General Runtime Administration
This chapter provides instructions for performing general administration tasks in the Payara Server environment by using the asadmin
command-line utility.
Using the asadmin
Utility
Use the asadmin
utility to perform administrative tasks for Payara Server from the command line or from a script. You can use this utility instead of the Administration Console interface.
Path to the asadmin
Utility
The asadmin
utility is located in the as-install/bin
directory. To run the asadmin
utility without specifying the path, ensure that this directory is in your path.
asadmin
Utility Syntax
The syntax for running the asadmin
utility is as follows:
asadmin [asadmin-util-options] [subcommand [subcommand-options] [operands]]
The replaceable items in this syntax are described in the subsections that follow.
Subcommands of the asadmin
Utility
The subcommand identifies the operation or task that you are performing. Subcommands are case-sensitive. Each subcommand is either a local subcommand or a remote subcommand.
-
A local subcommand can be run without a running domain administration server (DAS). However, to run the subcommand and have access to the installation directory and the domain directory, the user must be logged in to the machine that hosts the domain.
-
A remote subcommand is always run by connecting to a DAS and running the subcommand there. A running DAS is required.
asadmin
Utility Options and Subcommand Options
Options control the behavior of the asadmin
utility and its subcommands. Options are case-sensitive.
The asadmin
utility has the following types of options:
asadmin
utility options-
These options control the behavior of the
asadmin
utility, not the subcommand.The
asadmin
utility options may precede or follow the subcommand, butasadmin
utility options after the subcommand are deprecated.All
asadmin
utility options must either precede or follow the subcommand. Ifasadmin
utility options are specified both before and after the subcommand, an error occurs. - Subcommand Options
-
These options control the behavior of the subcommand, not the
asadmin
utility. Subcommand options must follow the subcommand.
A subcommand option may have the same name as an asadmin
utility option, but the effects of the two options are different.
Options have a long form and a short form.
-
The short form of an option has a single dash (
-
) followed by a single character. -
The long form of an option has two dashes (
--
) followed by an option word.
For example, the short form and the long form of the option for specifying terse output are as follows:
-
Short form:
-t
-
Long form:
--terse
Most options require argument values, except Boolean options, which toggle to enable or disable a feature.
|
Operands of asadmin
Utility Subcommands
Operands specify the items on which the subcommand is to act. Operands must follow the argument values of subcommand options, and are set off by a space, a tab, or double dashes (--
). The asadmin
utility treats anything that follows the subcommand options and their values as an operand.
To Run an asadmin
Utility Subcommand in Single Mode
In single mode, you must type a separate asadmin
command for each subcommand that you want to use. After the subcommand has run, you are returned to the operating system’s command shell. Any asadmin
utility options must be specified in each separate asadmin
command that you run.
If you require the same asadmin
utility options for multiple subcommands, use the asadmin
utility in multimode.
For more information, see To Start a Multimode Session.
-
In the operating system’s command shell, run the
asadmin
utility, specifying the subcommand. -
If necessary, also specify any required
asadmin
utility options, subcommand options, and operands.
Example 2-1 Running an asadmin Utility Subcommand in Single Mode
asadmin list-applications
hello <web>
Command list-applications executed successfully.
This example runs the list-applications
subcommand in single mode.
In this example, the default values for all options are used.
The example shows that the application hello
is deployed on the local host.
Example 2-2 Specifying an asadmin Utility Option With a Subcommand in Single Mode
asadmin --host srvr1.example.com list-applications
basic-ezcomp <web>
scrumtoys <web>
ejb31-war <ejb, web>
automatic-timer-ejb <ejb>
Command list-applications executed successfully.
This example specifies the --host
asadmin
utility option with the list-applications
subcommand in single mode.
In this example, the DAS is running on the host srvr1.example.com
.
The example shows that the applications basic-ezcomp
, scrumtoys
, ejb31-war
, and automatic-timer-ejb
are deployed on the host srvr1.example.com
.
