ok
Direktori : /proc/self/root/usr/lib/jvm-exports/jre-openjdk/lib/management/ |
Current File : //proc/self/root/usr/lib/jvm-exports/jre-openjdk/lib/management/jmxremote.password.template |
# ---------------------------------------------------------------------- # Template for jmxremote.password # # o Copy this template to jmxremote.password # o Set the user/password entries in jmxremote.password # o Change the permission of jmxremote.password to read-only # by the owner. # # See below for the location of jmxremote.password file. # ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ############################################################## # Password File for Remote JMX Monitoring ############################################################## # # Password file for Remote JMX API access to monitoring. This # file defines the different roles and their passwords. The access # control file (jmxremote.access by default) defines the allowed # access for each role. To be functional, a role must have an entry # in both the password and the access files. # # Default location of this file is $JRE/lib/management/jmxremote.password # You can specify an alternate location by specifying a property in # the management config file $JRE/lib/management/management.properties # or by specifying a system property (See that file for details). ############################################################## # File permissions of the jmxremote.password file ############################################################## # Since there are cleartext passwords stored in this file, # this file must be readable by ONLY the owner, # otherwise the program will exit with an error. # # The file format for password and access files is syntactically the same # as the Properties file format. The syntax is described in the Javadoc # for java.util.Properties.load. # Typical password file has multiple lines, where each line is blank, # a comment (like this one), or a password entry. # # # A password entry consists of a role name and an associated # password. The role name is any string that does not itself contain # spaces or tabs. The password is again any string that does not # contain spaces or tabs. Note that passwords appear in the clear in # this file, so it is a good idea not to use valuable passwords. # # A given role should have at most one entry in this file. If a role # has no entry, it has no access. # If multiple entries are found for the same role name, then the last one # is used. # # In a typical installation, this file can be read by anybody on the # local machine, and possibly by people on other machines. # For # security, you should either restrict the access to this file, # or specify another, less accessible file in the management config file # as described above. # # Following are two commented-out entries. The "measureRole" role has # password "QED". The "controlRole" role has password "R&D". # # monitorRole QED # controlRole R&D