Dear Wiki user,

You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "Tomcat Wiki" for change 
notification.

The following page has been changed by TimFunk:
http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/FAQ/Developing

The comment on the change is:
missing page from port

New page:
== About ==
This section of the FAQ discusses common questions related to Tomcat 
development.

== Questions ==
'''How do I configure Tomcat to support remote debugging?'''

The short answer is to add the following options when the JVM is started:
{{{-Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,address=8000,server=y,suspend=n}}}
There are a number of ways you can do this depending on how you normally start 
Tomcat:
* Set environment variables {{{JPDA_ADDRESS=8000}}} and 
{{{JPDA_TRANSPORT=dt_socket}}} and then start tomcat using {{{catalina jpda 
start}}}.
* If you run Tomcat using service wrapper, check the documentation for the 
service to determine how to set the required JVM options.
* If you start Tomcat from within an IDE, check the documentation for the IDE 
to determine how to set the required JVM options.

The port does not need to be set to 8000, it may be any value appropriate for 
your system.

Whilst this is very useful in development it should not be used in production 
because of both security and performance implications.


'''How do I remotely debug Tomcat using Eclipse?'''

This answer assumes that you have a project set up with all of the fixings and 
have some idea of what you're doing in this respect. If not then thats really 
outside the scope of this topic and more in the scope of you needing to go to 
[[http://eclipse.org eclipse.org]] and read up on how to use your ide, and 
maybe practice a little bit before you come back to this. We're also going to 
assume you have some idea of what a debugger is and how to use one.

Make sure tomcat is started and that your app is deployed and the sources, etc 
are all defined as resources in your app. If you have a servlet or something, 
set a breakpoint where its sure to hit on the next request. Go to 
"Run->Debug...". Click on "Remote Java Applications", then click "New". Type in 
the title and all. Notice that port 8000 from the Tomcat instructions. Save and 
run. Eclipse will connect to the VM that Tomcat is running under. Wow, that was 
easy! Now go type the url to submit to your servlet or whatever in your 
browser. Boom you hit the breakpoint right? Have fun!


'''How do I remotely debug Tomcat using NetBeans IDE?'''

This answer assumes that you have correctly set up a NetBeans IDE project and 
that you know how to use the NetBeans IDE debugger. If not, please go to 
http://www.netbeans.org/kb/using-netbeans/40/debug.html and read up on how to 
use NetBeans IDE and its debugger.

Make sure that Tomcat is started in debug mode as described above, that your 
application is deployed, and that the sources are all defined as resources in 
your application. If you have a servlet or JSP file, set a breakpoint where you 
think a problem might be occurring. Go to "Run->Attach Debugger". A dialog pops 
up to let you specify the following options:

    * Debugger: JPDA Debugger
    * Connector: SocketAttach
    * Host: The IP address of the host your Tomcat installation is running on 
(127.0.0.1 if it is your local machine).
    * Port: The port of your Tomcat debugging interface, which should be 8000 
if you've followed the instructions above.

When you press OK, you have a debugging connection very similar to local 
debugging.

Note that NetBeans IDE has a second option -- you can debug JSP files and 
servlets locally using a Tomcat server that is bundled with the IDE. When you 
debug a JSP file or servlet in the IDE, the bundled Tomcat server automatically 
starts in debug mode, and the debugger connects to it.


'''How do I change the monitoring interval for modified resources and 
application reloading?'''

Modify the {{{checkInterval}}} attribute value on the relevant Loader element 
in your web application configuration file (yourapp.xml), or in the main 
configuration file {{{%CATALINA_HOME%/conf/server.xml}}} if that is the one 
you're using. For more information, please see the 
[[http://tomcat.apache.org/faq/config/loader.html Loader configuration 
reference]]. 

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to