The following sections provide an overview of Java classloaders, followed by details about WebLogic Server Java EE application classloading.
Classloaders are a fundamental module of the Java language. A classloader is a part of the Java virtual machine (JVM) that loads classes into memory; a classloader is responsible for finding and loading class files at run time. Every successful Java programmer needs to understand classloaders and their behavior. This section provides an overview of Java classloaders.
Classloaders contain a hierarchy with parent classloaders and child classloaders. The relationship between parent and child classloaders is analogous to the object relationship of super classes and subclasses. The bootstrap classloader is the root of the Java classloader hierarchy. The Java virtual machine (JVM) creates the bootstrap classloader, which loads the Java development kit (JDK) internal classes and java.*
packages included in the JVM. (For example, the bootstrap classloader loads java.lang.String
.)
The extensions classloader is a child of the bootstrap classloader. The extensions classloader loads any JAR files placed in the extensions directory of the JDK. This is a convenient means to extending the JDK without adding entries to the classpath. However, anything in the extensions directory must be self-contained and can only refer to classes in the extensions directory or JDK classes.
The system classpath classloader extends the JDK extensions classloader. The system classpath classloader loads the classes from the classpath of the JVM. Application-specific classloaders (including WebLogic Server classloaders) are children of the system classpath classloader.
Note:
What Oracle refers to as a "system classpath classloader" is often referred to as the "application classloader" in contexts outside of WebLogic Server. When discussing classloaders in WebLogic Server, Oracle uses the term "system" to differentiate from classloaders related to Java EE applications or libraries (which Oracle refers to as "application classloaders").Classloaders use a delegation model when loading a class. The classloader implementation first checks its cache to see if the requested class has already been loaded. This class verification improves performance in that its cached memory copy is used instead of repeated loading of a class from disk. If the class is not found in its cache, the current classloader asks its parent for the class. Only if the parent cannot load the class does the classloader attempt to load the class. If a class exists in both the parent and child classloaders, the parent version is loaded. This delegation model is followed to avoid multiple copies of the same form being loaded. Multiple copies of the same class can lead to a ClassCastException
.
Classloaders ask their parent classloader to load a class before attempting to load the class themselves. Classloaders in WebLogic Server that are associated with Web applications can be configured to check locally first before asking their parent for the class. This allows Web applications to use their own versions of third-party classes, which might also be used as part of the WebLogic Server product. The prefer-web-inf-classes Element section discusses this in more detail.
The weblogic.xml
Web application deployment descriptor contains a <prefer-web-inf-classes>
element (a sub-element of the <container-descriptor>
element). By default, this element is set to False
. Setting this element to True
subverts the classloader delegation model so that class definitions from the Web application are loaded in preference to class definitions in higher-level classloaders. This allows a Web application to use its own version of a third-party class, which might also be part of WebLogic Server. See "weblogic.xml Deployment Descriptor Elements".
When using this feature, you must be careful not to mix instances created from the Web application's class definition with issuances created from the server's definition. If such instances are mixed, a ClassCastException
results.
Example 8-1 illustrates the prefer-web-inf-classes
element, its description and default value.
WebLogic Server allows you to deploy newer versions of application modules such as EJBs while the server is running. This process is known as hot-deploy or hot-redeploy and is closely related to classloading.
Java classloaders do not have any standard mechanism to undeploy or unload a set of classes, nor can they load new versions of classes. In order to make updates to classes in a running virtual machine, the classloader that loaded the changed classes must be replaced with a new classloader. When a classloader is replaced, all classes that were loaded from that classloader (or any classloaders that are offspring of that classloader) must be reloaded. Any instances of these classes must be re-instantiated.
In WebLogic Server, each application has a hierarchy of classloaders that are offspring of the system classloader. These hierarchies allow applications or parts of applications to be individually reloaded without affecting the rest of the system. WebLogic Server Application Classloading discusses this topic.
WebLogic Server now allows you to enable class caching for faster start ups. Once you enable caching, the server records all the classes loaded until a specific criterion is reached and persists the class definitions in an invisible file. When the server restarts, the cache is checked for validity with the existing code sources and the server uses the cache file to bulk load the same sequence of classes recorded in the previous run. If any change is made to the system classpath or its contents, the cache will be invalidated and re-built on server restart.
