Thanks Jonathan, brilliant!

We are doing kind of the same using jolokia --> telegraf --> influxdb -->
grafana.

Jonathan: in your opinion what would be the advantages of chronograf over
grafana? Looking forward for your blog post! :)

Thanks,

Luis

[1] https://jolokia.org/

El mar., 9 oct. 2018 a las 17:33, exabrial12 (<exabr...@gmail.com>)
escribió:

> To echo Romain's point and add some advice from the trenches: All pool
> configuration is done in a very simple file, largely negating the need for
> a
> console. I think most of the functionality you're asking for is available
> via JMX. TomEE also has an API for writing your own JMX mbeans to do
> anything the container doesn't offer by default:
> http://tomee.apache.org/examples-trunk/mbean-auto-registration
>
> However, TomEE has a different design philosophy than Weblogic. We value
> minimalism to maximize speed and have only a few MB of RAM overhead per
> app.
> Combine that with it's fast boot times, I've always encouraged people run
> one app per TomEE/JVM instance and leverage your operating system's
> existing
> service management facility (systemd, smf), or something like LXC/Docker
> instead. Weblogic is designed to be a service manager itself, so it comes
> from a different philosophy of thinking.
>
> Monitoring your apps is extremely important for any business. If you'd like
> to store the JMX information of TomEE, I suggest deploying/securing Hawtio
> in the JVM and using the TICK stack; Hawtio to expose JMX metrics, Telegraf
> to poll/transmit those to Influxdb, then graphing them out with Chronograf.
> Adding Kapacitor allows you to script alerts. I've been meaning to write a
> blog post about this for awhile since it works exceptionally well.
>
>
>
> --
> Sent from:
> http://tomee-openejb.979440.n4.nabble.com/TomEE-Users-f979441.html
>


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