Hi You will probably get better answers by asking on the tomcat users list. See tomcat.apache.org. Tomcat publishes its health statistics using jmx and if your developers were thorough it is likely that application statistics would also be available in jmx. There is a number of expensive and not so expensive commercial tools to setup monitoring for jmx. Tivoli and AppManager comes to mind. I believe there might be support for jmx monitoring in cacti so that would be worth googling. Other than that a good test would be to monitor output of a wget request to your tomcat server which gives a good indiction of the health of your application server. Also have a look at http://www.lambdaprobe.org/d/index.htm which is a tool to monitor multiple tomcats with. Regards > -----Original Message----- > From: centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:centos-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On > Behalf Of Sergej kandyla > Sent: 20 January 2009 11:06 > To: CentOS mailing list > Subject: Re: Tomcat Monitoring > > Sean Carolan wrote: > > What do you use for monitoring your Apache Tomcat servers? I have > > used jconsole to manually connect and look at the statistics. I'm > > wondering if there are any standard tools for watching the health of > > the java process. > > Hi, I'm interesting too in tomcat monitoring. > Some times i have a problems with java, for example i get > java.lang.OutOfMemoryError > > some idea is monitor catalina.out log for such errors, but may be there > are a standard tools for java monitoring\restarting. > ______________________________________________________________________ This email has been scanned by the MessageLabs Email Security System. For more information please visit http://www.messagelabs.com/email ______________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos