Administering HTTP Connectivity

This chapter provides procedures for performing HTTP connectivity tasks in the Payara Server environment by using the asadmin command-line utility.

Instructions for accomplishing the tasks in this chapter by using the Administration Console are contained in the Administration Console online help.

About Internet Connectivity

The HTTP service provides functionality for deploying web applications and for making deployed web applications accessible by Internet clients, either in a single application server instance or in a cluster of multiple server instances. HTTP services are provided by two kinds of related objects: listeners and virtual servers.

For more information about clusters, see the Payara Server High Availability section.

About HTTP Network Listeners

An HTTP listener, also known as a network listener, is a listen socket that has an Internet Protocol (IP) address, a port number, a server name, and a default virtual server. Each virtual server provides connections between the server and clients through one or more listeners. Each listener must have a unique combination of port number and IP address. For example, an HTTP listener can listen for a host on all configured IP addresses on a given port by specifying the IP address 0.0.0.0.

A listener can listen on a specific port on all network interfaces by using the IP 0.0.0.0, and a configured port. Alternatively, the listener can specify a unique IP address for each listener while using the same port.

A virtual server will then be used to select a combination of network listeners to use for an application. For example, Payara Server has two default network listeners for user deployed applications: an insecure listener on port 8080 (http-listener-1), and a secure listener on port 8181 (http-listener-2).

Because an HTTP listener is a combination of IP address and port number, you can have multiple HTTP listeners with the same IP address and different port numbers, or with different IP addresses and the same port number (if your host was configured to respond to these addresses). However, if an HTTP listener uses the 0.0.0.0 IP address, which listens on all IP addresses on a port, you cannot create HTTP listeners for additional IP addresses that listen on the same port for a specific IP address. For example, if an HTTP listener uses 0.0.0.0:8080 (all IP addresses on port 8080), another HTTP listener cannot use 1.2.3.4:8080.

The host running the Payara Server typically has access to only one IP address. HTTP listeners typically use the 0.0.0.0 IP address and different port numbers, with each port number serving a different purpose. However, if the host does have access to more than one IP address, each address can serve a different purpose.

To access a web application deployed on Payara Server, use the URL http://localhost:8080/ (or https://localhost:8081/ for a secure application), along with the context root specified for the web application.

To access the Administration Console, use the URL https://localhost:4848/ or http://localhost:4848/asadmin/ (console default context root).

About Virtual Servers

A virtual server, sometimes called a virtual host, is an object that allows the same physical server to host multiple Internet domain names.

All virtual servers hosted on the same physical server share the IP address of that physical server. A virtual server associates a domain name for a server (such as www.aaa.com) with the particular server on which Payara Server is running. Each virtual server must be registered with the DNS server for your network.

Do not confuse an Internet domain with the administrative domain of Payara Server.

For example, assume that you want to host the following domains on your physical server: www.aaa.com, www.bbb.com, and www.ccc.com. Assume that these domains are respectively associated with web modules web1, web2, and web3. This means that the following URLs are handled by your physical server:

http://www.aaa.com:8080/web1
http://www.bbb.com:8080/web2
http://www.ccc.com:8080/web3

The first URL is mapped to virtual server www.aaa.com, the second URL is mapped to virtual server www.bbb.com, and the third is mapped to virtual server www.ccc.com. For this mapping to work, www.aaa.com, www.bbb.com, and www.ccc.com must all resolve to your physical server’s IP address and each virtual server must be registered with the DNS server for your network. In addition, on a UNIX system, add these domains to your /etc/hosts file (if the setting for hosts in your /etc/nsswitch.conf file includes files).

Administering HTTP Network Listeners

By default, when Payara Server starts, the following HTTP listeners are started automatically:

  • HTTP listeners associated with the virtual server named server:

    • The listener named http-listener-1 does not have security enabled.

    • The listener named http-listener-2 has security enabled

  • An HTTP listener named admin-listener, associated with the virtual server named __asadmin. For this listener, security is not enabled.

The following table describes the Payara Server default ports for the listeners that use ports.

Table 1. Default Ports for Listeners
Listener Default Port Description

Administrative server

4848

A domain’s administrative server is accessed by the Administration Console and the asadmin utility.

For the Administration Console, specify the port number in the URL of the browser. When running an asadmin subcommand remotely, specify the port number by using the --port option.

HTTP

8080

The web server listens for HTTP requests on a port. To access deployed web applications and services, clients connect to this port.

HTTPS

8181

Web applications configured for secure communications listen on a separate port.

Network Listeners Configuration

When configuring network listeners from the admin console, there are some visible configuration options that transparently configure the protocol being used.
If a configuration property isn’t shown here but is visible in the admin console, see Protocols.

Existing network listeners can be configured from the admin console or with asadmin commands. The network listener configurations can be found in the admin console under Configurationsyour-configNetwork ConfigNetwork Listeners.