The advantages of using class caching are:
Reduces server startup time.
The package level index reduces search time for all classes and resources.
The cache uses optimization techniques to minimize the initial cache recording time. Cache recording continues until a specific class has been recorded.
Note:
Class caching is supported in development mode when starting the server using astartWebLogic
script. Class caching is disabled by default and is not supported in production mode. The decrease in startup time varies among different JRE vendors.To enable class caching, set an environment variable (CLASS_CACHE=true
for UNIX, set CLASS_CACHE=true
for Windows) in the startWebLogic
script.
Configure class caching using the following properties:
Logging: To debug class caching issues, turn on logging by placing the following system properties in the JAVA_OPTIONS
for the section of the startup script that enables caching.
-Dclass.load.log.level=finest -Dclass.load.log.file=/tmp/class-load-log.txt
There are three levels of logging: fine, finer, finest. Do not enable logging during regular cache operation. Logging will slow the start up of the server. Use logging for debugging only.
Recording limit: Though the recording limit for class caching is set to a specific class, you can configure this class in your environment to a different class.
-Dlaunch.complete=<fully qualified class name> for example com.oracle.component.Foo
The class used in this property must be in the system classpath for WebLogic Server.
Example 8-2 illustrates modified UNIX and Windows startWebLogic scripts with class caching enabled and logging turned on.
Example 8-2 startWebLogic scripts
On UNIX # CLASS CACHING CLASS_CACHE=true if [ "${CLASS_CACHE}" = "true" ] ; then echo "Class caching enabled..." JAVA_OPTIONS="${JAVA_OPTIONS} -Dlaunch.main.class=${SERVER_CLASS} -Dlaunch.class.path="${CLASSPATH}" -Dlaunch.complete=weblogic.store.internal.LockManagerImpl -Dclass.load.log.level=finest -Dclass.load.log.file=/tmp/class-load-log.txt -cp ${WL_HOME}/server/lib/pcl2.jar" export JAVA_OPTIONS SERVER_CLASS="com.oracle.classloader.launch.Launcher" fi On Windows @REM CLASS CACHING set CLASS_CACHE=true if "%CLASS_CACHE%"=="true" ( echo Class caching enabled... set JAVA_OPTIONS=%JAVA_OPTIONS% -Dlaunch.main.class=%SERVER_CLASS% -Dlaunch.class.path="%CLASSPATH%" -Dclass.load.log.level=finest -Dclass.load.log.file=C:\class-load-log.txt -Dlaunch.complete=weblogic.store.internal.LockManagerImpl -cp %WL_HOME%\server\lib\pcl2.jar set SERVER_CLASS=com.oracle.classloader.launch.Launcher )
The following sections provide an overview of the WebLogic Server application classloaders:
WebLogic Server classloading is centered on the concept of an application. An application is normally packaged in an Enterprise Archive (EAR) file containing application classes. Everything within an EAR file is considered part of the same application. The following may be part of an EAR or can be loaded as standalone applications:
An Enterprise JavaBean (EJB) JAR file
A Web application WAR file
A resource adapter RAR file
Note:
See the following sections for more information:For information on Resource Adapters and classloading, see About Resource Adapter Classes.
For information on overriding generic application files while classloading, see "Generic File Loading Overrides" in Deploying Applications to Oracle WebLogic Server.
If you deploy an EJB and a Web application separately, they are considered two applications. If they are deployed together within an EAR file, they are one application. You deploy modules together in an EAR file for them to be considered part of the same application.
Every application receives its own classloader hierarchy; the parent of this hierarchy is the system classpath classloader. This isolates applications so that application A cannot see the classloaders or classes of application B. In hierarchy classloaders, no sibling or friend concepts exist. Application code only has visibility to classes loaded by the classloader associated with the application (or module) and classes that are loaded by classloaders that are ancestors of the application (or module) classloader. This allows WebLogic Server to host multiple isolated applications within the same JVM.
WebLogic Server automatically creates a hierarchy of classloaders when an application is deployed. The root classloader in this hierarchy loads any EJB JAR files in the application. A child classloader is created for each Web application WAR file.
Because it is common for Web applications to call EJBs, the WebLogic Server application classloader architecture allows JavaServer Page (JSP) files and servlets to see the EJB interfaces in their parent classloader. This architecture also allows Web applications to be redeployed without redeploying the EJB tier. In practice, it is more common to change JSP files and servlets than to change the EJB tier.
