log directory tx. The directory in which the transaction logs are kept must be writable by the user account under which the server runs. A relative path is relative to the log-root attribute of the domain element. |
|
rollback |
(optional) If the outcome of a distributed transaction cannot be determined because other participants are unreachable, this property determines the outcome. Allowed values are rollback and commit. |
|
600 |
(optional) Determines the retry time in the following scenarios:
|
|
2048 |
(optional) Specifies the number of transactions between keypoint operations in the log. Keypoint operations reduce the size of the transaction log file by compressing it. A larger value for this attribute (for example, 4096) results in a larger transaction log file, but fewer keypoint operations and potentially better performance. A smaller value (for example, 100) results in smaller log files, but slightly reduced performance due to the greater frequency of keypoint operations. |
The following table describes properties for the transaction-service element.
Table 1–129 transaction-service Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
true |
If true, the Oracle XA Resource workaround is used in transaction recovery. |
|
false |
If true, disables transaction logging, which might improve performance. If the automatic-recovery attribute is set to true , this property is ignored. |
|
specific to the XAResource used |
Changes the XAResource timeout. In some cases, the XAResource default timeout can cause transactions to be aborted, so it is desirable to change it. |
|
none if this property is absent, 60 if this property is present but has no value |
Specifies the interval, in seconds, at which an asynchronous thread checks for pending transactions and completes them. |
|
true |
If true, enables last agent optimization, which improves the throughput of transactions. If one non-XA resource is used with XA resources in the same transaction, the non XA resource is the last agent. |
Contains the group to which the principal belongs.
none - contains data
Defines a virtual server. A virtual server, also called a virtual host, is a virtual web server that serves content targeted for a specific URL. Multiple virtual servers can serve content using the same or different host names, port numbers, or IP addresses. The HTTP service can direct incoming web requests to different virtual servers based on the URL.
When the Application Server is first installed, a default virtual server is created. (You can also assign a default virtual server to each new http-listener you create.)
Virtual servers are not the same thing as server instances. Each server instance is a completely separate server that contains one or more virtual servers.
Before the Application Server can process a request, it must accept the request via a listener, then direct the request to the correct virtual server. The virtual server is determined as follows:
If the listener is configured to only a default virtual server, that virtual server is selected.
If the listener has more than one virtual server configured to it, the request Host header is matched to the hosts attribute of a virtual server. If no Host header is present or no hosts attribute matches, the default virtual server for the listener is selected.
If a virtual server is configured to an SSL listener, its hosts attribute is checked against the subject pattern of the certificate at server startup, and a warning is generated and written to the server log if they don’t match.
The following table describes subelements for the virtual-server element.
Table 1–130 virtual-server Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
The following table describes attributes for the virtual-server element.
Table 1–131 virtual-server Attributes
Attribute |
Default |
Description |
---|---|---|
none |
Virtual server ID. This is a unique ID that allows lookup of a specific virtual server. A virtual server ID cannot begin with a number. |
|
none |
(optional) In a comma-separated list, references id attributes of http-listener elements that specify the connection(s) the virtual server uses. Required only for a virtual-server that is not referenced by the default-virtual-server attribute of an http-listener. |
|
system default web module |
(optional) References the name attribute of the default web-module for this virtual server, which responds to requests that cannot be resolved to other web modules deployed to this virtual server (see the application-ref element). |
|
none |
A comma-separated list of values, each of which selects the current virtual server when included in the Host request header. Two or more virtual-server elements that reference or are referenced by the same http-listener cannot have any hosts values in common. |
|
on |
(optional) Determines whether a virtual-server is active (on) or inactive (off, disabled). The default is on (active). When inactive, a virtual-server does not service requests. If a virtual-server is disabled, only the global server administrator can turn it on. |
|
server.log in the directory specified by the log-root attribute of the domain element |
(optional) Writes this virtual server’s log messages to a log file separate from the server log. The file and directory in which the virtual server log is kept must be writable by the user account under which the server runs. See the log-service description for details about logs. |
The following table describes properties for the virtual-server element.
Table 1–132 virtual-server Properties
Property |
Default |
Description |
|
---|---|---|---|
true |
If true, single sign-on is enabled for web applications on this virtual server that are configured for the same realm. If false, single sign-on is disabled for this virtual server, and users must authenticate separately to every application on the virtual server. |
||
300 |
Specifies the time 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. Higher values provide longer single sign-on persistence for the users at the expense of more memory use on the server. |
||
60 |
Specifies the interval between purges of expired single sign-on records. |
||
none |
Specifies a comma-separated list of Cache-Control response directives. For a list of valid directives, see section 14.9 of the document at http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt. |
||
none |
Specifies that a request for an old URL is treated as a request for a new URL. These properties are inherited by all web applications deployed on the virtual server. The value of each redirect_n property has two components, which may be specified in any order: The first component, from, specifies the prefix of the requested URI to match. The second component, url-prefix, specifies the new URL prefix to return to the client. The from prefix is simply replaced by this URL prefix. For example:
|
Configures the web container.
The following table describes subelements for the web-container element.
Table 1–133 web-container Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Specifies session configuration information for the web container. |
|
zero or more |
Specifies a property or a variable. |
Specifies a deployed web module.
The following table describes subelements for the web-module element.
Table 1–134 web-module Subelements
Element |
Required |
Description |
---|---|---|
zero or one |
Contains a text description of this element. |
The following table describes attributes for the web-module element.
Table 1–135 web-module Attributes