Configuration Page Location

The following fields can be configured for network listeners:

Table 2. Network Listeners Configuration
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

Name

The unique name of the network listener. This cannot be edited from the admin console.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.name=value

Protocol

The protocol used by the network listener. This cannot be edited from the admin console.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.protocol=${protocol-name}

Status

The status of the network listener. This determines whether the listener will be actively listening for requests.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.status=[true/false]

JK Enabled

Whether mod_jk support should be enabled for this listener. Should only be enabled if mod_jk is being explicitly configured on an Apache Web Server in conjunction with Payara Server.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.jk-enabled=[true/false]

JK Configuration File

The location of the mod_jk configuration file. Defaults to ${com.sun.aas.instanceRoot}/config/glassfish-jk.properties.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.jk-configuration-file=/location/to/file

Port

The port used by the network listener. The selected port will be used to listen for requests.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.port=value

Address

The address used by the network listener. 0.0.0.0 corresponds to all addresses.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.address=value

Transport

The transport used by the network listener. This cannot be edited from the admin console. Defaults to tcp.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.transport=${transport-name}

Thread Pool

The thread pool used by the network listener. This determines the pool of threads used to service requests.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.network-listeners.network-listener.${network-listener-name}.thread-pool=${thread-pool-name}

To Create an Internet Connection

Use the subcommands in this procedure to create an internet connection with the full range of listener options. A network listener is created behind the scenes. For the shortcut version of this process , see To Create an HTTP Network Listener.

  1. Ensure that the server is running.

    Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create an HTTP or HTTPS protocol by using the create-protocol subcommand with the --securityenabled option.

    To use the built-in http-listener-1 HTTP protocol, or http-listener-2 HTTPS protocol, skip this step.

  3. Create an HTTP configuration by using the create-http subcommand.

    To use a built-in protocol, skip this step.

  4. Create a transport by using the create-transport subcommand.

    To use the built-in tcp transport, skip this step.

  5. Create a thread pool by using the create-threadpool subcommand.

    To avoid using a thread pool, or to use the built-in http-thread-pool thread pool, skip this step.

    For additional thread pool information, see Administering Thread Pools.

  6. Create an HTTP listener by using the create-network-listener subcommand.

    Specify a protocol and transport, optionally a thread pool.

  7. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server.

To Create an HTTP Network Listener

Use the create-http-listener subcommand or the create-network-listener subcommand in remote mode to create a listener. These subcommands provide backward compatibility and also provide a shortcut for creating network listeners that use the HTTP protocol.

Behind the scenes, a network listener is created as well as its associated protocol, transport, and HTTP configuration. This method is a convenient shortcut, but it gives access to only a limited number of options. If you want to specify the full range of listener options, follow the instructions in To Create an Internet Connection.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create an HTTP network listener by using the create-network-listener subcommand or the create-http-listener subcommand.

  3. If needed, restart the server. If you edit the special HTTP network listener named admin-listener, you must restart the server for changes to take effect.

Example - Creating an HTTP Listener

This example creates an HTTP listener named sampleListener that uses a non-default number of acceptor threads. Security is not enabled at runtime.

asadmin create-http-listener --listeneraddress `0.0.0.0` --listenerport 7272 --defaultvs server --servername host1.sun.com --acceptorthreads 100 --securityenabled=false --enabled=false sampleListener
Command create-http-listener executed successfully.

Example - Creating a Network Listener

This example a network listener named sampleListener that is not enabled at runtime:

asadmin create-network-listener --listenerport 7272 protocol http-1 --enabled=false sampleListener
Command create-network-listener executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-http-listener or asadmin help create-network-listener at the command line.

To List HTTP Network Listeners

Use the list-http-listeners subcommand or the list-network-listeners subcommand in remote mode to list the existing HTTP listeners.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List HTTP listeners by using the list-http-listeners or list-network-listeners subcommand.

Example - Listing HTTP Listeners*

This example lists the HTTP listeners. The same output is given if you use the list-network-listeners subcommand.

asadmin list-http-listeners
admin-listener
http-listener-2
http-listener-1
Command list-http-listeners executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help list-http-listeners or asadmin help list-network-listeners at the command line.

To Update an HTTP Network Listener

  1. List HTTP listeners by using the list-http-listeners or list-network-listeners subcommand.

  2. Modify the values for the specified listener by using the set subcommand.

    The listener is identified by its dotted name.

Example - Updating an HTTP Network Listener

This example changes security-enabled to false on http-listener-2.

asadmin set server.network-config.protocols.protocol.http-listener-2.security-enabled=false
Command set executed successfully.

To Restart an HTTP Network Listener

The restart-http-listeners commands restarts all HTTP listeners but the admin-listener of the targeted instance(s). It is either used with the --all flag to target all instances or with a particular target instance, deployment group or cluster following the --target parameter.

When target and all parameters are both omitted the default target is the DAS.

This command only restarts all HTTP listeners except the admin-listener. IIOP listeners are not affected and may require a server restart to make changes take effect.

Example - Restarting an HTTP Network Listener

This example restarts the instance named FlyingFish:

asadmin restart-http-listeners --target FlyingFish
Command restart-http-listeners executed successfully.

