That JMX operation (or the CLI equivalent[1]) will return 0.0.0.0 which
really is the bound address but AIUI isn't what's wanted.
If the server is configured to use 0.0.0.0, there is no single
"WildFly.getHostAddress()". That setting means the relevant sockets will
be listening on all available interfaces on the machine. Which of those
is the one that's useful to a particular client depends on the network
topology.
BTW, if you know the names of the nics in your target environment but
don't know the addresses, WildFly (and EAP) let you configure the
interfaces to use a particular nic. If binding to 0.0.0.0 is a
workaround for not knowing the actual addresses, that may help. For example:
<interface name="public">
<nic name="eth0"/>
</interface>
The 'name' attribute also allows expressions:
<nic name="${my.public.nic:eth0}"/>
With that kind of config, the JMX query Filippe showed will provide a
regular address.
[1] The CLI op:
[standalone@localhost:9990 /]
/socket-binding-group=standard-sockets/socket-binding=http:read-attribute(name=bound-address)
{
"outcome" => "success",
"result" => "0.0.0.0"
}
On 9/1/15 12:25 PM, Filippe spolti wrote:
Hello Arun,
I usethis code w/ Jboss 7 and wildfly 8, i didn't test with wildfly 9/10.
MBeanServer mBeanServer =
ManagementFactory.getPlatformMBeanServer();
String url = null;
try {
ObjectName http = new
ObjectName("jboss.as:socket-binding-group=standard-sockets,socket-binding=http");
String jbossHttpAddress = (String)
mBeanServer.getAttribute(http,"boundAddress");
int jbossHttpPort = (Integer)
mBeanServer.getAttribute(http,"boundPort");
url = jbossHttpAddress + ":" + jbossHttpPort;
log.fine("Url obtained from the system: " + url);
} catch (Exception e) {
log.severe(e.getStackTrace().toString());
}
return url;
regards.
On 09/01/2015 02:20 PM, Arun Gupta wrote:
> Assuming WildFly is bound to all available IP addresses using -b
> 0.0.0.0, is there a WildFly-specific API that can be used to obtain
> the IP address where the server is running?
>
> Ideally, I'd like something like:
>
> WildFly.getHostAddress()
> WildFly.getHostPort()
>
> It could be running in a Docker container, in AWS, on my local laptop,
> in OpenShift, or any where else and would like the IP address to be
> returned correctly.
>
> Suggestions?
>
> Arun
>
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