2010/10/19 André Warnier <a...@ice-sa.com>: >(...) > In this case, the application appears in jvisualvm, as an "unknown > application (pid xxxx)" > >(...) > In this case, the application appears in jvisualvm, as a "tomcat (pid xxxx)" > >(...) > To confirm this, I used the Windows Services applet to change the user under > which tomcat runs, to be the same as my Windows login-id, then restarted the > Service. > And tadaaaa, jvisualvm then finds it (but as the "unknown application"). > > So the fact of running either on the base of Registry settings or on the > base of environment variables seems to have a bearing on jvisualvm's ability > to find a name for the application. >
Here is an answer: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1334907/jvisualvm-how-to-provide-an-icon-and-another-name-than-the-invoking-class-for-m with more details here: http://blogs.sun.com/geertjan/entry/getting_started_extending_visualvm_part The summary is that jvisualvm knows certain applications, and one may write a plugin to it to teach it to recognize more apps. Best regards, Konstantin Kolinko --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tomcat.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tomcat.apache.org