To Delete an HTTP Network Listener

Use the delete-http-listener subcommand or the delete-network-listener subcommand in remote mode to delete an existing HTTP listener. This disables secure communications for the listener.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List HTTP listeners by using the list-http-listeners subcommand.

  3. Delete an HTTP listener by using the delete-http-listener or delete-network-listener subcommand.

  4. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server. See To Restart a Domain.

Example - Deleting an HTTP Listener

This example deletes the HTTP listener named sampleListener:

asadmin delete-http-listener sampleListener
Command delete-http-listener executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-http-listener or asadmin help delete-network-listener at the command line.

Configure an HTTP Listener for SSL

Use the create-ssl subcommand in remote mode to create and configure an SSL element in the specified listener. This enables secure communication for the listener.

  1. Ensure that the server is running.

    Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Configure an HTTP listener by using the create-ssl subcommand.

  3. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server.

Example - Configuring an HTTP Listener for SSL

This example enables the HTTP listener named http-listener-1 for SSL:

asadmin create-ssl --type http-listener --certname sampleCert http-listener-1
Command create-ssl executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-ssl at the command line.

Configure SNI for HTTP Listeners

Server Name Indication, SNI for short, allows you to use multiple SSL certificates with the same IP address. When enabled, the server will look for a certificate in the configured keystore using a nickname that matches the host name requested.

SNI can be enabled by configuring a network listener. Existing network listeners can be configured from the admin console or with asadmin commands. The network listener configurations can be found in the admin console under Configurations → <your-config> → Network Config → Network Listeners.

From here, click on the SSL tab, and make sure that the SNI Support checkbox is ticked.

For SNI to take effect, the network listener must have security enabled by providing a default keypair and certificate, and by checking the Security box on the HTTP tab.

Configure Optional Client Authentication for SSL

In Payara Server, you can configure the SSL protocol of an HTTP listener such that it requests a certificate before permitting a client connection, but does not refuse a connection if the client does not provide one. To enable this feature, set the client-auth property of the SSL protocol to the value want. For example:

asadmin set configs.config.config-name.network-config.protocols.protocol.listener-name.ssl.client-auth=want

Configure a Custom SSL Implementation

In Payara Server, you can configure the SSL protocol an HTTP listener such that it uses a custom implementation of SSL. To enable this feature, set the classname property of the SSL protocol to the name of a class that implements the com.sun.grizzly.util.net.SSLImplementation interface. For example:

asadmin> set configs.config.config-name.network-config.protocols.protocol.listener-name.ssl.classname=SSLImplementation-class-name

By default, Payara Server uses the implementation com.sun.enterprise.security.ssl.GlassfishSSLImpl for the SSL protocol.

Delete SSL From an HTTP Listener

Use the delete-ssl subcommand in remote mode to delete the SSL element in the specified listener. This disables secure communications for the listener.

  1. Ensure that the server is running.

    Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Delete SSL from an HTTP listener by using the delete-ssl subcommand.

  3. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server.

Example - Deleting SSL From an HTTP Listener

This example disables SSL for the HTTP listener named http-listener-1:

asadmin delete-ssl --type http-listener http-listener-1
Command delete-ssl executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-ssl at the command line.

Assign a Default Virtual Server to an HTTP Listener

  1. In the Administration Console, open the HTTP Service component under the relevant configuration.

  2. Open the HTTP Listeners component under the HTTP Service component.

  3. Select or create a new HTTP listener.

  4. Select from the Default Virtual Server drop-down list. For more information, see:

For details, click the Help button in the Administration Console from the HTTP Listeners page.

Administering HTTP Protocols

A protocol is used by a network listener to determine the nature of the communication expected by the listener. For example, a protocol determines the timeout of a request, as well as whether HTTPS should be used. The reason the protocol is separate to the listener is so that the same protocol configuration can be used to listen on multiple ports.

Existing protocols can be configured from the admin console or with asadmin commands. The protocol configurations can be found in the Admin Console under Configurationsyour-configNetwork ConfigProtocols.

Each HTTP listener has an HTTP protocol, which is created either by using the create-protocol subcommand or by using the built-in protocols that are applied when you follow the instructions in To Create an HTTP Network Listener.

Protocol Configurations

Table 3. Security
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

Security

Whether security is enabled for the protocol. When disabled, all the SSL/TLS options are ignored.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.security-enabled=[true|false]

Table 4. HTTP Settings
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

Server Name

The name of the server. This will be sent as the Server header in responses.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.server-name-enabled=value

Default Virtual Server

The default virtual server used for the protocol. Establishes the request priority when multiple virtual servers are configured.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.default-virtual-server=value

Redirect Port

The port used for SSL transport redirection.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.redirect-port=value

Max Connections

The maximum number of requests per connection to keep in keep-alive mode.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.max-connections=value

Timeout

The amount of time in seconds before a connection is deemed as idle. After this, the connection will no longer be in keep-alive state.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.timeout-seconds=value

Upload Timeout Enabled

Enables closing a connection that is reading bytes slowly after the configuration-http-upload-timeout-millis setting is reached.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.upload-timeout-enabled=value

Connection Upload Timeout

The timeout, in milliseconds, for uploads.