The following graphic illustrates this WebLogic Server application classloading concept.
If your application includes servlets and JSPs that use EJBs:
Package the servlets and JSPs in a WAR file
Package the Enterprise JavaBeans in an EJB JAR file
Package the WAR and JAR files in an EAR file
Deploy the EAR file
Although you could deploy the WAR and JAR files separately, deploying them together in an EAR file produces a classloader arrangement that allows the servlets and JSPs to find the EJB classes. If you deploy the WAR and JAR files separately, WebLogic Server creates sibling classloaders for them. This means that you must include the EJB home and remote interfaces in the WAR file, and WebLogic Server must use the RMI stub and skeleton classes for EJB calls, just as it does when EJB clients and implementation classes are in different JVMs. This concept is discussed in more detail in the next section Application Classloading and Pass-by-Value or Reference.
Note:
The Web application classloader contains all classes for the Web application except for the JSP class. The JSP class obtains its own classloader, which is a child of the Web application classloader. This allows JSPs to be individually reloaded.You can create custom classloader hierarchies for an application allowing for better control over class visibility and reloadability. You achieve this by defining a classloader-structure
element in the weblogic-application.xml
deployment descriptor file.
The following diagram illustrates how classloaders are organized by default for WebLogic applications. An application level classloader exists where all EJB classes are loaded. For each Web module, there is a separate child classloader for the classes of that module.
For simplicity, JSP classloaders are not described in the following diagram.
This hierarchy is optimal for most applications, because it allows call-by-reference semantics when you invoke EJBs. It also allows Web modules to be independently reloaded without affecting other modules. Further, it allows code running in one of the Web modules to load classes from any of the EJB modules. This is convenient, as it can prevent a Web module from including the interfaces for EJBs that it uses. Note that some of those benefits are not strictly Java EE-compliant.
The ability to create custom module classloaders provides a mechanism to declare alternate classloader organizations that allow the following:
Reloading individual EJB modules independently
Reloading groups of modules to be reloaded together
Reversing the parent child relationship between specific Web modules and EJB modules
Namespace separation between EJB modules
You can declare the classloader hierarchy in the WebLogic-specific application deployment descriptor weblogic-application.xml
.
The DTD for this declaration is as follows:
Example 8-3 Declaring the Classloader Hierarchy
<!ELEMENT classloader-structure (module-ref*, classloader-structure*)> <!ELEMENT module-ref (module-uri)> <!ELEMENT module-uri (#PCDATA)>
The top-level element in weblogic-application.xml
includes an optional classloader-structure
element. If you do not specify this element, then the standard classloader is used. Also, if you do not include a particular module in the definition, it is assigned a classloader, as in the standard hierarchy. That is, EJB modules are associated with the application root classloader, and Web application modules have their own classloaders.
The classloader-structure
element allows for the nesting of classloader-structure
stanzas, so that you can describe an arbitrary hierarchy of classloaders. There is currently a limitation of three levels. The outermost entry indicates the application classloader. For any modules not listed, the standard hierarchy is assumed.
Note:
JSP classloaders are not included in this definition scheme. JSPs are always loaded into a classloader that is a child of the classloader associated with the Web module to which it belongs.For more information on the DTD elements, refer to Appendix A, "Enterprise Application Deployment Descriptor Elements."
The following is an example of a classloader declaration (defined in the classloader-structure
element in weblogic-application.xml
):
Example 8-4 Example Classloader Declaration
<classloader-structure> <module-ref> <module-uri>ejb1.jar</module-uri> </module-ref> <module-ref> <module-uri>web3.war</module-uri> </module-ref> <classloader-structure> <module-ref> <module-uri>web1.war</module-uri> </module-ref> </classloader-structure> <classloader-structure> <module-ref> <module-uri>ejb3.jar</module-uri> </module-ref> <module-ref> <module-uri>web2.war</module-uri> </module-ref> <classloader-structure> <module-ref> <module-uri>web4.war</module-uri> </module-ref> </classloader-structure> <classloader-structure> <module-ref> <module-uri>ejb2.jar</module-uri> </module-ref> </classloader-structure> </classloader-structure> </classloader-structure>
The organization of the nesting indicates the classloader hierarchy. The above stanza leads to a hierarchy shown in the following diagram.
