Interface | Description |
---|---|
JMXAddressable |
Implemented by objects that can have a
JMXServiceURL address. |
JMXAuthenticator |
Interface to define how remote credentials are converted into a
JAAS Subject.
|
JMXConnector |
The client end of a JMX API connector.
|
JMXConnectorProvider |
A provider for creating JMX API connector clients using a given
protocol.
|
JMXConnectorServerMBean |
MBean interface for connector servers.
|
JMXConnectorServerProvider |
A provider for creating JMX API connector servers using a given
protocol.
|
MBeanServerForwarder |
An object of this class implements the MBeanServer interface and
wraps another object that also implements that interface.
|
Class | Description |
---|---|
JMXConnectionNotification |
Notification emitted when a client connection is opened or
closed or when notifications are lost.
|
JMXConnectorFactory |
Factory to create JMX API connector clients.
|
JMXConnectorServer |
Superclass of every connector server.
|
JMXConnectorServerFactory |
Factory to create JMX API connector servers.
|
JMXPrincipal |
The identity of a remote client of the JMX Remote API.
|
JMXServiceURL |
The address of a JMX API connector server.
|
NotificationResult |
Result of a query for buffered notifications.
|
SubjectDelegationPermission |
Permission required by an authentication identity to perform
operations on behalf of an authorization identity.
|
TargetedNotification |
A (Notification, Listener ID) pair.
|
Exception | Description |
---|---|
JMXProviderException |
Exception thrown by
JMXConnectorFactory and
JMXConnectorServerFactory when a provider exists for
the required protocol but cannot be used for some reason. |
JMXServerErrorException |
Exception thrown as the result of a remote
MBeanServer
method invocation when an Error is thrown while
processing the invocation in the remote MBean server. |
Interfaces for remote access to JMX MBean servers. This package defines the essential interfaces for making a JMX MBean server manageable remotely. The specification of this functionality is completed by Part III of the JMX Specification, version 1.4 PDF document.
The JMX specification defines the notion of connectors.
A connector is attached to a JMX API MBean server and makes it
accessible to remote Java clients. The client end of a
connector exports essentially the same interface as the MBean
server, specifically the MBeanServerConnection
interface.
A connector makes an MBean server remotely accessible through a given protocol. The JMX Remote API allows the use of different type of connectors:
JMXConnectorFactory
and, optionally, the Generic Connector
(not part of this bundle, see note below).
Note: the optional packages implementing the optional part of the JMX Remote API are not included in the Java SE Platform but are available from the JMX Remote API Reference Implementation.
Typically, a connector server has an address, represented by the
class JMXServiceURL
. An address for the RMI Connector can look
like this:
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://myhost:1099/myname
In this JMXServiceURL
, the first rmi:
specifies the RMI connector, while the second rmi:
specifies the RMI registry into which the RMI connector server
has stored its stub.
The example above shows only one form of address.
An address for the RMI Connector can take several forms,
as detailed in the documentation for the package
.javax.management.remote.rmi
A connector server is created by constructing an instance of
a subclass of JMXConnectorServer
. Usually, this instance is created
using the method JMXConnectorServerFactory.newJMXConnectorServer
.
Typically, a connector server is associated with an MBean server either by registering it in that MBean server, or by supplying the MBean server as a parameter when creating the connector server.
A connector client is usually created by supplying the
JMXServiceURL
of the connector server to connect to
to the JMXConnectorFactory.connect
method.
For more specialized uses, a connector client can be created
by directly instantiating a class that implements the JMXConnector
interface,
for example the class RMIConnector
.
When creating a connector client or server, it is possible to
supply an object of type Map
that defines
additional parameters. Each entry in this Map has a key that is
a string and an associated value whose type is appropriate for
that key. The standard keys defined by the JMX Remote API all
begin with the string "jmx.remote.
". The document
JMX Remote API lists these standard keys.
Every connection opened by a connector server has a string
identifier, called its connection id. This identifier
appears in the JMXConnectionNotification
events emitted by the connector
server, in the list returned by getConnectionIds()
, and in the value
returned by the client's getConnectionId()
method.
As an example, a connection ID can look something like this:
rmi://192.18.1.9 username 1
The formal grammar for connection ids that follow this convention is as follows (using the grammar notation from section 2.4 of The Java™ Language Specification):
ConnectionId: Protocol : ClientAddressopt Space ClientIdopt Space ArbitraryText ClientAddress: // HostAddress ClientPortopt ClientPort : HostPort
The Protocol
is a protocol that would
be recognized by JMXConnectorFactory
.
The ClientAddress
is the
address and port of the connecting client, if these can be
determined, otherwise nothing. The
HostAddress
is the Internet address of
the host that the client is connecting from, in numeric or DNS
form. Numeric IPv6 addresses are enclosed in square brackets
[]
. The HostPort
is the
decimal port number that the client is connecting from.
The ClientId
is the identity of the
client entity, typically a string returned by JMXPrincipal.getName()
. This string must not contain
spaces.
The ArbitraryText
is any additional
text that the connector server adds when creating the client id.
At a minimum, it must be enough to distinguish this connection
ID from the ID of any other connection currently opened by this
connector server.
Submit a bug or feature
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
Copyright © 1993, 2015, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.