| <article link="monitorArticle.html"> |
| <title>Building Administrative Applications in Eclipse</title> |
| <date>November 12, 2004</date> |
| |
| <category>Platform</category> |
| <author> |
| <name>Doina Klinger</name> |
| <email>dklinger@uk.ibm.com</email> |
| <company>IBM</company> |
| </author> |
| <author> |
| <name>Chris Markes</name> |
| <email>cmarkes@uk.ibm.com</email> |
| <company>IBM</company> |
| </author> |
| <description> |
| Eclipse is most commonly used as a platform for tools that allow |
| the user to construct or assemble an end product out of |
| development resources. It is less usual to use Eclipse as an |
| administrative tool for monitoring existing runtime systems or |
| applications. This article will describe some of the issues that |
| arise in this case and illustrate possible solutions. It will |
| show you can build an Eclipse perspective dedicated to the |
| monitoring task. Running processes are shown in a dedicated view |
| which always reflects their current state. You can start/stop |
| the process, manage connections, invoke operations that the |
| server exposes, examine server output and view events generated |
| by the running applications. |
| </description> |
| </article> |