Using my right account to send to list this time
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Kabir Khan <kabir.khan(a)jboss.com>
> Subject: Re: [jboss-as7-dev] Remoting issues
> Date: 23 September 2011 13:20:34 GMT+01:00
> To: Brian Stansberry <brian.stansberry(a)redhat.com>, Darran Lofthouse
<darran.lofthouse(a)jboss.com>
> Cc: "jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org Development"
<jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org>
>
>
> On 22 Sep 2011, at 21:41, Brian Stansberry wrote:
>
>> Real quick reply:
>>
>> 1) IMO only having a single remoting socket for both management and
>> other uses is A Real Good Thing™. But if there are situations that
>> prevent that, I don't think it's terrible.
> Since the socket sets up the security, we might want different ones for management vs
user stuff? Darran how does this fit in with your plans?
>
>>
>> 2) We need to continue to support AS 7.0-style configs. That to me means
>> for cases where that style config is used, we create a separate endpoint.
>>
>> 3) For a domain mode server, we can't force people to add a remoting
>> subsystem in their domain.xml profile. We talked about having the
>> HostController generate one, but that will result in the server having a
>> profile that does not match what was configured in domain.xml --
>> suddenly a bonus subsystem appears. That is no good.
>>
>> 4) For a domain mode server if the HostController is going to configure
>> the server to set up a native management interface that points to the
>> remoting subsystem in the profile, it needs to be told how to do so. One
>> solution, is, in domain.xml:
>>
>> <server-group name="main-server-group"
profile="default">
>> <native-management remoting-connector="management"/>
>> </server-group>
>>
>> In summary, I think reusing the remoting subsystem endpoint is great and
>> we should have our standard configs set up that way but there are cases
>> where things aren't going to be configured that way.
>>
>> On 9/22/11 2:19 PM, Kabir Khan wrote:
>>> I'm trying to understand the issues in remoting subsystem vs the
management usage a bit better before I dig into this. We have 3 ways remoting is set up:
>>>
>>> 1) Standalone server
>>> a) Endpoint is set up when installing the subsystem
>>> b) Management is set up and creates a new stream server and channel open
listener for ("management") with the endpoint from a) injected
>>>
>>> 2) Host controller
>>> a) Endpoint is set up by the bootstrap
>>> b) Bootstrap sets up the management stream server and channel open listeners
for (using endpoint from a) injected
>>> -"management" - i.e. traffic on the management address
>>> -"server" - i.e. traffic from a server
>>> -"domain" - if it is the master, to listen to traffic from slaves
>>> c) If it is a slave it connects to the master on the "domain"
channel
>>>
>>> 3) Domain mode server
>>> a) Endpoint is set up when installing the subsystem
>>> b) No management stream server is created
>>> c) A channel is opened to the HC using the endpoint from a) on the
"server" channel.
>>>
>>> So, I think the issue is that the core depends on stuff set up by a
subsystem? A problem in 3 is that if there is no remoting subsystem no endpoint is
created, so communication with HC will not start and we will not get the subsystem config
from the HC.
>>>
>>> Something doesn't feel quite right but I'm not sure what, so I'm
throwing out some ideas.
>>>
>>> The remoting subsystem is quite basic at the moment and the code to set up
new connectors is commented out.
>>>
>>> So maybe we should stick with what we have for HC:
>>> <management>
>>> <security-realms>
>>> SNIP
>>> </security-realms>
>>> <management-interfaces>
>>> <native-interface interface="management"
port="9999" />
>>> <http-interface interface="management"
port="9990"/>
>>> </management-interfaces>
>>> </management>
>>>
>>> But for the standalone server case do something like
>>>
>>> <management>
>>> <management-interfaces>
>>> <native-channel name="server" />
>>> <http-interface interface="management"
port="9990">
>>> </management-interfaces>
>>> </management>
>>>
>>> <subsystem xmlns="urn:jboss:domain:remoting:1.0"/>
>>> <connector socket-binding="remote-management">
>>> <security-stuff><security-stuff/>
>>> <channel name="server"
type="management"/>
>>> </connector>
>>> <connector socket-binding="user">
>>> <security-stuff><security-stuff/>
>>> <channel name="jndi" type="jndi"/>
>>> <channel name="jndi" type="ejb"/>
>>> </connector>
>>> </subsystem>
>>>
>>> Or maybe everything all goes over one socket so
>>> <subsystem xmlns="urn:jboss:domain:remoting:1.0"/>
>>> <connector socket-binding="remote-management">
>>> <security-stuff><security-stuff/>
>>> <channel name="server"
type="management"/>
>>> <channel name="jndi" type="jndi"/>
>>> <channel name="jndi" type="ejb"/>
>>> </connector>
>>> </subsystem>
>>>
>>> I'm not clear on the security side of this but we now have the http side
of it securing itself in one way and the native channel in another, so maybe this is
better
>>>
>>> <management>
>>> <management-interfaces>
>>> <native-channel name="server" />
>>> <http-interface interface="management"
port="9990">
>>> <security-realms>
>>> SNIP
>>> </security-realms>
>>> </http-interface>
>>> </management-interfaces>
>>> </management>
>>>
>>>
>>> Or the alternative for the domain mode server is to use two endpoints, one
for management installed by the core, and one for other stuff installed by the remoting
subsystem.
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
>>> jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jboss-as7-dev
>>
>>
>> --
>> Brian Stansberry
>> Principal Software Engineer
>> JBoss by Red Hat
>> _______________________________________________
>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
>> jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jboss-as7-dev
>