Example 2-3 Specifying an asadmin
Utility Option and a Subcommand Option in Single Mode
asadmin --host srvr1.example.com list-applications --type web
basic-ezcomp <web>
scrumtoys <web>
ejb31-war <ejb, web>
Command list-applications executed successfully.
This example specifies the --host
asadmin
utility option and the --type
subcommand option with the list-applications
subcommand in single mode.
In this example, the DAS is running on the host srvr1.example.com
and applications of type web
are to be listed.
To Display Help Information for the asadmin
Utility or a Subcommand
Payara Server provides help information about the syntax, purpose, and options of the asadmin
utility and its subcommands.
This help information is also available in the Payara Server Command Reference Manual.
-
If you are displaying help information for a remote subcommand, ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Specify the subcommand of interest as the operand of the
help
subcommand. If you run thehelp
subcommand without an operand, help information for theasadmin
utility is displayed.
Example 2-4 Displaying Help Information for the asadmin
Utility
asadmin help
This example displays the help information for the asadmin
utility.
Example 2-5 Displaying Help Information for an asadmin
Utility Subcommand
asadmin help create-jdbc-resource
This example displays the help information for the create-jdbc-resource
subcommand.
To display the available subcommands, use the list-commands
subcommand. Local subcommands are displayed before remote subcommands. If the server is not running, only local subcommands are displayed.
To Start a Multimode Session
The asadmin
utility can be used in multiple command mode, or multimode. In multimode, you run the asadmin
utility once to start a multimode session.During the session, the asadmin
utility continues to accept subcommands until you end the session and return to the operating system’s command shell.
Any asadmin
utility options that you set for your multimode session are used for all subsequent subcommands in the session.
Starting a multimode session does not require a running DAS. |
-
Do one of the following:
-
Run the
asadmin
utility without a subcommand. -
Use the
multimode
subcommand.
-
-
If necessary, also specify any
asadmin
utility options that will apply throughout the multimode session. -
In a multimode session, the
asadmin>
prompt is displayed on the command line. You can now typeasadmin
subcommands at this prompt to administer Payara Server.
Example 2-6 Starting a Multimode Session With asadmin
Utility Options
asadmin --user admin1 --passwordfile pwd.txt multimode
This example starts a multimode session in which the asadmin
utility options --user
and --passwordfile
are set for the session.
Example 2-7 Starting a Multimode Session by Using the multimode
Subcommand
asadmin multimode
This example uses the multimode
subcommand to start a multimode session in which the default asadmin
utility options are used.
The asadmin>
prompt is displayed on the command line.
Example 2-8 Running a Subcommand in a Multimode Session
asadmin
Use "exit" to exit and "help" for online help.
asadmin> list-domains
Name: domain1 Status: Running
Command list-domains executed successfully.
asadmin>
This example starts a multimode session and runs the list-domains
subcommand in the session.
Starting a Multimode Session From Within an Existing Multimode Session
You can start a multimode session from within an existing session by
running the multimode
subcommand from within the existing session.
After you end the second multimode session, you return to your original
multimode session.
To End a Multimode Session
At the asadmin>
prompt, type one of the following commands or key combinations:
-
exit
-
quit
-
UNIX and Linux systems:
Ctrl-D
-
Windows systems:
Ctrl-Z
Do not type Ctrl-C to end a multimode session. If a domain or Payara Server instance is started from the multimode session, typing Ctrl-C kills the domain or instance process.
|
You are returned to the operating system’s command shell and the asadmin>
prompt is no longer displayed. If the asadmin>
prompt is still displayed, you might have opened a multimode session within a multimode session. In this situation, repeat this procedure to end the remaining multimode session.
To enable Multimode Session Event Designators
This feature allows the use of Bash Event Designators when using Payara Server’s Asadmin CLI in multimode.
An Event Designator is a reference to a command line entry in the history list, which makes it easy for users to refer and re-use previous asadmin subcommands entries.