To disable this timeout, set the value to -1.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.connection-upload-timeout-millis=value

Request Timeout

The timeout, in seconds, for requests.

To disable this timeout, set the value to -1.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.request-timeout-seconds=value

Send Buffer Size

The size, in bytes, of the send buffer.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.send-buffer-size-bytes=value

Header Buffer Length

The size, in bytes, of the buffer used to read the request data.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.header-buffer-length-bytes=value

Max Post Size

The maximum size, in bytes, of POST actions.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.max-post-size-bytes=value

Max Form Post Size

The maximum size, in bytes, of a POST form.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.max-form-post-size-bytes=value

Max Save Post Size

The maximum size, in bytes, of a POST request that will be saved during authentication.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.max-save-post-size-bytes=value

URI Encoding

The character set used to decode the request URIs received.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.uri-encoding=value

Compression

Whether to enable HTTP/1.1 GZIP compression to save server bandwidth. Will be ignored when HTTP/2 is used.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.compression=[off/on/force]

Compression Level

The level of compression to be used:

  • -1 corresponds to the default level

  • 0 is no compression

  • 1 is the best speed

  • 9 is the best compression

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.compression-level=[-1-9]

Compression Strategy

Sets the strategy to be used during HTTP compression.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.compression-strategy=[Default/Filtered/Huffman Only]

Compressible Mime Types

Comma separated list of MIME types for which HTTP compression is used.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.compressable-mime-type=value

Compression Minimum Size

The minimum size of a file that determines whether compression is applied.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.compression-min-size-bytes=value

No-Compression User Agents

Comma separated list of regular expressions matching user agents for which compression should not be used.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.no-compression-user-agents=value

Restricted User Agents

List of restricted user agents for which HTTP compression is applied.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.restricted-user-agents=value

Default Response Type

The default response type if none are matched. Specified as a semicolon delimited string consisting of content type, encoding, language, charset.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.default-response-type=value

Adapter

The class name of the static resources adapter.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.adapter=value

Comet Support

Whether comet support is enabled or not.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.comet-support-enabled=[true|false]

DNS Lookup

Enables Domain Name System lookups.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.dns-lookup-enabled=[true|false]

Trace Enabled

Enables the TRACE operation

Setting this to false helps prevent cross-site scripting attacks.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.trace-enabled=[true|false]

Auth Pass Through

Enable this if the network listener receives traffic from an SSL terminating proxy server.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.auth-pass-through-enabled=[`true|false]`

Chunking Enabled

Enables HTTP response chunking.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.chunking-enabled=[true|false]

XPoweredBy

Used to overwrite the default X-Powered-By header string.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.xpowered-by=value

XFrame Options

When enabled, the X-Frame-Options header will be set to SAMEORIGIN. This can still be overridden by a deployed application.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.xframe-options=[true|false]

Encoded Slash

Allow encoded slashes (e.g. %2F) in URIs.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.encoded-slash-enabled=[true|false]

Websockets Support Enabled

Allows Websockets to be used.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.websockets-support-enabled=[true|false]

Scheme Mapping

HTTP header name used for identifying the originating protocol of an HTTP request.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.scheme-mapping=value

Remote User Mapping

HTTP header name used for identifying the originating user of an HTTP request.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.remote-user-mapping=value

Enable Cookie SameSite

Enabling to set all cookies to use the SameSite value.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.cookie-same-site-enabled=[true|false]

Cookie SameSite Value

The values to be used:

  • Lax: Cookies are not sent on normal cross-site sub-requests

  • Strict: Cookies will only be sent in a first-party context

  • None: Cookies will be sent in all contexts

Users can set up the SameSite Cookie attribute at the application level by using the payara-web.xml deployment descriptor.

Set this attribute by using the cookie-properties tag with a child property named cookieSameSite:

<payara-web-app>
    <cookie-properties>
        <property name="cookieSameSite" value="Strict" />
    </cookie-properties>
</payara-web-app>

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.cookie-same-site-value=[`Lax|Strict|None]`

Table 5. HTTP/2 Settings
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

HTTP/2 Enabled

Whether to enable HTTP/2 support.

HTTP/2 support can only be enabled on a secure network listener

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-enabled=[true|false]

Disable HTTP/2 Cipher Check

Whether TLS connections can be established using insecure cipher suites.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-disable-cipher-check=[true|false]

HTTP/2 Max Concurrent Streams

The number of maximum concurrent streams allowed per HTTP/2 connection.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-max-concurrent-streams=value

HTTP/2 Initial Window Size

The initial window size in bytes.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-initial-window-size-in-bytes=value

HTTP/2 Max Frame Payload Size

The maximum size of the HTTP/2 frame payload to be accepted.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-max-frame-payload-size-in-bytes=value

HTTP/2 Max Header List Size

The maximum size, in bytes, of the header list.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-max-header-list-size-in-bytes=value

Streams High Watermark

The maximum number of streams that are allowed. Excess streams will be cleaned out periodically in proportion to the maximum number of streams.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-streams-high-water-mark=value

Streams Clean Percentage

The number of streams to process when the high watermark is exceeded.

