In my startup script (for Ubuntu server 6.10) I need to be able to shutdown the 
jboss server when the server stops.
However my server's jmx console is secured - because it's a public server.
so shutting it down with the jboss's bin command won't work, unless I hardcode 
my server password in the init.d file - which I am not allowed.
(the strange thing is I even found this in the red hat scripts - so they don't 
allow securing the jmx-console either)

After some searching I've found this solution:
su -l jboss -c 'killall java'
So basically I am soft killing all processes of the jboss user. Is this a good 
practice?


PS: I think jboss is really great, but I find the support for OS services 
(startup/shutdown) integration on production lacking at this time. I hope the 
support for production use on Ubuntu, Red Hat, Debian, Suse and even Windows 
will improve.

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