This section explains a special type of MBean, called MXBeans.
An MXBean is a type of MBean that references only a predefined set of data types. In this way, you can be sure that your MBean will be usable by any client, including remote clients, without any requirement that the client have access to model-specific classes representing the types of your MBeans. MXBeans provide a convenient way to bundle related values together, without requiring clients to be specially configured to handle the bundles.
In the same way as for standard MBeans, an MXBean is defined by writing a Java interface called
SomethingMXBean
and a Java class that implements that interface. However, unlike standard MBeans, MXBeans do not require the Java class to be calledSomething
. Every method in the interface defines either an attribute or an operation in the MXBean. The annotation@MXBean
can be also used to annotate the Java interface, instead of requiring the interface's name to be followed by the MXBean suffix.MXBeans existed in the Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition (J2SE) 5.0 software, in the package
java.lang.management
. However, users can now define their own MXBeans, in addition to the standard set that is defined injava.lang.management
.The main idea behind MXBeans is that types such as
java.lang.management.MemoryUsage
that are referenced in the MXBean interface,java.lang.management.MemoryMXBean
in this case, are mapped into a standard set of types, the so-called Open Types that are defined in the packagejavax.management.openmbean
. The exact mapping rules appear in the MXBean specification. However, the general principle is for simple types such as int or String to remain unchanged, while complex types such asMemoryUsage
get mapped to the standard typeCompositeDataSupport
.The MXBean example consists of the following files, which are found in
jmx_examples.zip
:
QueueSamplerMXBean
interfaceQueueSampler
class that implements the MXBean interfaceQueueSample
Java type returned by thegetQueueSample()
method in the MXBean interfaceMain
, the program that sets up and runs the exampleThe MXBean example uses these classes to perform the following actions:
- Defines a simple MXBean that manages a resource of type
Queue<String>
- Declares a getter,
getQueueSample
, in the MXBean that takes a snapshot of the queue when invoked and returns a Java classQueueSample
that bundles the following values together:
- The time the snapshot was taken
- The queue size
- The head of the queue at that given time
- Registers the MXBean in an MBean server
MXBean Interface
The following code shows the example
QueueSamplerMXBean
MXBean interface:package com.example; public interface QueueSamplerMXBean { public QueueSample getQueueSample(); public void clearQueue(); }Note that you declare an MXBean interface in exactly the same way as you declare a standard MBean interface. The
QueueSamplerMXBean
interface declares a getter,getQueueSample
and an operation,clearQueue
.Defining MXBean Operations
The MXBean operations are declared in the
QueueSampler
example class, as follows:package com.example; import java.util.Date; import java.util.Queue; public class QueueSampler implements QueueSamplerMXBean { private Queuequeue; public QueueSampler(Queue queue) { this.queue = queue; } public QueueSample getQueueSample() { synchronized (queue) { return new QueueSample(new Date(), queue.size(), queue.peek()); } } public void clearQueue() { synchronized (queue) { queue.clear(); } } }
QueueSampler
defines thegetQueueSample()
getter andclearQueue()
operation that were declared by the MXBean interface. ThegetQueueSample()
operation returns an instance of theQueueSample
Java type which was created with the values returned by thejava.util.Queue
methodspeek()
andsize()
, and an instance ofjava.util.Date
.Defining the Java Type Returned by the MXBean Interface
The
QueueSample
instance returned byQueueSampler
is defined in theQueueSample
class, as follows:In thepackage com.example; import java.beans.ConstructorProperties; import java.util.Date; public class QueueSample { private final Date date; private final int size; private final String head; @ConstructorProperties({"date", "size", "head"}) public QueueSample(Date date, int size, String head) { this.date = date; this.size = size; this.head = head; } public Date getDate() { return date; } public int getSize() { return size; } public String getHead() { return head; } }QueueSample
class, the MXBean framework calls all the getters inQueueSample
to convert the given instance into aCompositeData
instance and uses the@ConstructorProperties
annotation to reconstruct aQueueSample
instance from aCompositeData
instance.Creating and Registering the MXBean in the MBean Server
So far, the following have been defined: an MXBean interface and the class that implements it, as well as the Java type that is returned. Next, the MXBean must be created and registered in an MBean server. These actions are performed by the same
Main
example JMX agent that was used in the standard MBean example, but the relevant code was not shown in the Standard MBean lesson.package com.example; import java.lang.management.ManagementFactory; import java.util.Queue; import java.util.concurrent.ArrayBlockingQueue; import javax.management.MBeanServer; import javax.management.ObjectName; public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception { MBeanServer mbs = ManagementFactory.getPlatformMBeanServer(); [...] ObjectName mxbeanName = new ObjectName("com.example:type=QueueSampler"); Queuequeue = new ArrayBlockingQueue (10); queue.add("Request-1"); queue.add("Request-2"); queue.add("Request-3"); QueueSampler mxbean = new QueueSampler(queue); mbs.registerMBean(mxbean, mxbeanName); System.out.println("Waiting..."); Thread.sleep(Long.MAX_VALUE); } } The
Main
class performs the following actions:
- Gets the platform MBean server.
- Creates an object name for the MXBean
QueueSampler.
- Creates a
Queue
instance for theQueueSampler
MXBean to process.- Feeds the
Queue
instance to a newly createdQueueSampler
MXBean.- Registers the MXBean in the MBean server in exactly the same way as a standard MBean.
Running the MXBean Example
The MXBean example uses classes from the
jmx_examples.zip
bundle that you used in the Standard MBeans section. This example requires version 6 of the Java SE platform. To run the MXBeans example follow these steps:
- If you have not done so already, save
jmx_examples.zip
into yourwork_dir
directory.
- Unzip the bundle of sample classes by using the following command in a terminal window.
unzip jmx_examples.zip
- Compile the example Java classes from within the
work_dir
directory.
javac com/example/*.java
- Start the
Main
application.
java com.example.Main
A confirmation that
Main
is waiting for something to happen is generated.- Start JConsole in a different terminal window on the same machine.
jconsole
The New Connection dialog box is displayed, presenting a list of running JMX agents that you can connect to.
- In the New Connection dialog box, select
com.example.Main
from the list and click Connect.A summary of your platform's current activity is displayed.
- Click the MBeans tab.
This panel shows all the MBeans that are currently registered in the MBean server.
- In the left frame, expand the
com.example
node in the MBean tree.You see the example MBean
QueueSampler
that was created and registered byMain
. If you clickQueueSampler
, you see its associated Attributes and Operations nodes in the MBean tree.- Expand the Attributes node.
You see the
QueueSample
attribute appear in the right pane, with its value ofjavax.management.openmbean.CompositeDataSupport
.- Double-click the
CompositeDataSupport
value.You see the
QueueSample
valuesdate
,head
, andsize
because the MXBean framework has converted theQueueSample
instance intoCompositeData
. If you had definedQueueSampler
as a standard MBean rather than as an MXBean, JConsole would not have found theQueueSample
class because it would not be in its class path. IfQueueSampler
had been a standard MBean, you would have received aClassNotFoundException
message when retrieving theQueueSample
attribute value. The fact that JConsole findsQueueSampler
demonstrates the usefulness of using MXBeans when connecting to JMX agents through generic JMX clients such as JConsole.- Expand the Operations node.
A button to invoke the
clearQueue
operation is displayed.- Click the
clearQueue
button.A confirmation that the method was invoked successfully is displayed.
- Expand the Attributes node again, and double click on the
CompositeDataSupport
value.The
head
andsize
values have been reset.- To close JConsole, select Connection -> Exit.