Only closed streams will be removed.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-clean-percentage=value

Streams Clean Frequency Check

The number of streams that must be closed before checking if the number of streams exceeds the high watermark.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-clean-frequency-check=value

HTTP/2 Push

Enables server push. This is enabled by default.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.http.http2-push-enabled=[true|false]

Table 6. HTTP/2 Settings
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

TLS V1.2 Enabled

Whether to enable TLS V1.2 or not. Will be ignored if TLS is disabled.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.tls12-enabled=[true|false]

TLS V1.3 Enabled

Whether to enable TLS V1.3 or not. Will be ignored if TLS is disabled.

Support for TLS 1.3 is available with JDK 8 versions after JDK 1.8.0u261, unless you’re using Zulu JDK 1.8.0u222 - 1.8.0u252, in which case you’ll also need to use the Java option -XX:+UseOpenJSSE. This option makes OpenJSSE default TLS provider.
OpenJSEE is a JSEE provider created by Azul to support TLS 1.3 on JDK 8. See TLS 1.3 Support in Zulu 8 with OpenJSSE for more information. Also note that this flag can cause problems with the HTTP/2 support. If you’re using a lower version than 1.8.0u222, checkbox to enable TLS 1.3 will not be visible on the web administration console.
You will need to add the following Java Option: -Dfish.payara.clientHttpsProtocol=TLSv1.3 to the asadmin script for TLS 1.3 to work with asadmin CLI. This sets the TLS version to 1.3 which will be used by the asadmin client.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.tls13-enabled=[true|false]

Client Authentication

When enabled, clients will be required to authenticate themselves to the server.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.client-auth-enabled=[true|false]

Certificate Nickname

The alias of the certificate to be supplied on secure requests. The certificate should be present in the server keystore.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.cert-nickname=value

Key Store

The name of the keystore file used to secure communication handled by this network listener.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.key-store=value

Trust Store

The name of the trust store file where trusted certificates are stored.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.trust-store=value

Trust Algorithm

The name of the trust management algorithm (e.g. PKIX) to use for certification path validation.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.trust-algorithm=value

Max Certificate Length

Maximum number of non self-issued intermediate certificates that can exist in a certification path. Only used if the trust algorithm is set to PKIX.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.trust-max-cert-length=value

Enabled Ciphers

A list of the server enabled ciphers. This string is stores as a comma separated list of the enabled ciphers with a + or a - at the start of each, depending on whether the cipher is enabled or disabled. E.g. +TLS_RSA_WITH_AES_256_CBC_SHA,+SSL_RSA_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.ssl3-tls-ciphers=value

Handshake Timeout

The timeout, in milliseconds, for a handshake. After this timeout the handshake will be aborted.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.handshake-timeout-millis=value

TLS Rollback

Whether TLS rollback is enabled or not.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.tls-rollback-enabled=[true|false]

HSTS Enabled

Whether HSTS is enabled. When enabled, the server will respond to requests with the Strict-Transport-Security header. While these requests often return a 301 directing the client to the secure site, this header instructs the requester to make all connections to this site secure for the next year.

The header takes the following form:

Strict-Transport-Security: max-age=31536000; includeSubDomains; preload

The last 2 attributes are added based on the other HSTS configuration options.

HSTS can be enabled on any HTTP listener. However, it’s meant to be enabled on a secure HTTP listener if an insecure HTTP listener redirects to the secure listener. When browsers receive the Strict-Transport-Security header over HTTPS, they will use HTTPS immediately for all future connections requested over plain HTTP.
If the header is retrieved over HTTP, it is ignored by browsers due to security reasons. More information in MDN Docs.

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.hsts-enabled=[true|false]

When the configuration value is set to true, the HSTS header is added with a max-age property value of 31536000. The max-age property is not configurable.

HSTS Subdomains

When enabled in combination with HSTS, Strict-Transport-Security headers will include the includeSubDomains attribute. When this is configured, the client will also assume subdomains of the targeted resource require secure connections. The subdomains property is not enabled by default and has to be enabled with the following command:

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.hsts-sub-domains=[true|false]

HSTS Preload

When enabled in combination with HSTS, Strict-Transport-Security headers will include the preload attribute. When this is configured, the domain of the target resource will be added to the browser preload list, meaning that initial requests to this resource in future won’t be insecure. The preload property is not enabled by default and has to be enabled with the following command:

set configs.config.server-config.network-config.protocols.protocol.${protocol-name}.ssl.hsts-preload=[true|false]

Create a Protocol

Use the create-protocol subcommand in remote mode to create a protocol.

  1. Ensure that the server is running.

    Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create a protocol by using the create-protocol

    Information about options and properties for the subcommand are included in this help page.

Example - Creating an HTTP Protocol

This example creates a protocol named http-1 with security enabled.

asadmin> create-protocol --securityenabled=true http-1
Command create-protocol executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-protocol at the command line.