User-defined classloader restrictions give you better control over what is reloadable and provide inter-module class visibility. This feature is primarily for developers. It is useful for iterative development, but the reloading aspect of this feature is not recommended for production use, because it is possible to corrupt a running application if an update includes invalid elements. Custom classloader arrangements for namespace separation and class visibility are acceptable for production use. However, programmers should be aware that the Java EE specifications say that applications should not depend on any given classloader organization.
Some classloader hierarchies can cause modules within an application to behave more like modules in two separate applications. For example, if you place an EJB in its own classloader so that it can be reloaded individually, you receive call-by-value semantics rather than the call-by-reference optimization Oracle provides in our standard classloader hierarchy. Also note that if you use a custom hierarchy, you might end up with stale references. Therefore, if you reload an EJB module, you should also reload the calling modules.
There are some restrictions to creating user-defined module classloader hierarchies; these are discussed in the following sections.
If you use a custom classloader hierarchy, servlet reloading is disabled for Web applications in that particular application.
Nesting is limited to three levels (including the application classloader). Deeper nestings lead to a deployment exception.
The standard WebLogic Server classloader hierarchy makes EJB interfaces available to all modules in the application. Thus other modules can invoke an EJB, even though they do not include the interface classes in their own module. This is possible because EJBs are always loaded into the root classloader and all other modules either share that classloader or have a classloader that is a child of that classloader.
With the custom classloader feature, you can configure a classloader hierarchy so that a callee's classes are not visible to the caller. In this case, the calling module must include the interface classes. This is the same requirement that exists when invoking on modules in a separate application.
The standard classloader hierarchy provided with WebLogic Server allows for calls between modules within an application to use call-by-reference semantics. This is because the caller is always using the same classloader or a child classloader of the callee. With this feature, it is possible to configure the classloader hierarchy so that two modules are in separate branches of the classloader tree. In this case, call-by-value semantics are used.
Be aware that the classloader switch required for reloading is not atomic across modules. In fact, updates to applications in general are not atomic. For this reason, it is possible that different in-flight operations (operations that are occurring while a change is being made) might end up accessing different versions of classes depending on timing.
WebLogic Server allows you to reload individual EJB modules without requiring you to reload other modules at the same time and having to redeploy the entire EJB module. This feature is similar to how JSPs are currently reloaded in the WebLogic Server servlet container.
Because EJB classes are invoked through an interface, it is possible to load individual EJB implementation classes in their own classloader. This way, these classes can be reloaded individually without having to redeploy the entire EJB module. Below is a diagram of what the classloader hierarchy for a single EJB module would look like. The module contains two EJBs (Foo
and Bar
). This would be a sub-tree of the general application hierarchy described in the previous section.
To perform a partial update of files relative to the root of the exploded application, use the following command line:
Example 8-5 Performing a Partial File Update
java weblogic.Deployer -adminurl url -user user -password password -name myapp -redeploy myejb/foo.class
After the -redeploy
command, you provide a list of files relative to the root of the exploded application that you want to update. This might be the path to a specific element (as above) or a module (or any set of elements and modules). For example:
Example 8-6 Providing a List of Relative Files for Update
java weblogic.Deployer -adminurl url -user user -password password -name myapp -redeploy mywar myejb/foo.class anotherejb
Given a set of files to be updated, the system tries to figure out the minimum set of things it needs to redeploy. Redeploying only an EJB impl
class causes only that class to be redeployed. If you specify the whole EJB (in the above example, anotherejb
) or if you change and update the EJB home interface, the entire EJB module must be redeployed.
Depending on the classloader hierarchy, this redeployment may lead to other modules being redeployed. Specifically, if other modules share the EJB classloader or are loaded into a classloader that is a child to the EJB's classloader (as in the WebLogic Server standard classloader module) then those modules are also reloaded.
Modern programming languages use two common parameter passing models: pass-by-value and pass-by-reference. With pass-by-value, parameters and return values are copied for each method call. With pass-by-reference, a pointer (or reference) to the actual object is passed to the method. Pass by reference improves performance because it avoids copying objects, but it also allows a method to modify the state of a passed parameter.
