Enterprise Java

How to manage Quartz remotely

Option 1: JMX

Many people asked can they manage Quartz via JMX, and I am not sure why Quartz doc won’t even mention it. Yes you can enable JMX in quartz with the following in quartz.properties

org.quartz.scheduler.jmx.export = true

After this, you use standard JMX client such as $JAVA_HOME/bin/jconsole to connect and manage remotely.

Option 2: RMI

Another way to manage quartz remotely is to enable RMI in Quartz. If you use this, you basically run one instance of Quartz as RMI server, and then you can create second Quartz instance as RMI client. These two can talk remotely via a TCP port.

For server scheduler instance, you want to add these in quartz.properties

org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.export = true
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.createRegistry = true
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.registryHost = localhost
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.registryPort = 1099
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.serverPort = 1100

And for client scheduler instance, you want to add these in quartz.properties

org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.proxy = true
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.registryHost = localhost
org.quartz.scheduler.rmi.registryPort = 1099

The RMI feature is mentioned in Quartz doc here. Quartz doesn’t have a client API, but use the same org.quartz.Scheduler for both server and client. It’s just the configuration are different. By different configuration, you get very different behavior. For server, your scheduler is running all the jobs, while for client, it’s simply a proxy. Your client scheduler instance will not run any jobs! You must be really careful when shutting down client because it does allow you to bring down the server!

These configurations have been highlighted in the MySchedule project. If you run the webapp, you should see a screen like this demo, and you will see it provided many sample of quartz configurations with these remote managment config properties.

If configure with RMI option, you can actually still use MySchedule web UI to manage the Quartz as proxy. You can view and drill down jobs, and you can even stop or shutdown remote server!

Based on my experience, there is a down side of using Quartz RMI feature though. That is it creates a single point of failure. There is no fail over if your RMI server port is down!

Reference: How to manage Quartz remotely from our JCG partner Zemian Deng at the A Programmer’s Journal blog.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Back to top button