List Protocols

Use the list-protocols subcommand in remote mode to list the existing HTTP protocols.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List the existing protocols by using the list-protocols subcommand.

Example - Listing the Protocols

This example lists the existing protocols.

asadmin list-protocols
admin-listener
http-1
http-listener-1
http-listener-2
Command list-protocols executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help list-protocols at the command line.

Delete a Protocol

Use the delete-protocol subcommand in remote mode to remove a protocol.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Delete a protocol by using the delete-protocol subcommand

Example - Deleting a Protocol

This example deletes the protocol named http-1.

asadmin delete-protocol http-1
Command delete-protocol executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-protocol at the command line.

Administering HTTP Configurations

Each HTTP listener has an HTTP configuration, which is created either by using the create-http subcommand or by using the built-in configurations that are applied when you follow the instructions in To Create an HTTP Network Listener.

Create an HTTP Configuration

Use the create-http subcommand in remote mode to create a set of HTTP parameters for a protocol. This set of parameters configures one or more network listeners,

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create an HTTP configuration by using the create-http subcommand.

    Information about options and properties for the subcommand are included in this help page.

Example - Creating an HTTP Configuration

This example creates an HTTP parameter set for the protocol named http-1.

asadmin create-http --timeout-seconds 60 --default-virtual-server server http-1
Command create-http executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-http at the command line.

Delete an HTTP Configuration

Use the delete-http subcommand in remote mode to remove HTTP parameters from a protocol.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Delete the HTTP parameters from a protocol by using the delete-http subcommand.

Example - Deleting an HTTP Configuration

This example deletes the HTTP parameter set from a protocol named http-1.

asadmin delete-http http-1
Command delete-http executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-http at the command line.

Administering HTTP Transports

Each HTTP listener has an HTTP transport, which is created either by using the create-transport subcommand or by using the built-in transports that are applied when you follow the instructions in To Create an HTTP Network Listener.

Create a Transport

Use the create-transport subcommand in remote mode to create a transport for a network listener,

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create a transport by using the create-transport subcommand.

    Information about options and properties for the subcommand are included in this help page.

Example - Creating a Transport

This example creates a transport named http1-trans that uses a non-default number of acceptor threads.

asadmin create-transport --acceptorthreads 100 http1-trans
Command create-transport executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-transport at the command line.

List Transports

Use the list-transports subcommand in remote mode to list the existing HTTP transports.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List the existing transports by using the list-transports subcommand.

Example - Listing HTTP Transports

This example lists the existing transports.

asadmin list-transports
Enter the value for the target operand> server
http1-trans
tcp
Command list-transports executed successfully.

The values for target operand are as follows:

target

Restricts the listing to transports for a specified target. Valid values are as follows:

server

Lists the transports for the default server instance. This is the default value.

configuration-name

Lists the transports for the specified configuration.

cluster-name

Lists the transports for all server instances in the specified cluster.

instance-name

Lists the transports for the specified server instance. You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help list-transports at the command line.

Delete a Transport

Use the delete-transport subcommand in remote mode to remove a transport.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Delete a transport by using the delete-transport subcommand.

Example - Deleting a Transport

This example deletes the transport named http1-trans.

asadmin delete-transport http1-trans
Command delete-transport executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-transport at the command line.

Administering Virtual Servers

A virtual server 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 directs incoming web requests to different virtual servers based on the URL.

Just as multiple network cards in a single PC make the network see them as separate hosts, virtual servers allow one physical server instance to appear as many, enabling multiple domain names to be associated with the same server.

When you first install Payara Server, a default virtual server is created. You can assign a default virtual server to each new HTTP listener you create.

Web applications and Jakarta EE applications containing web components (web modules) can be assigned to virtual servers during deployment. A web module can be assigned to more than one virtual server, and a virtual server can have more than one web module assigned to it. If you deploy a web application and don’t specify any assigned virtual servers, the web application is assigned to all currently defined virtual servers.

If you then create additional virtual servers and want to assign existing web applications to them, you must redeploy the web applications. For more information about deployment, see the Payara Server Application Deployment section.

You can define virtual server properties using the asadmin set command. For example:

asadmin set server-config.http-service.virtual-server.MyVS.property.sso-enabled="true"

Some virtual server properties can be set for a specific web application. For details, see "payara-web-app" in the Payara Server Application Deployment section.

Virtual Server Configuration

Existing virtual servers can be configured from the admin console or with set asadmin commands. The virtual server configurations can be found in the admin console under Configurationsyour-configVirtual Servers.

Configuration Page Location

The following fields can be configured:

Table 7. Virtual Server Configuration
configuration settings Description Asadmin Command

ID

The unique ID for the virtual server. The only field which cannot be altered from the admin console. The ID cannot begin with a number.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.id=value

Hosts

A comma separated list of values allowed in the host request header to select this virtual server. Each virtual server with the same connection group must have a unique host for that group.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.hosts=value,value2

State

The enabled state of the virtual server. There are 3 options for this property:

  • On → This means that the virtual server is active and will be ready to serve requests.

