When I connect to GridGain node using JConsole or VisualVM, I get IOException.
How to overcome this?
Check if the hostname correctly resolves to the host address.
Run the command:
hostname -i
If it reports 127.0.0.1, JConsole/VisualVM would not be able to connect through JMX to the JVM running on that Linux machine. To fix this issue, edit /etc/hosts such that the hostname resolves to the host address.
You can also add system property to GridGain: -Djava.rmi.server.hostname=<hostname>
Related
I want to connect to HBase container on remote server that I connect to with ssh through VPN. Let's say it's 10.0.0.10.In /etc/hosts i placed:
10.0.0.10 hbaseaddr
In my java code I use hbase-client:
config.set("hbase.zookeeper.quorum", "hbaseaddr");
config.set("hbase.zookeeper.property.clientPort", "2181");
I get following error:
Can not resolve 791995b8a2df, please check your network
What is 791995b8a2df? Also, surprisingly, when I have a VPN turned off it just stays idle and does nothing, so it really is connecting to 10.0.0.10, then why do I have this error?
I read that it might be the issue with /etc/hosts. But I have /etc/hosts inside a local machine, /etc/hosts inside machine on 10.0.0.10 and /etc/hosts inside container with HBase.
What can I do to make it work?
Thanks in advance
There is a Linux VM with Hadoop installed and running.
And there is Java app running in Eclipse that retrieve data from HDFS.
If I am copying file(s) to or from HDFS inside the VM everything works fine.
But when i am running the app from my Windows physical machine I am getting the next exception:
WARN hdfs.DFSClient: Failed to connect to /127.0.0.1:50010 for block, add to
deadNodes and continue. java.net.ConnectException: Connection refused: no further
information. Could not obtain BP-*** from any node: java.io.IOException:
No live nodes contain current block. Will get new block locations from namenode and retry
I can only retrieve list of files from HDFS.
Seems that when retrieve data from data node it is connecting to my Windows localhost.
Because when I made a tunnel in putty from my localhost to VM everything was fine.
Here is my Java code:
Configuration config = new Configuration();
config.set("fs.defaultFS", "hdfs://ip:port/");
config.set("mapred.job.tracker", "hdfs://ip:port");
FileSystem dfs = FileSystem.get(new URI("hdfs://ip:port/"), config, "user");
dfs.copyToLocalFile(false, new Path("/tmp/sample.txt"),newPath("D://sample.txt"), true);
How can it be fixed?
Thanks.
P.S. This error occurs when I am using QuickStart VM from Cloudera.
Your DataNode is advertising its address to the NameNode as 127.0.0.1. You need to re-configure your Pseudo distributed cluster such that the nodes use externally available addresses (hostnames or IP addresses) when opening socket services.
I imagine if you run a netstat -atn on your VM, you'll see the Hadoop ports bound to 127.0.0.1 rather than 0.0.0.0 - this means they will only accept internal connections.
You need to look at your VM's /etc/hosts configuration file and ensure hostname doesn't have an entry resolving to 127.0.0.1.
Whenever you start a VM, it gets its own I.P. Something like 192.x.x.x or 172.x.x.x.
Using 127.0.0.1 for HDFS wont help when you are executing from your windows box, because this is mapped to local i.p. So, if you are using 127.0.0.1 from your windows machine, it will think that your HDFS is running on windows machine. This is why your connection is failing.
Find the i.p that is associated with your VM. Here is a link to get that if you are using Hyper-V. http://windowsitpro.com/hyper-v/quickly-view-all-ip-addresses-hyper-v-vms
Once you get the VMs I.P, use it in the application.
You need to change the ip. First go to linux VM and in its terminal find the IP address of your VM.
Command to see the ip address in linux VM is below
ifconfig
Then in your code change the ip address to the IP thats shown in your linux VM.
Netty server, Fedora. I just can't connect to the server from remote host and no listening socket is displayed via netstat util. However I can establish the connection running client and server on the same machine. That's simply like that:
port = System.getProperty(PORT_PROPERTY);
Preconditions.checkNotNull(port, "Network error, port property is not set");
hostAddress = new InetSocketAddress(Integer.valueOf(port));
...
serverChannel = bootstrap.bind(hostAddress);
I've tried initializing hostAddress with the port only, localhost IP, 0.0.0.0 IP, and IP of my network. Nothing helps. What could be the root of problem?
Here's some suggestions that should help disagnosing the problem:
For clarity (until you resolve this), stick to using
new InetSocketAddress("0.0.0.0", Integer.valueOf(port))
since this will ensure you bind to all interfaces.
Invoke the JVM with -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to force the JVM into IPV4. I have found it easier to muck with these issues when in IPV4 since is it less complicated than V6.
Get the PID of the JVM and then issue a netstat like this:
sudo netstat -ap --numeric-ports | grep <PID>
This should display all sockets for your JVM instance. (Please post this output if you're still not able to connect remotely. Also post the output of ifconfig)
We are having problem connecting to our Java applications running in Amazon's EC2 cluster. We definitely have allowed both the "JMX port" (which is usually the RMI registry port) and the server port (which does most of the work) to the security-group for the instances in question. Jconsole connects but seems to hang and never show any information.