This feature is disabled by default in Payara Server and has to be enabled first before being used. |
If this feature is enabled, all occurrences of the \ character will be escaped and thus, removed before running the corresponding command. You’ll have to escape these characters and turn them into \\ for any commands to be properly parsed.
|
Enabling JLine Event Expansion
To enable support for JLine event designators just set the AS_ADMIN_DISABLE_EVENT_EXPANSION
environment variable to false
. Follow these steps depending on your operating system:
To Run a Set of asadmin
Subcommands From a File
Running a set of asadmin
subcommands from a file enables you to automate repetitive tasks.
-
Create a plain text file that contains the sequence of subcommands that you want to run.
-
Run the
multimode
subcommand, specifying the file that you created.If necessary, also specify any
asadmin
utility options that are required to enable subcommands in the file to run.
Example 2-9 Running a Set of asadmin
Subcommands From a File.
create-domain --portbase 9000 customdomain
start-domain customdomain
list-commands
stop-domain customdomain
delete-domain customdomain
This example contains the following:
-
A listing of a file that is named
commands_file.txt
, which contains a sequence ofasadmin
subcommands. -
The command to run the subcommands in the file
commands_file.txt
The commands_file.txt
file contains the asadmin
utility subcommands to perform the following sequence of operations:
-
Creating the domain
customdomain
-
Starting the domain
customdomain
-
Listing all available subcommands
-
Stopping the domain
customdomain
-
Deleting the domain
customdomain
This example runs the sequence of subcommands in the commands_file.txt
file. Because the --portbase
option is specified for the create-domain
subcommand in the file, the --port
asadmin
utility option must also be set.
asadmin --port 9048 multimode --file commands_file.txt
For more information about the subcommands in the preceding example, see the following help pages:
To Run asadmin
Subcommands in --detach
Mode
You can use the --detach
option of the asadmin
utility to detach asadmin
subcommands and run them in the background in detach mode. The asadmin
--detach
option is useful for long-running subcommands and enables you to run several independent subcommands from one console or script.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote commands require a running server.
-
Detach and run the subcommand by using the
asadmin
--detach
option.
Example 2-10 Using the --detach
Option in Single Mode
asadmin --detach create-cluster Cluster1
Job ID: 1
Command create-cluster started successfully.
This example uses the asadmin
--detach
option in single mode to run the create-cluster
subcommand.
Example 2-11 Using the --detach
Option in Multimode
asadmin> create-cluster Cluster1 --detach
Job ID: 1
Command create-cluster started successfully.
This example uses the asadmin
--detach
option in multimode to run the create-cluster
subcommand.
Job IDs are assigned to subcommands that are started using the asadmin
--detach
option or that contain progress information.
You can use the list-jobs
subcommand to list jobs and their job IDs, the attach
subcommand to reattach to a job and view its status, and the configure-managed-jobs
subcommand to configure how long information about jobs is kept.
Example 2-12 Listing Jobs
asadmin> list-jobs
JOB ID COMMAND STATE EXIT CODE TIME OF COMPLETION
1 create-instance COMPLETED SUCCESS 2023-02-15 16:16:16 PST
2 deploy COMPLETED FAILURE 2023-02-15 18:26:30 PST
Command list-jobs executed successfully
This example runs the list-jobs
subcommand in multimode to list jobs and job information.
Example 2-13 Attaching to a Subcommand and Checking Its Status
asadmin> attach 1
Command create-cluster executed with status SUCCESS.
Command attach executed successfully.
This example runs the attach
subcommand in multimode to attach to the create-cluster
subcommand with a job ID of 1
. If a subcommand is still in progress, the output displays the current status, such as percentage complete.
Example 2-14 Configuring Managed Jobs
asadmin> configure-managed-jobs --job-retention-period=36h
Command configure-managed-jobs executed successfully.
