Ah, I see. But that looks up what ports are in use by JRun. The utility I
was referring to does the opposite, telling you what ports are NOT in use,
on the entire system.

But thanks for pointing out the Key Search feature. I'm sure others, like
me, may not have noticed it before.

/charlie

-----Original Message-----
From: Drew Falkman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 3:37 PM
To: JRun-Talk
Subject: RE: Finding Free Ports


Charles-

The "key search" is a link in the top nav bar of the JMC. This is actually a
great utility as you can look up any key/value pair that is stored in any of
the properties files. The first option (on the JMC I am looking at) is
Commonly Used keys, next to it is a drop-down menu, of which "All ports" is
one option - you can also search "All classpaths". The other option is
entering a "User Defined Key". This allows you to be more selective. Then
you can choose the JRun servers you wish to check for keys on.

Unfortunately this doesn't tell you where it was found - which would be
helpful if you wanted to change values, etc. But it will at least tell you
what's going on under the hood.

As far as all JRun's ports, I mean all of the internal/external ports JRun
uses. Each server actually has a few ports that are used as endpoints,
sniffers and whatnot. But these are only the ports that JRun uses - not the
Web server or other software/services.

-drew

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