  • Off → This means that the virtual server is inactive, and will return a 404 error for all requests made through it. This will look from the outside as if no applications are deployed to this server.

  • Disabled → This means that the virtual server is inactive, and will return a 403 error for all requests made through it. This will look from the outside as if the server is intentionally down for maintenance.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.state=on/off/disabled

SSO

Allows multiple web applications deployed to the same virtual server to share the user authentication state. This would mean that signing in to one application would implicitly sign you into all others.

There are 3 options for this property:

  • True (enabled) → This enables SSO for applications on the same virtual server.

  • False (disabled) → This disables SSO for applications on the same virtual server.

  • Inherit (controlled by HTTP service) → This will inherit from the value specified in the HTTP Service.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.sso-enabled=true/false/inherit

SSO Cookie Http Only

Determines whether to add the HttpOnly flag to the JSESSIONIDSSO cookie. In practice, this will disallow JavaScript access to the cookie in the browser.

This prevents malicious XSS attacks hijacking a Java session. It is enabled by default.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.sso-cookie-http-only=true/false

Network Listeners

Comma separated list of network listeners which applications deployed to this virtual server are available on.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.network-listeners=listener-1,listener-2

Default Web Module

This defines which application deployed to this virtual server will be requested if no modules are resolved in the request. For example if app1 and app2 have context roots of /app1 and /app2 respectively, app1 will be returned when the user requests /.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.default-web-module=app1

Log File

This defines a file where log messages coming from this virtual server are redirected to. This allows you to separate application logs from server logs.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.log-file=/dir/to/logs/file.log

Docroot

This defines the directory used as the document root for this virtual server. A document root is a directory where static files can be placed and served from.

For example, if you have a web application deployed to http://localhost:8080/app1 and the corresponding virtual server has a docroot value of /opt/server/docs, then requesting http://localhost:8080/app1/img.jpg will fetch the file at /opt/server/docs/img.jpg.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.docroot=/dir/to/docs/

Access Logging

Enables access logging for this virtual server. Access logging logs all requests made to that virtual server.

There are 3 options for this property:

  • True (enabled) → This enables access logging for applications on the same virtual server.

  • False (disabled) → This disables access logging for applications on the same virtual server.

  • Inherit (controlled by HTTP service) → This will inherit from the value specified in the HTTP Service.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.access-logging=true/false/inherit

Access Log Directory

Defines the directory used for access logs.

set configs.config.server-config.http-service.virtual-server.${virtual-server-name}.access-log=/dir/to/logs

Additional properties

Defines additional properties for the configuration of a virtual server.

Key Description Default Value

sso-max-inactive-seconds

The number of seconds of no activity after which a user’s SSO record becomes eligible for purging.

300

sso-reap-interval-seconds

The number of seconds between purges of SSO records.

60

setCacheControl

Comma separated list of Cache-Control response directives (See section 14.9 of: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2616.txt).

none

allowLinking

If set to true, resources that are symbolic links will be served for all applications deployed to this virtual server.

Can be overridden for an individual application in the glassfish-web.xml/payara-web.xml deployment descriptor with:

<glassfish-web-app>
  <property name="allowLinking" value="false" />
</glassfish-web-app>
Setting this property to true on Windows systems exposes JSP source code.

false

accessLogWriteInterval

The number of seconds between each time the log is written to disk. The access log is written when the buffer is full or when the interval expires. If the value is 0, the buffer is always written even if it’s not full.

300

accessLogBufferSize

The size, in bytes, of the buffer where access log calls are stored.

32768

allowRemoteAddress

Comma separated list of regular expression patterns to which the remote client’s IP address is compared. The IP must match one of the patterns to be accepted.

none

denyRemoteAddress

Comma separated list of regular expression patterns to which the remote client’s IP address is compared. The IP must not match any of the patterns to be accepted.

none

allowRemoteHost

Comma separated list of regular expression patterns to which the remote client’s host name is compared. The host name must match one of the patterns to be accepted.

none

denyRemoteHost

Comma separated list of regular expression patterns to which the remote client’s host name is compared. The host name must not match any of the patterns to be accepted.

none

authRealm

Specifies the name attribute of a security realm, which overrides the server’s default realm for standalone web applications deployed to this virtual server. Can be overridden for an individual application with a realm defined in the web.xml.

none

securePagesWithPragma

Set this property to false to ensure that for all web applications on this server file downloads using SSL work properly in Internet Explorer.

true

contextXmlDefault

Sets the directory of the context.xml used for this virtual server, if one is used.

none

alternatedocroot_n

Specifies an alternate document root, where n is a positive integer that allows specification of more than one.

none

send-error_n

Specifies custom error page mappings for the virtual server, which are inherited by all web applications deployed on the virtual server, unless overridden in the web.xml. The value is a string, composed of three values:

  • code → The HTTP response status code for the custom error page.

  • path → The path of the file to be returned, relative to the /config directory.

  • reason (optional) → The text of the reason string.

E.g. send-error_1="code=404 path=/dir/of/file/error.html reason=UNAUTHORIZED".

none

redirect_n

Specifies a redirect from an old url to a new one. The value is a string, composed of two values:

  • from → The prefix of the requested URI to match.

