Yes Chris, i am pretty sure that nobody is accessing the application. The moment i start my Tomcat the "Request Count " reaches values of 400+ within few seconds, this value is getting incremented by 6 everytime (eg: 6,12,18,24,30)
Whereas my AJP Connector "Request Count" is showing the correct numbers depending on the requests which all are redirected from APache. As of now i have not configured the "AccessLogValve" , but will try out this option definitely Please suggest Thanks Vicky ________________________________ From: Christopher Schultz <ch...@christopherschultz.net> To: Tomcat Users List <users@tomcat.apache.org> Sent: Sunday, 9 December 2012 10:29 PM Subject: Re: PSI-PROBE query -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 Vicky, On 12/9/12 7:05 AM, vicky wrote: > I am trying to gather statistical information about the number of > requests served by my tomcat (forwarded from Apache MPM worker) & > for this i am using /PSI-PRobe > (http://code.google.com/p/psi-probe/) application. I have enclosed > the "PROBE screenshot" as well for your reference, Sorry, this list strips attachments. Please copy/paste the numbers into a followup post. > in this "Request Time "," Processing Time " values for http-8080 > connector are keep on increasing even when no one is accessing > the application. Are you sure nobody is accessing the application? Do you have an AccessLogValve (or Filter) enabled? > I am wondering how can i get the report of number of requests which > all are served by my tomcat instance, i am not able to relate to > the numbers which all are getting displayed in the Probe > Application. Does i am doing something wrong in interpreting the > Probe Application output If you want to know which requests are taking a long time, configure (or re-configure) an AccessLogValve to include the total time for the request. Then sort your log file by response-time and start at the longest response to see what's going on. Psi Probe likely uses JMX (or maybe gets the data directly from Tomcat in the same way that the JMX beans get their data), so all that same data is available the JMX. Attach to Tomcat using jconsole, jvisualvm, etc. and poke around: there's a lot of good information in there. - -chris -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.17 (Darwin) Comment: GPGTools - http://gpgtools.org Comment: Using GnuPG with undefined - http://www.enigmail.net/ iEYEAREIAAYFAlDEw2kACgkQ9CaO5/Lv0PCrswCgh1e7HpCS7uLtr9jiq9Qg+q1Y 7EQAn2+z7X/0mEBdzL5nZazdJh/D4SAh =1U+/ -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: users-unsubscr...@tomcat.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: users-h...@tomcat.apache.org