To start Virgo Tomcat Server in debug mode, run
startup.sh passing in the
-debug argument:
prompt$ cd $SERVER_HOME prompt$ bin/startup.sh -debug
This will start the debug agent listening on port
8000 which is the default remote debug port used
by Eclipse. To start in debug mode with a specific port number, pass
this in as the value for the -debug argument:
prompt$ cd $SERVER_HOME prompt$ bin/startup.sh -debug 8001
This will start the debug agent listening on port
8001. To start in debug mode and suspend the VM
until a debugger attaches, pass in the -suspend
argument along with the -debug argument:
prompt$ cd $SERVER_HOME prompt$ bin/startup.sh -debug -suspend
This starts the debug agent, but prevents Virgo Tomcat Server from actually starting until a debugger attaches to the agent. This can be useful when trying to diagnose problems that occur during startup.
To start Virgo Tomcat Server in debug mode, run
startup.bat passing in the
-debug argument:
prompt> cd %SERVER_HOME% prompt> bin\startup.bat -debug
This will start the debug agent listening on port
8000 which is the default remote debug port used
by Eclipse. To start in debug mode with a specific port number, pass
this in as the value for the -debug argument:
prompt> cd %SERVER_HOME% prompt> bin\startup.bat -debug 8001
This will start the debug agent listening on port
8001. To start in debug mode and suspend the VM
until a debugger attaches, pass in the -suspend
argument along with the -debug argument:
prompt> cd %SERVER_HOME% prompt> bin\startup.bat -debug -suspend
This starts the debug agent, but prevents Virgo Tomcat Server from actually starting until a debugger attaches to the agent. This can be useful when trying to diagnose problems that occur during startup.