  • url-prefix → The prefix of the new URI to return to the client. The from prefix is replaced by this value.

E.g. redirect_1="from=/fake url-prefix=http://another".

none

listener_n

Specifies the fully qualified class name of a custom Catalina listener, where n is a positive integer that allows the specification of more than one. The listener class must implement the org.apache.catalina.ContainerListener or org.apache.catalina.LifecycleListener interface.

none

errorReportValve

Specifies the fully qualified class name of a custom valve that produces default error pages for applications on this virtual server. Specify an empty string to disable the default error page mechanism for this virtual server.

org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve

Create a Virtual Server

By default, when Payara Server starts, the following virtual servers are started automatically:

  • A virtual server named server, which hosts all user-defined web modules. For development, testing, and deployment of web services in a non-production environment, server is often the only virtual server required.

  • A virtual server named __asadmin, which hosts all administration-related web modules (specifically, the Administration Console). This server is restricted, which means that you cannot deploy web modules to this virtual server.

In a production environment, additional virtual servers provide hosting facilities for users and customers so that each appears to have its own web server, even though there is only one physical server.

Use the create-virtual-server subcommand in remote mode to create the named virtual server.

Before You Begin

A virtual server must specify an existing HTTP listener. Because the virtual server cannot specify an HTTP listener that is already being used by another virtual server, create at least one HTTP listener before creating a new virtual server.

  1. Ensure that the server is running.

    Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. Create a virtual server by using the create-virtual-server subcommand.

    Information about properties for this subcommand is included in this help page.

  3. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server.

Example - Creating a Virtual Server

This example creates a virtual server named sampleServer on localhost.

asadmin create-virtual-server --hosts pigeon,localhost --property authRealm=ldap sampleServer
Command create-virtual-server executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help create-virutal-server at the command line.

To List Virtual Servers

Use the list-virtual-servers subcommand in remote mode to list the existing virtual servers.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List virtual servers by using the list-virtual-servers subcommand.

Example - Listing Virtual Servers

This example lists the virtual servers for localhost.

asadmin list-virtual-servers

sampleListener
admin-listener
http-listener-2
http-listener-1
Command list-http-listeners executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help list-virutal-servers at the command line.

Update a Virtual Server

  1. List virtual servers by using the list-virtual-servers subcommand.

  2. Modify the values for the specified virtual server by using the set subcommand.

    The virtual server is identified by its dotted name.

Delete a Virtual Server

Use the delete-virtual-server subcommand in remote mode to delete an existing virtual server.

  1. Ensure that the server is running. Remote subcommands require a running server.

  2. List virtual servers by using the list-virtual-servers subcommand.

  3. If necessary, notify users that the virtual server is being deleted.

  4. Delete a virtual server by using the delete-virtual-server subcommand.

  5. To apply your changes, restart Payara Server. See To Restart a Domain.

Example - Deleting a Virtual Server

This example deletes the virtual server named sampleServer from localhost.

asadmin> delete-virtual-server sampleServer
Command delete-virtual-server executed successfully.

You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by typing asadmin help delete-virutal-server at the command line.

To Assign a Default Web Module to a Virtual Server

A default web module can be assigned to the default virtual server and to each new virtual server. To access the default web module for a virtual server, point the browser to the URL for the virtual server, but do not supply a context root.

For example:

http://myvserver:3184/

A virtual server with no default web module assigned serves HTML or JavaServer Pages ( JSP) content from its document root, which is usually domain-dir/docroot.

To access this HTML or JSP content, point your browser to the URL for the virtual server, do not supply a context root, but specify the target file.

For example:

http://myvserver:3184/hellothere.jsp

Assign a Virtual Server to an Application or Module

You can assign a virtual server to a deployed application or web module.

Before You Begin

The application or module must already be deployed.

  1. In the Administration Console, open the HTTP Service component under the relevant configuration.

  2. Open the Virtual Servers component under the HTTP Service component.

  3. Select the virtual server to which you want to assign a default web module.

  4. Select the application or web module from the Default Web Module drop-down list.

Use the sso-cookie-http-only and sso-cookie-secure virtual server attributes to set the HttpOnly and Secure attributes of any JSESSIONIDSSO cookies associated with web applications deployed to the virtual server.

Use the set subcommand to set the value of the sso-cookie-http-only and sso-cookie-secure virtual server attributes.

The values supported for these attributes are as follows:

sso-cookie-http-only

A boolean value that specifies whether the HttpOnly attribute is included in JSESSIONIDSSO cookies.

When set to true, which is the default, the HttpOnly attribute is included. When set to false, the HttpOnly attribute is not included.

sso-cookie-secure

A string value that specifies whether the Secure attribute is included in JSESSIONIDSSO cookies. Allowed values are as follows:

  • true — The Secure attribute is included.

  • false — The Secure attribute is not included.

  • dynamic — The Secure attribute setting is inherited from the default ports table for all HTTP listeners first session participating in SSO. This is the default value.