We are running our java with something like the following:
java -server -jar foo.jar other parameters here > java.log 2>&1
We have tried:
Telnets to the ports connect but no information is displayed.
We can run jconsole on the instance itself using remote-X11 over ssh and it connects and shows information. So the JRE is exporting it locally.
Opening all ports in the security group. Weeee.
Using tcpdump to make sure the traffic is not going to other ports.
Simulating it locally. We can always connect to our local JREs or those running elsewhere on our network using the same application parameters.
java -version outputs:
OpenJDK Runtime Environment (IcedTea6 1.11.5) (amazon-53.1.11.5.47.amzn1-x86_64)
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.0-b12, mixed mode)
As an aside, we are using my Simple JMX package which allows us to set both the RMI registry and server ports which are typically semi-randomly chosen by the RMI registry. You can also force this with something like the following JMX URI:
service:jmx:rmi://localhost:" + serverPort + "/jndi/rmi://:" + registryPort + "/jmxrmi"
These days we use the same port for both the server and the registry. In the past we have used X as the registry-port and X+1 for the server-port to make the security-group rules easy. You connect to the registry-port in jconsole or whatever JMX client you are using.
We are having problem connecting to our Java applications running in Amazon's EC2 cluster.
It turns out that the problem was a combination of two missing settings. The first forces the JRE to prefer ipv4 and not v6. This was necessary (I guess) since we are trying to connect to it via a v4 address:
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true
The real blocker was the fact that JMX works by first contacting the RMI port which responds with the hostname and port for the JMX client to connect. With no additional settings it will use the local IP of the box which is a 10.X.X.X virtual address which a remote client cannot route to. We needed to add the following setting which is the external hostname or IP of the server -- in this case it is the elastic hostname of the server.
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=ec2-107-X-X-X.compute-1.amazonaws.com
The trick, if you are trying to automate your EC2 instances (and why the hell would you not), is how to find this address at runtime. To do that you need to put something like the following in our application boot script:
# get our _external_ hostname
RMI_HOST=`wget -q -O - http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/public-hostname`
...
java -server \
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true -Djava.rmi.server.hostname=$RMI_HOST \
-jar foo.jar other parameters here > java.log 2>&1
The mysterious 169.254.169.254 IP in the wget command above provides information that the EC2 instance can request about itself. I'm disappointed that this does not include tags which are only available in an authenticated call.
I initially was using the extern ipv4 address but it looks like the JDK tries to make a connection to the server-port when it starts up. If it uses the external IP then this was slowing our application boot time until that timed out. The public-hostname resolves locally to the 10-net address and to the public-ipv4 externally. So the application now is starting fast and JMX clients still work. Woo hoo!
Hope this helps someone else. Cost me 3 hours today.
To force your JMX server to start the server and the RMI registry on designated ports so you can block them in the EC2 Security Groups, see this answer:
How to close rmiregistry running on particular port?
Edit:
We just had this problem re-occur. It seems that the Java JMX code is doing some hostname lookups on the hostname of the box and using them to try to connect and verify the JMX connection.
The issue seems to be a requirement that the local hostname of the box should resolve to the local-ip of the box. For example, if your /etc/sysconfig/network has HOSTNAME=server1.foobar.com then if you do a DNS lookup on server1.foobar.com, you should get to the 10-NET virtual address. We were generating our own /etc/hosts file and the hostname of the local host was missing from the file. This caused our applications to either pause on startup or not startup at all.
Lastly
One way to simplify your JMX creation is to use my SimpleJMX package.
Per the second answer Why does JMX connection to Amazon EC2 fail?, the difficulty here is that by default the RMI port is selected at random, and clients need access to both the JMX and RMI ports. If you're running jdk7u4 or later, the RMI port can be specified via an app property. Starting my server with the following JMX settings worked for me:
Without authentication:
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9999
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.rmi.port=9998
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=<public EC2 hostname>
With authentication:
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9999
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.rmi.port=9998
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=true
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.password.file=/path/to/jmxremote.password
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=<public EC2 hostname>
I also opened ports 9998-9999 in the EC2 security group for my instance.
A bit different approach by using ssh tunnels
(On the Remote machine) Pass the following flags to the JVM
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=1099
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=127.0.0.1
(On the Remote machine) Check which ports java started to use
$ netstat -tulpn | grep java
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:37484 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2904/java
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:1099 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2904/java
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:45828 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2904/java
(On the local machine) Make ssh tunnels for all the ports
ssh -N -L 1099:127.0.0.1:1099 ubuntu#<ec2_ip>
ssh -N -L 37484:127.0.0.1:37484 ubuntu#<ec2_ip>
ssh -N -L 45828:127.0.0.1:45828 ubuntu#<ec2_ip>`
(On the local machine) Connect by Java Mission Control to localhost:1099
The answer given by Gray worked for me, however I find that I have to open TCP ports 0 to 65535 or I don't get in. I think that you can connect on the main JMX port, and then get another one assigned. I got that from this blog post that has always worked well for me.
