Christopher Schultz wrote:
[...]
Assuming Chuck has an iPhone, which has 128MB of RAM, I'm not sure I'd
want to run a JVM on that server in the first place. Something tells me
we've been over this before so I won't beat a dead horse.
Chuck assured us, on this forum, that his phone had waaay mo
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André,
André Warnier wrote:
> I have been put right about that by someone else already.
Yeah, I'm about 2 days behind on all the drivel on the list. ;)
> Not everyone agrees with that solution by the way, because the JConsole
> may interfere with th
Christopher Schultz wrote:
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André,
André Warnier wrote:
Christopher Schultz wrote:
What about forwarding X through the tunnel instead?
You can't, because it is variable.
If you forward the X connection, then Jconsole is running locally on the
T
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André,
André Warnier wrote:
> Christopher Schultz wrote:
>>
>> What about forwarding X through the tunnel instead?
>>
> You can't, because it is variable.
If you forward the X connection, then Jconsole is running locally on the
Tomcat server. So ther
The disadvantage of running these tools on the server that also runs
Tomcat is that these tools generate certain load, which under some
circumstances is not wanted as it might influence the stats.
On Thu, 2009-02-05 at 14:15 +0100, André Warnier wrote:
> Mark Thomas wrote:
> > Peter Crowther wrote
Mark Thomas wrote:
Peter Crowther wrote:
From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
using XMing as the X11 server (client?, I can never remember..).
Yeah, X's terminology is very counter-intuitive - I get comments of "you're
kidding" every time I teach it. An X server serves out the keyboar
Peter Crowther wrote:
>> From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
>> using XMing as the X11 server (client?, I can never remember..).
>
> Yeah, X's terminology is very counter-intuitive - I get comments of "you're
> kidding" every time I teach it. An X server serves out the keyboard, mouse
> From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
> using XMing as the X11 server (client?, I can never remember..).
Yeah, X's terminology is very counter-intuitive - I get comments of "you're
kidding" every time I teach it. An X server serves out the keyboard, mouse and
display. X11 clients conn
Hi.
Thanks Chris and Peter and Gregor.
Gregor sent me a link to an article that looks promising, and says
basically the same as Peter below, using XMing as the X11 server
(client?, I can never remember..).
I will try that tonight.
Peter Crowther wrote:
From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa
> From: Gregor Schneider [mailto:rc4...@googlemail.com]
> http://sourceforge.net/projects/xming
>
> Just a simple install, very small, convinient and works like charm.
Thanks Gregor, I wasn't aware of that one. Think I may just have a new
preferred X server :-).
- Peter
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On Thu, Feb 5, 2009 at 11:11 AM, Peter Crowther
wrote:
>
> OK. If you don't want to put Cygwin on
>
http://sourceforge.net/projects/xming
Just a simple install, very small, convinient and works like charm.
Rgds
Gregor
--
just because your paranoid, doesn't mean they're not after you...
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> From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
> "X" is not something I use regularly, so when
> Chris mentioned X, I thought he was talking about the secondary
> connection/port that the JVM/Jconsole agree on, not about
> X-terminal and so.
>
> So thanks for the tip, but could you expand even more
http://solaris.reys.net/english/2006/04/x11_forwarding
Works pretty much the same on any other Linux
Rgds
Gregor
--
just because your paranoid, doesn't mean they're not after you...
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Peter Crowther wrote:
From: André Warnier [mailto:a...@ice-sa.com]
Christopher Schultz wrote:
What about forwarding X through the tunnel instead?
You can't, because it is variable. It is the result of some internal
"negotiation" between Jconsole and the remote JVM.
Apparently, anyway. I haven'
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