I've finally manage to get it working. My poor understanding of JMX plus a
misconfiguration prevented from working right. I´ve fixed and tested with
nagios plugin check_jmx.
Thanks,
Andrés
El vie., 12 jul. 2019 a las 23:22, Tim Bain ()
escribió:
> Does netstat show a server socket on port 109
Does netstat show a server socket on port 1099?
If not, does your service script actually use that variable you're
defining? And does it overwrite it and lose your content somewhere before
it starts the ActiveMQ process?
If so, you'll need to tell us more about how you're trying to connect.
Tim
I´ve managed to make my queue work, messages goes from syslog through
activemq to graylog. Now I´m trying to configure JMX in apache, without
success
On my systemd config (file activemq.service) I´ve added in [Service]
Environment=ACTIVEMQ_SUNJMX_START=-Dcom.sun.managment.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.mana
Through the JMX service there are an extensive number of mbeans available
to determine the state of the broker and its queues and topics:
http://activemq.apache.org/jmx.html
It possible to access the JMX MBeans over HTTP, and of course you can use
tools that make direct use of the JMX service. Fo
/check_activemq_queue.rb
they're for use with nagios and needs the ruby stomp lib - and stomp
on your broker.
- Original Message -
> From: "Quinn Stevenson"
> To: "users"
> Cc: "barry barnett"
> Sent: Wednesday, 13 April, 2016 15:49:13
> Subject: Re: M
+91 2261178196
> Cell: +91 7045306767
>
>
>
> -Original Message-
> From: Quinn Stevenson [mailto:qu...@pronoia-solutions.com]
> Sent: 13 April 2016 19:08
> To: users@activemq.apache.org
> Cc: barry.barn...@wellsfargo.com
> Subject: Re: Monitoring ActiveMQ
>
>
-solutions.com]
Sent: 13 April 2016 19:08
To: users@activemq.apache.org
Cc: barry.barn...@wellsfargo.com
Subject: Re: Monitoring ActiveMQ
I’ve used Splunk a few times with my customers - it was pretty easy to get
going.
I’ve used Splunk scripted inputs to pull data from the ActiveMQ Statistics
plugin
ma, Chhaya
> [chhaya.vishwaka...@thinkbiganalytics.com<mailto:chhaya.vishwaka...@thinkbiganalytics.com>]
> Sent: Monday, April 11, 2016 07:10 AM Central Standard Time
> To: users@activemq.apache.org
> Subject: Monitoring ActiveMQ
>
>
> Hi All,
>
> I have ingestio
: +91 2261178196
Cell: +91 7045306767
-Original Message-
From: barry.barn...@wellsfargo.com [mailto:barry.barn...@wellsfargo.com]
Sent: 11 April 2016 17:48
To: users@activemq.apache.org; users@activemq.apache.org
Subject: RE: Monitoring ActiveMQ
RHQ is a good tool!
Regards,
Barry
entral Standard Time
To: users@activemq.apache.org
Subject: Monitoring ActiveMQ
Hi All,
I have ingestion pipeline source --> ActiveMQ --> Storm --> HDFS. Now I want to
monitor ActiveMQ queue so as to detect failures and send email to concerned
person.
I haven't used it before so I&
Hi All,
I have ingestion pipeline source --> ActiveMQ --> Storm --> HDFS. Now I want to
monitor ActiveMQ queue so as to detect failures and send email to concerned
person.
I haven't used it before so I'm looking at options that can be used for
monitoring these queues.
Can somebody suggest sui
monitor the system)
The Command Agent; ActiveMQ.Agent topic that you query for status
The Visualisation plug-in
The Statistics plug-in
thanks,
Ravi.
--
View this message in context:
http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/queries-for-admin-and-monitoring-activemq-tp3908977p3908977.html
Sent from the
Hi everyone,
I found the root-cause of my issue. Maybe this will save somebody else time ;-)
The root cause was, that there as not a single queue. While the documentation
(http://activemq.apache.org/statisticsplugin.html) mentions something about
multiple results, it could be more detailed here
Hm, it should work. Can you turn on debug logging and see if there's
anything there to indicate the problem.
Regards
--
Dejan Bosanac - http://twitter.com/dejanb
-
The experts in open source integration and messaging - http://fusesource.com
ActiveMQ in Action - http://www.manning.
Hi everyone,
I am quiet new to ActiveMQ and try to monitor the overall queue size. I found a
nice Nagios/Icinga plugin to do so, which uses the StatisticsPlugin. Currently
I am a bit puzzles, because it seems the same configuration yields different
result on different host.
On one host (my VM),
s down/not functioning then an exception can be
> thrown and the problem managed from there.
> However this seems like a fairly shoddy solution, and i'm hoping that
> somebody is aware of a better way of checking that the connection is alive.
>
> thanks
> Tim
>
> --
>
en an exception can be
thrown and the problem managed from there.
However this seems like a fairly shoddy solution, and i'm hoping that
somebody is aware of a better way of checking that the connection is alive.
thanks
Tim
--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/Monitoring
en an exception can be
thrown and the problem managed from there.
However this seems like a fairly shoddy solution, and i'm hoping that
somebody is aware of a better way of checking that the connection is alive.
thanks
Tim
--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/Monitoring
18 matches
Mail list logo