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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T09:27:10+00:00 2026-05-13T09:27:10+00:00

We have a Java web application and we’d like to set up some basic

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We have a Java web application and we’d like to set up some basic monitoring with a view to expanding this monitoring in future. Our plan is as follows:

(1) Collect generic information (e.g. memory and threads) about the virtual machine of the web container that application is running in.

(2) Monitor the “state” of the application. This is rather vague but at the least we’d like to see if the web application is still alive and can respond to requests.

(3) In the future we’d like to collect more information that is specific to our application. Again this is rather vague but you can assume that we might want to make certain statistics collected internally by the application available to the support staff.

Usually the web application will be deployed in a Tomcat 5.5 or 6 environment. A quick bit of searching on the web shows that JMX can be enabled for Tomcat and that JConsole can then be used to connect to the server. This gives us lots of basic information that solves point (1). Also, some information is available in the MBeans section for “Catalina” and drilling down on this I can at least, for example, see how many requests a particular servlet has received. This is not quite what we want for point (2) but at least gives us some information. There seems to be quite a lot of information there but it’s rather difficult to interpret using JConsole. Perhaps there is a better tool for interpreting the MBeans exposed by Tomcat.

For point (3), it seems, at first glance that we could write our own MBeans and then make these available to something like JConsole. Personally, this would involve me learning about JMX which I’m quite happy to do but I have a concern. Having looked around I notice that most of the textbooks on the subject haven’t been updated for several years and the open source tools seem to be languishing without recent updates. So my main question is a simple one. What are your opinions on JMX? Does it have a future or is it/has it been superseded by something else? Given we already have our web application but we’re starting from scratch for the management console, should we choose JMX or is there something more appropriate with a better future ahead of it?

I ask this question with no personal axe to grind, I’m simply interested to hear your opinions and experiences. I’m sure there’s no one correct answer but I think an informed discussion would be useful.

Thanks in advance,

Adam.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T09:27:10+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:27 am

    JMX is certainly a good solution here. I wouldn’t worry about it languishing. Most enterprises I’ve worked for recently use (or have plans to use) JMX, and I’d have to hear a pretty convincing argument before choosing something else in the Java world. It’s easy to write clients (monitoring solutions) for it and you can return complex data very easily indeed. Most 3rd party components support monitoring via JMX as well.

    Note that you may want to consider integration with any existing management solutions (e.g. Nagios, BNC Patrol, HP Openview etc.) as well. They may not be so Java-aware, but rather prefer tests like simple HTTP connectivity for testing if a web-site is up (easy using Nagios), or integration using SNMP (which Openview talks natively).

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