WebLogic Server includes an optimization to improve the performance of Remote Method Interface (RMI) calls within the server. Rather than using pass by value and the RMI subsystem's marshalling and unmarshalling facilities, the server makes a direct Java method call using pass by reference. This mechanism greatly improves performance and is also used for EJB 2.0 local interfaces.
RMI call optimization and call by reference can only be used when the caller and callee are within the same application. As usual, this is related to classloaders. Because applications have their own classloader hierarchy, any application class has a definition in both classloaders and receives a ClassCastException error if you try to assign between applications. To work around this, WebLogic Server uses call-by-value between applications, even if they are within the same JVM.
Note:
Calls between applications are slower than calls within the same application. Deploy modules together as an EAR file to enable fast RMI calls and use of the EJB 2.0 local interfaces.In WebLogic Server, any JAR file present in the system classpath is loaded by the WebLogic Server system classloader. All applications running within a server instance are loaded in application classloaders which are children of the system classloader. In this implementation of the system classloader, applications cannot use different versions of third-party JARs which are already present in the system classloader. Every child classloader asks the parent (the system classloader) for a particular class and cannot load classes which are seen by the parent.
For example, if a class called com.foo.Baz
exists in both $CLASSPATH
as well as the application EAR, then the class from the $CLASSPATH
is loaded and not the one from the EAR. Since weblogic.jar
is in the $CLASSPATH
, applications can not override any WebLogic Server classes.
The following sections define and describe how to use a filtering classloader:
The FilteringClassLoader
provides a mechanism for you to configure deployment descriptors to explicitly specify that certain packages should always be loaded from the application, rather than being loaded by the system classloader. This allows you to use alternate versions of applications such as Xerces and Ant. Though the FilteringClassLoader
lets you bundle and use 3rd party JARs in your application, it is not recommended that you filter out API classes, like classes in javax
packages or weblogic
packages.
The FilteringClassLoader
sits between the application classloader and the system classloader. It is a child of the system classloader and the parent of the application classloader. The FilteringClassLoader
intercepts the loadClass(String
className
)
method and compares the className
with a list of packages specified in weblogic-application.xml
file. If the package matches the className
, the FilteringClassLoader
throws a ClassNotFoundException
. This exception notifies the application classloader to load this class from the application.
To configure the FilteringClassLoader
to specify that a certain package is loaded from an application, add a prefer-application-packages
descriptor element to weblogic-application.xml
which details the list of packages to be loaded from the application. The following example specifies that org.apache.log4j.*
and antlr.*
packages are loaded from the application, not the system classloader:
<prefer-application-packages> <package-name>org.apache.log4j.*</package-name> <package-name>antlr.*</package-name> </prefer-application-packages>
The prefer-application-packages
descriptor element can also be defined in weblogic.xml
. For more information, see "prefer-application-packages
".
For aid in configuring filtering classloaders, see Using the Classloader Analysis Tool (CAT).
The resource loading order is the order in which java.lang.ClassLoader
methods getResource()
and getResources()
return resources. When filtering is enabled, this order is slightly different from the case when filtering is disabled. Filtering is enabled implies that there are one or more package patterns in the FilteringClassLoader
. Without any filtering (default), the resources are collected in the top-down order of the classloader tree. For instance, if Web (1) requests resources, the resources are grouped in the following order: Sys (3), App (2) and Web(1). See Example 8-7.
Example 8-7 Using the System Classloader
System (3) | App (2) | Web (1)
To be more explicit, given a resource /META-INF/foo.xml
which exists in all the classloaders, would return the following list of URLs:
META-INF/foo.xml - from the System ClassLoader (3) META-INF/foo.xml - from the App ClassLoader (2) META-INF/foo.xml - from the Web ClassLoader (1)
When filtering is enabled, the resources from the child of the FilteringClassLoader
(an application classloader) down to the calling classloader are returned before the ones from the system classloader. In Example 8-8, if the same resource existed in all the classloaders (D), (B) and (A) one would get them in the following order if requested by the Web classloader:
META-INF/foo.xml - from the App ClassLoader (B) META-INF/foo.xml - from the Web ClassLoader (A) META-INF/foo.xml - from the System ClassLoader (D)
Note:
The resources are returned in the default Java EE delegation model beneath theFilteringClassLoader
. Only the resources from the parent of the FilteringClassLoader
are appended to the end of the enumeration being returned.Example 8-8 Using a Filtering Classloading Implementation
System (D) | FilteringClassLoader (filterList := x.y.*) (C) | App (B) | Web (A)
If the application classloader requested the same resource, the following order would be obtained.