This example runs the configure-managed-jobs
subcommand in multimode to set the job retention period to 36 hours. Time periods can be specified in Hh|Mm|Ss
format for hours, minutes, or seconds.
For the full syntax and options of the subcommands in the preceding examples, see the following help pages:
Administering System Properties
Shared server instances will often need to override attributes defined in their referenced configuration. Any configuration attribute can be overridden through a system property of the corresponding name.
To Create System Properties
Use the create-system-properties
subcommand in remote mode to create or update one or more system properties of the domain or configuration. Any configuration attribute can be overwritten through a system property of the corresponding name.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Create system properties by using the
create-system-properties
subcommand.
To List System Properties
Use the list-system-properties
subcommand in remote mode to list the system properties that apply to a domain, cluster, or server instance or configuration.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List system properties by using the
list-system-properties
subcommand.
The existing system properties are displayed, including predefined properties such as HTTP_LISTENER_PORT
and HTTP_SSL_LISTENER_PORT
.
To Delete a System Property
Use the delete-system-property
subcommand in remote mode to delete system properties.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List the existing system properties by using the
list-system-properties
subcommand. -
Delete the system property by using the
delete-system-property
subcommand. -
If necessary, notify users that the system property has been deleted.
System Properties Inventory
The following properties are used exclusively by Payara Server to configure specific settings across multiple features:
fish.payara.clientHttpsProtocol
-
Sets the TLS version to be used by the asadmin client.
This is separate from the TLS version set for HTTPS communication on a listener.
Valid values are:
-
TLSv1.2
, -
TLSv1.3
-
TLSv1.3
(default)
-
fish.payara.classloading.delegate
-
When set to
false
, libraries from applications, anddomain-dir/lib
will override the library in theas-install/glassfish/modules
directoryDefaults to
true
. fish.payara.admin.command.jline.log.disable
-
When set to
true
, JLine logging entries for invalid key bindings and other unwanted errors will be preventedThis is a property used exclusively by the Asadmin CLI Defaults to
false
fish.payara.deployment.transform.namespace
-
When set to
true
, namespace transformation (javax.*
tojakarta.\*
package refactoring) is always performed.If the value is
undefined
then auto transformation is performed on the absence ofjakarta.\*
classes in the deployment archive otherwise transformation task is disabled.Defaults to
null
(undefined) fish.payara.permittedFormBasedAuthHttpMethods
-
A comma separated list of HTTP methods that are permitted to use for FORM based authentication (
j_security_check
).If not set all HTTP methods are permitted.
Valid values are:
-
GET
-
HEAD
-
POST
-
PUT
-
DELETE
-
CONNECT
-
OPTIONS
-
TRACE
-
PATCH
Defaults to
null
(undefined)
-
fish.payara.shutdowngrace
-
After server shutdown is initiated the server waits this period of time (in seconds) to finish ongoing requests before terminating.
New requests are still accepted during this grace period. Accepts values between
0
-Integer.MAX
and defaults to0
. fish.payara.SO_KEEPALIVE
-
Enables keep alive (
SO_KEEPALIVE
) on the sockets created by an IIOP listener. Can be set as a global system property, or as a property on a specific listener (with the latter taking precedence over the global setting if both are set).Replaces deprecated property fish.payara.SOKeepAlive
.Defaults to
false
org.glassfish.grizzly.DEFAULT_MEMORY_MANAGER
-
If option (defined as JVM Option with
-D
or as System Property value)org.glassfish.grizzly.DEFAULT_MEMORY_MANAGER
is not present in the server/instance configuration, the server will override the Grizzly default and use theHeapMemoryManager
class.To override this behaviour (so to use a different memory manager), you must specify this JVM option in the server/instance config with your desired setting.