We are using AWS Elastic Container Service for running our spring boot services.
The below config allowed us to connect to our docker containers.
Without Authentication:
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9090 \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.rmi.port=9090 \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false \
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=$(/usr/bin/curl -s --connect-timeout 2 \
http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/public-ipv4)
I found it crisp and also doesn't require any other servicer side init script.
I'm on a vista machine. I've started tomcat 5.5.27 with these options:
CATALINA_OPTS="-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=9003 \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false \
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false"
When I connect via jconsole and added the following service url
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://localhost:9003/jmxrmi
it would not connect. Any ideas ?
Ok, I orignally supposed the URL given by op was wrong but it turns out no. So I can't answer.
Still, here are the basics:
For a simple connection through jconsole.
If you know that the JMX Server you want to connect to has the RMI registry port at 9003 for example, connect using
localhost:9003
instead.
Otherwise, here's what I found out from the ground up:
Suppose you have the JMX Server (alias 'JMX Agent' alias 'the JVM you want to connect to') running on 'TARGET MACHINE' with the RMI registry port at 'RMI REGISTRY PORT' and the JMX RMI server port at 'JMX RMI SERVER PORT'.
Note:
The RMI registry tells JMX clients where to find the JMX RMI server port; information can be obtained under key jmxrmi.
The RMI registry port is generally known as it is set through system properties at JVM startup.
The JMX RMI server port is generally not known as the JVM chooses it at random (if no other precautions are taken).
The following URI will lead to success (tested)
service:jmx:rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<JMX_RMI_SERVER_PORT>/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
This looks nasty. Let's cut it apart.
This URI is an RFC2609 "Service Location Protocol URL" (well, it's really an URI, right?)
It is composed of:
service - a constant
jmx:rmi - the service type composed of: abstract type jmx and URL scheme rmi
the rest - the sap (service access protocol specification)
sap is decomposed into:
//<TARGET_MACHINE>:<JMX_RMI_SERVER_PORT> - ipsite
/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi - URL part
A well-informed JMX client connects to the "ipsite" to do JMX-over-RMI exchanges; but what of the JMX client that doesn't KNOW that port? Patience...
URL part is decomposed into:
/jndi/ - This seems to tell the JMX client that it can get lookup information at the location that follows
rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi - Yep, we get information about the JMX RMI Server at the RMI registry, under the lookup key jmxrmi
This is somewhat cart-before-horse, as one has to contact the RMI registry given by the latter part of the SLP URL first.
After scratching head, intuitively, let's try:
service:jmx:rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>/jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
Yes, that works! The JMX RMI server port is nicely obtained from the registry. On second thoughts, the target machine should also be obtained from the registry, thus:
service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://<TARGET_MACHINE>:<RMI_REGISTRY_PORT>/jmxrmi
Even better, that works, too!
References:
1 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/management/remote/rmi/package-summary.html
2 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/javax/management/remote/JMXServiceURL.html
3 mx4j.sourceforge.net/docs/ch03s04.html
4 download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/technotes/guides/management/agent.html#gdevg
5 http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2609.txt
On Ubuntu 10.04, using OpenJDK 6 and Tomcat 6.0.29, I was unable to activate JMX for a local jconsole session, no matter how many com.sun.management.jmxremote.* options I passed to java with CATALINA_OPTS. The problem was the -Djava.io.tmpdir setting, which defaults to $CATALINA_BASE/temp. I simply had to set:
CATALINA_TMPDIR="/tmp"
at the beginning of bin/catalina.sh and I was able to connect locally with jconsole, jmap, jps etc. There was no need for any com.sun.management.jmxremote.* settings at all.
Are the processes run under the same user?
You can also check by running jps and jconsole (both in the JDK_HOME/bin directory)
This is also needed for OS X 10.7 aka Lion.
I answered a similar question here:java.rmi.ConnectException: Connection refused to host: 127.0.1.1;
I found many of the Q&A on this topic, not nothing was helping me - that's because my issue was more basic ( what can I say I am not a networking guru :) ). My ip address in /etc/hosts was incorrect. What I had tried included the following for CATALINA_OPTS:
CATALINA_OPTS="$CATALINA_OPTS -Djava.awt.headless=true -Xmx128M -server
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.port=7091
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.authenticate=false
-Dcom.sun.management.jmxremote.ssl=false
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=A.B.C.D" #howeverI put the wrong ip here!
export CATALINA_OPTS
My problem was that I had changed my ip address many months ago, but never updated my /etc/hosts file. it seems that by default the jconsole uses the hostname -i ip address in some fashion even though I was viewing local processes. The best solution was to simply change the /etc/hosts file.
The other solution which can work is to get your correct ip address from /sbin/ifconfig and use that ip address when specifying the ip address in, for example, a catalina.sh script:
-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=A.B.C.D