META-INF/foo.xml - from the App ClassLoader (B) META-INF/foo.xml - from the System ClassLoader (D)
For getResource()
, only the first descriptor is returned and getResourceAsStream()
returns the inputStream
of the first resource.
Your applications may use many different Java classes, including Enterprise Beans, servlets and JavaServer Pages, utility classes, and third-party packages. WebLogic Server deploys applications in separate classloaders to maintain independence and to facilitate dynamic redeployment and undeployment. Because of this, you need to package your application classes in such a way that each module has access to the classes it depends on. In some cases, you may have to include a set of classes in more than one application or module. This section describes how WebLogic Server uses multiple classloaders so that you can stage your applications successfully.
For more information about analyzing and resolving classloading issues, see Using the Classloader Analysis Tool (CAT).
Each resource adapter now uses its own classloader to load classes (similar to Web applications). As a result, modules like Web applications and EJBs that are packaged along with a resource adapter in an application archive (EAR file) do not have visibility into the resource adapter's classes. If such visibility is required, you must place the resource adapter classes in APP-INF/classes. You can also archive these classes (using the JAR utility) and place them in the APP-INF/lib of the application archive.
Make sure that no resource-adapter specific classes exist in your WebLogic Server system classpath. If you need to use resource adapter-specific classes with Web modules (for example, an EJB or Web application), you must bundle these classes in the corresponding module's archive file (for example, the JAR file for EJBs or the WAR file for Web applications).
WebLogic Server provides a location within an EAR file where you can store shared utility classes. Place utility JAR files in the APP-INF/lib
directory and individual classes in the APP-INF/classes
directory. (Do not place JAR files in the /classes
directory or classes in the /lib
directory.) These classes are loaded into the root classloader for the application.
This feature obviates the need to place utility classes in the system classpath or place classes in an EJB JAR file (which depends on the standard WebLogic Server classloader hierarchy). Be aware that using this feature is subtly different from using the manifest Class-Path
described in the following section. With this feature, class definitions are shared across the application. With manifest Class-Path
, the classpath of the referencing module is simply extended, which means that separate copies of the classes exist for each module.
The Java EE specification provides the manifest Class-Path
entry as a means for a module to specify that it requires an auxiliary JAR of classes. You only need to use this manifest Class-Path
entry if you have additional supporting JAR files as part of your EJB JAR or WAR file. In such cases, when you create the JAR or WAR file, you must include a manifest file with a Class-Path
element that references the required JAR files.
The following is a simple manifest file that references a utility.jar
file:
Manifest-Version: 1.0 [CRLF] Class-Path: utility.jar [CRLF]
In the first line of the manifest file, you must always include the Manifest-Version
attribute, followed by a new line (CR | LF |CRLF) and then the Class-Path
attribute. More information about the manifest format can be found at: https://download.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/guide/jar/jar.html#JAR
The manifest Class-Path
entries refer to other archives relative to the current archive in which these entries are defined. This structure allows multiple WAR files and EJB JAR files to share a common library JAR. For example, if a WAR file contains a manifest entry of y.jars
, this entry should be next to the WAR file (not within it) as follows:
/<directory>/x.war /<directory>/y.jars
The manifest file itself should be located in the archive at META-INF/MANIFEST.MF
.
For more information, see http://download-llnw.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar/manifestindex.html
.
CAT is a Web-based class analysis tool which simplifies filtering classloader configuration and aids you in analyzing classloading issues, such as detecting conflicts, debugging application classpaths and class conflicts, and proposes solutions to help you resolve them.
CAT is a stand-alone Web application, distributed as a single WAR file, wls-cat.war
, exposing its features through a Web-based front end. CAT is deployed as an internal on-demand application only in development mode. Deployment happens upon first access. If the server is running in production mode, it is not deployed automatically. The CAT Web application is located at WL_HOME
/server/lib/wls-cat.war
. You can deploy it to any WebLogic Server version 10.3.x and later.
