Actually I wanted a solution working for JEE containers, specifically for Glassfish, but after I tried many combinations of settings and did not succeed, I reduced the setup to the simplest possible case.
Here is my Hello World daemon started in a Docker container. I want to attach jconsole
or VisulaVM
to it. Everything is on the same machine.
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) {
while (true) {
try {
Thread.sleep(3000);
System.out.println("Hello, World");
} catch (InterruptedException e) {
break;
}
}
}
}
Dockerfile
FROM java:8
COPY . /usr/src/myapp
WORKDIR /usr/src/myapp
RUN javac Main.java
CMD ["java", "Main"]
Building: docker build -t hello-world-daemon .
Running: docker run -it --rm --name hwd hello-world-daemon
Questions:
- what JVM parameters should be added to
CMD
command line? - what ports should be exposed and published?
- what network mode should Docker container be using?
I do not show my failed attempts here so that correct answers will not be biased. This should be a pretty common problem, yet I could not find a working solution.
Update. Worked solution
This Dockerfile works
FROM java:8
COPY . /usr/src/myapp
WORKDIR /usr/src/myapp
RUN javac Main.java
CMD ["java", \
"-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote", \
"-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9010", \
"-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.local.only=false", \
"-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false", \
"-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false", "Main"]
EXPOSE 9010
in combination with the docker run command
docker run -it --rm --name hwd -p 9010:9010 hello-world-daemon
VisualVM
connects via right click Local->Add JMX Connection, and then entering localhost:9010
, or through adding a remote host.
JConsole
connects via selecting a Remote process with localhost:9010
.
When defining the connection as remote, any interface listed by ifconfig
can be used. For instance, docker0
interface with address 172.17.0.1
works. The container's address 172.17.0.2
works too.
At first you should run you application with these JVM params:
Then you should expose port for docker:
Also specify port binding with docker run command:
After that you can connect with Jconsole to local 9010 port and manage application run in Docker.
As answered by Anthony. I had to use the
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname
java option on my Windows machine.Just be sure not to use the CMD in JSON format in your Dockerfile as this doesn't support shell expansion.
Dockerfile example:
I followed an other SO response to a similar question and it worked.
I started my Java process inside the container by adding those JVM params:
and started the Docker container specifying
-e HOST_HOSTNAME=$HOSTNAME -p <port>
to thedocker run
command.Then I've been able to access to this remote Java app from my local JVisualVm by adding a remote JMX connection ("File" > "Add a JMX Connection...") and specifying
<dockerhostname>:<port>
in the "Connection" input, and checking "Do not require SSL connection".