Valid values are:
-
org.glassfish.grizzly.memory.HeapMemoryManager
(default) -
org.glassfish.grizzly.memory.PooledMemoryManager
-
org.glassfish.grizzly.memory.ByteBufferManager
-
deployment.resource.validation
-
This option (defined as JVM Option with
-D
or as System Property value) defines if the resources are validated during deployment of the application.When active, the default value, all JNDI references are verified but those references can be provided by the application itself and thus not yet available at deployment time (for example the
java:module/env/
based ones).By setting this option to
false
, validation is not performed and deployment will succeed.However, issues will occur at runtime of the application in case of errors in the references.
Defaults to
true
fish.payara.javax.servlet.jsp.disable-static-field-references
-
This option brings back the behaviour of evaluating EL in JSP pages from previous iterations.
When enabled, a static field reference won’t be evaluated.
Defaults to
false
fish.payara.node.ssh.timeout
-
This option sets the SSH timeout in milliseconds for running commands on SSH nodes.
This is a separate timeout to the Asadmin CLI communication or any command specific timeout, this is specifically for the SSH connection used for running certain commands that operate on the remote node itself (e.g.
setup-ssh
andstart-instance
).If set to an invalid value a warning will be logged and the default will be used.
Accepts values from
1
-Integer.MAX
. Defaults to120000ms
fish.payara.tenantcontrol.blocking.disable
-
This option determines if a server instance should skip its standard checks for if it is available for a Hazelcast
Tenantable
object.Defaults to
true
.
fish.payara.autoscale.maxscale
-
This option sets the default maximum boundary for the number of instances to scale up or down by when using auto-scale groups.
Accepts values from
1
-Integer.MAX
. Defaults to100
instances.
Using Configuration Modularity
With configuration modularity in Payara Server, new modules can be added to Payara Server distributions without modifying the global domain.xml
configuration file. Default configuration data for modules is stored in the modules themselves, rather than in domain.xml
, and loaded when needed.
Module configuration elements are stored in domain.xml
only when the default configuration included in the module is changed or when module configuration elements are added to domain.xml
using the create-module-config
subcommand. The delete-module-config
subcommand removes module configuration elements from domain.xml
, and the get-active-module-config
subcommand displays the current active configuration of a module.
To Add the Default Configuration of a Module to domain.xml
Use the create-module-config
subcommand to add the default configuration of a module to domain.xml
.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Add the default configuration of a module to
domain.xml
by usingcreate-module-config
subcommand.
Example 2-18 Adding Module Configuration to domain.xml
asadmin> create-module-config web-container
Command create-module-config executed successfully.
This example adds the default configuration of the web container module to domain1
in server-config
(the default configuration).
Use the --dryrun
option to preview the configuration before it is added.
To Remove the Configuration of a Module From domain.xml
Use the delete-module-config
subcommand to remove the configuration of a module from domain.xml
and cause the module to
use the default configuration included in the module.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Remove the configuration of a module from
domain.xml
by using thedelete-module-config
subcommand.
To Display the Current Active Configuration of a Module
Use the get-active-module-config
subcommand to display the current active configuration of a module.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Display the current active configuration of a module by using the
get-active-module-config
subcommand.
Example 2-20 Displaying the Current Active Configuration of a Module
asadmin> get-active-module-config jms-service
At location: domain/configs/config[server-config]
<jms-service default-jms-host="default_JMS_host" type="EMBEDDED"
<jms-host port="7676" host="localhost" name="default_JMS_host"/>
</jms-service>
Command get-active-module-config executed successfully.
This example displays the current active configuration of the JMS service in server-config
(the default configuration).
Administering Resources
This section contains instructions for integrating resources into the Payara Server environment.Information about administering specific resources, such as JDBC, is contained in other chapters.
To Add Resources From an XML File
Use the add-resources
subcommand in remote mode to create the resources named in the specified XML file.
The following resources are supported: JDBC connection pool and resource, JMS, JNDI, and JavaMail resources, custom resource, connector resource and work security map, admin object, and resource adapter configuration.