Caution:
CAT uses Basic Authentication, which allows login credentials to be sent in the clear. Therefore, Oracle recommends that you undeploy or stop CAT after you are done using it, and that you should never deploy CAT in a production environment.If CAT is deployed in a production environment, you should prevent access to it immediately. For information about stopping access, see one of the following topics:
"Stop" in Deploying Applications to Oracle WebLogic Server
"Stop deployed Web applications" in the Oracle WebLogic Server Administration Console Help
Note the following about Basic Authentication:
Although the user name and password are Base64 encoded, Base64 encoding is not provided for security purposes but rather for encoding non-HTTP-compatible characters that may be in the user name or password into those that are HTTP-compatible.
Basic Authentication can make a system vulnerable to replay and man-in-the middle attacks.
Existing browsers retain authentication information indefinitely. HTTP does not provide a method for a server to direct clients to discard these cached credentials. This means that there is no effective way for a server to log out the user without closing the browser.
To begin using CAT:
In the WebLogic Server Administration Console, select Deployments > app_name > Testing and then select the Classloader Analysis Tool link. Enter your Console login credentials.
Or, open your browser to http://wls-host:port/wls-cat/
and then enter your Console login credentials.
CAT has a simple Web GUI which displays all your currently running applications and modules. In the left-side navigation pane, you select the application or module that you want to analyze; a brief description of it is shown in the right-side pane. You use the right-side pane to perform actions and analyses on the selected application or module. CAT lets you:
Analyze classloading conflicts
View the system and application classloaders
Generate reports
CAT analyzes classes loaded by the system classpath classloader and the WebLogic Server main application classloaders, defined here as the filtering, application, and module classloaders. You can perform analysis at the class, package, or JAR level. The results for each action you select can be shown in either a basic view or a detailed view.
Here are some of the tasks which you can perform using CAT:
Display basic information about applications and modules
Analyze classloading conflicts
Review proposed solutions
Get suggestions for configuring filtering classloaders
Display the classloader hierarchy and the entire classpath for each classloader
Search for a class (or a resource) on a classloader
Java EE libraries provide an easy way to share one or more different types of Java EE modules among multiple Enterprise applications. A Java EE library is a single module or collection of modules that is registered with the Java EE application container upon deployment. For more information, see Chapter 9, "Creating Shared Java EE Libraries and Optional Packages."
/lib
DirectoryWebLogic Server includes a lib
subdirectory, located in the domain directory, that you can use to add one or more JAR files, so that the JAR file classes are available (within a separate system level classloader) to all Java EE applications running on WebLogic Server instances in the domain. The JARS in the domain /lib
directory will not be appended to the system classpath. The classloader that gets created is a child of the system classloader. Any classes that are in JARs in the domain /lib
directory will only be visible to Java EE applications, such as EAR files. Classes in the system classpath cannot access classes in the domain /lib
directory.
The lib
subdirectory is intended for JAR files that change infrequently and are required by all or most applications deployed in the server. For example, you might use the lib
directory to store third-party utility classes that are required by all Java EE deployments in a domain. Third-party utility classes will be made available because the domain /lib
classloader will be the parent of any Java EE application.
The lib
directory is not recommended as a general-purpose method for sharing a JARs between one or two applications deployed in a domain, or for sharing JARs that need to be updated periodically. If you update a JAR in the lib
directory, you must reboot all servers in the domain in order for applications to realize the change. If you need to share a JAR file or Java EE modules among several applications, use the Java EE libraries feature described in Chapter 9, "Creating Shared Java EE Libraries and Optional Packages."
To share JARs using the lib
directory:
Shutdown all servers in the domain.
Copy the JAR file(s) to share into a lib
subdirectory of the domain directory. For example:
mkdir c:\bea\wlserver_10.3\samples\domains\wl_server\lib cp c:\3rdpartyjars\utility.jar c:\bea\wlserver_10.3\samples\domains\wl_server\lib
Note:
WebLogic Server must have read access to thelib
directory during startup.
The Administration Server does not automatically copy files in the lib
directory to Managed Servers on remote machines. If you have Managed Servers that do not share the same physical domain directory as the Administration Server, you must manually copy JAR file(s) to the domain_name
/lib
directory on the Managed Server machines.
Start the Administration Server and all Managed Servers in the domain.