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Foglight for Java EE Technologies 5.9.13 - Application Servers User Guide

Monitoring Application Servers Monitoring Systems Monitoring Servers Monitoring Deployed Applications Monitoring Requests Managing Traces Using Object Tracking to Locate Memory Leaks Monitoring Methods Application Servers Monitor Views
JVM view Method Groups view Request Types view Entity EJBs view Message Driven EJBs view Stateful Session EJBs view Stateless Session EJBs view Deployed Applications view JSPs/Servlets components view Resource Adapters components view Web Applications components view Web Services components view .NET views JBoss Services views Oracle Services views Tomcat Services views WebLogic Services views WebSphere Services views JMX Administration dashboard JMX Explorer dashboard
Appendix: Regular Expressions

WebSphere Services views

This section describes the Services views that are specific to WebSphere application servers:

WebSphere Dynamic Cache view

Use this view to get an overview of the dynamic caches for the WebSphere server. WebSphere 6.x defines two caches: one for servlets and one for objects. The purpose of the dynamic cache is to capture dynamically generated content and serve it from a cache rather than recomputing it each time. The charts capture the number of objects in the cache and the number of satisfied or missed requests.

You can review the dynamic cache by cache objects, or by cache templates using the View by links in this view.

On the Application Servers Monitor dashboard, select a WebSphere server and drill down on the Dynamic Cache link.

Lists cache type, size, requests, invalidations, and their hit and miss rates.

The graphs below the table display the access rate, hit rate, invalidation rate, and miss rate plotted over time.

WebSphere JCA Factories view

You can use this view to monitor the JCA Connection Factories for the selected WebSphere server.

On the Application Servers Monitor dashboard, select a WebSphere server and drill down on the JCA Factories link.

Lists all connection factories in the selected WebSphere server and summarizes its status, provider, connections, threads, and faults.

WebSphere JDBC Data Sources view

You can use this view to monitor the JDBC Data Sources that the selected WebSphere server uses.

On the Application Servers Monitor dashboard, select a WebSphere server and drill down on the JDBC Data Sources link.

Lists all JDBC Data Sources in the selected WebSphere server and summarizes its status, including whether it is active, its health status, as well as information on connections, waiters, and the prepared statement cache.

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