The XML file must reside in the domain-dir/config
directory. If you specify a relative path or simply provide the name of the XML file, this subcommand will prepend domain-dir/config
to this operand.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Add resources from an XML file by using the
add-resources
subcommand. Information about properties for the subcommand is included in this help page. -
Restart Payara Server. See To Restart a Domain.
Example 2-21 Adding Resources
asadmin> add-resources c:\tmp\resource.xml
Command : JDBC resource jdbc1 created successfully.
Command : JDBC connection pool poolA created successfully.
Command add-resources executed successfully.
This example creates resources using the contents of the resource.xml
file on localhost
.
Listing Various System Elements
To Display the Payara Server Version
Use the version
subcommand in remote mode to display information about the Payara Server version for a particular server. If the subcommand cannot communicate with the server by using the specified login (user/password) and target (host/port) information,
then the local version is displayed along with a warning message.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Display the version by using the
version
subcommand.
To List Applications
Use the list-applications
subcommand in remote mode to list the deployed applications. If the --type
option is not specified, all applications are listed.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List applications by using the
list-applications
subcommand.
To List Containers
Use the list-containers
subcommand in remote mode to list application containers.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List containers by using the
list-containers
subcommand.
Example 2-24 Listing Containers
asadmin> list-containers
List all known application containers
faulttolerance
metrics
appclient
jpa
jpa
osgi
connector
grizzly
health
jwtauth
ejb
openapi
webservices
security
payara-resources_ear
payara-resources
resources_ear
resources
web
ear
cdi
cdi
config
Command list-containers executed successfully.
This example lists the containers on localhost
.
To List Modules
Use the list-modules
subcommand in remote mode to list the modules that are accessible to the Payara Server module subsystem.
The status of each module is included. Possible statuses include NEW and READY.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List modules by using the
list-modules
subcommand.
Example 2-25 Listing Modules
asadmin> list-modules
This example lists the accessible modules.
Information similar to the following is displayed (partial output):
List Of Modules
Module Status Report Begins
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.admin.gf-restadmin-connector [114]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-config-extensions [273]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.transaction.internal-api [389]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.hazelcast-bootstrap [137]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.hazelcast-eclipselink-coordination [138]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.monitoring-console.core [296]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.ejb.ejb-container [89]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.corba.glassfish-corba-orb [123]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.core.jakartaee-kernel [203]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.shell [430]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.jmx-monitoring [248]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.security.ssl-impl [383]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.osgi-resource-locator [1]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.eclipse.angus.mail [10]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-fault-tolerance [279]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.slack-notifier-core [371]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.snmp-notifier-core [379]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.phonehome-bootstrap [347]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-metrics [285]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.jdbc.runtime [216]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.flashlight.framework [105]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.notification-cdi-eventbus-core [302]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.teams-notifier-core [387]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.ejb.http-admin [91]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.objectweb.asm.tree.analysis [21]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.orb.enabler [313]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.appclient.server.appclient-connector [16]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.microprofile-config-service [274]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.persistence.gf-jpa-connector [112]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.nucleus.logging [267]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.asadmin-recorder [20]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.osgi-platforms.osgi-container [329]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.concurrent.impl [49]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.admin.cli [4]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.configadmin [423]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.nucleus.kernel [262]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.healthcheck-core [142]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.connectors.internal-api [54]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.orb.iiop [314]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.api [149]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.persistence.cmp.support-ejb [44]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.jms.core [244]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.gogo.shell [428]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.objectweb.asm.tree [23]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.notification-jms-core [305]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.notification-eventbus-core [304]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.concurrent.connector [48]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.connectors.gf-connectors-connector [108]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.grizzly.glassfish-grizzly-extra-all [126]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.eventadmin [424]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.healthcheck-checker [141]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.deployment.autodeploy [77]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.jms.gf-jms-connector [110]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.amx-core [7]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.environment-warning [98]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.admin.config-api [50]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.scr [429]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.internal-api [157]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-healthcheck [281]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.gogo.command [426]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.glassfish-mbeanserver [128]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.security.services [367]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.deployment.dol [87]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.runlevel [154]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.connectors.runtime [55]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.admin.monitoring-core [298]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.security.ejb.security [94]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.datadog-notifier-core [73]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.web.weld-integration [416]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.opentracing-adapter [309]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.healthcheck-stuck [146]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.admin.util [6]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.objectweb.asm [25]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-jwt-auth [283]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.utils [155]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.security.appclient.security [18]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.ejb.opentracing [93]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.web.naming [407]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.glassfish-naming [129]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.nucleus.glassfish [131]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.objectweb.asm.commons [22]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.hk2.config [150]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.ejb.gf-ejb-connector [109]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.jdbc.config [215]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.security.jacc.provider.inmemory [160]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.resourcebase.resources.nucleus-resources [307]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.requesttracing-core [352]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-openapi [287]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.resources.javamail-connector [206]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.transaction.jts [258]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.webservices.jsr109-impl [255]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.util [47]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.webservices.connector [411]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.glassfish-api [117]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [jakarta.inject.jakarta.inject-api [181]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.asadmin-audit [19]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.admingui.gf-admingui-connector [106]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.locator [153]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.newrelic-notifier-core [300]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.grizzly.nucleus-grizzly-all [306]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.healthcheck-metrics [144]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.admin.rest-service [359]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.security [368]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.deployment.javaee-core [80]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.security.ee [366]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.resources.connector [353]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.class-model [34]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.web.gf-web-connector [115]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.notification-core [303]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.deployment.javaee-full [81]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.payara-modules.payara-executor-service [333]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.ha.hazelcast-store [136]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.web.cli [401]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.payara-micro-service [339]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.transaction.jta [257]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-modules.healthcheck-cpool [143]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.glassfish.hk2.osgi-adapter [327]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.load-balancer.gf-load-balancer-connector [113]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.rest-monitoring-service [358]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.batch.glassfish-batch-connector [119]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.web.gf-weld-connector [116]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.payara-appserver-modules.microprofile-config [275]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.deployment.common [79]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.xmpp-notifier-core [421]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.fileinstall [425]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.hk2.config-types [51]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.orb.connector [312]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.internal.docker [86]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.apache.felix.gogo.runtime [427]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.email-notifier-core [96]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.server.core.common.container-common [71]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [org.objectweb.asm.util [24]], State = [READY]
OSGiModuleImpl:: Bundle = [fish.payara.extensions.notifiers.discord-notifier-core [85]], State = [READY]
...
Command list-modules executed successfully.
To List Subcommands
Use the list-commands
subcommand in remote mode to list the deployed asadmin
subcommands.
You can specify that only remote subcommands or only local subcommands are listed. By default, this subcommand displays a list of local subcommands followed
by a list of remote subcommands.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List subcommands by using the
list-commands
subcommand.
To List Timers
The timer service is a persistent and transactional notification service that is provided by the enterprise bean container and is used to schedule notifications or events used by enterprise beans. All enterprise beans except stateful session beans can receive notifications from the timer service.
Persistent timers set by the service are not destroyed when the server is shut down or restarted.
Use the list-timers
subcommand in remote mode to list the persistent timers owned by a specific server instance. You can use this information to decide whether to do a timer migration, or to verify that a migration has been completed successfully.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
List timers by using the
list-timers
subcommand.
To Show Component Status
Use the show-component-status
subcommand in remote mode to get the status (either enabled or disabled) of the specified deployed component.
-
Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.
-
Show component status by using the
show-component-status
subcommand.
Example 2-28 Showing Status of a Component
asadmin> show-component-status MEjbApp
Status of MEjbApp is enabled
Command show-component-status executed successfully.
This example shows the status of the MEjbApp
component.
The implementation of the Payara Server REST interfaces is based on project Jersey. Project Jersey is the reference implementation of Jakarta RESTful Web Services.