Server configuration overview
The Open Liberty server configuration is made up of one mandatory file, the server.xml
file, and a set of optional files. The server.xml
file must be well-formed XML and the root element must be server
. When the server.xml
file is processed, any elements or attributes that are not understood are ignored.
This example server.xml
file configures the server to do the following things:
<server description="new server">
<featureManager>
<feature>jsp-2.3</feature>
</featureManager>
<httpEndpoint id="defaultHttpEndpoint"
httpPort="9080"
httpsPort="9443" />
<applicationManager autoExpand="true" />
</server>
The
feature
element configures Open Liberty to support the JavaServer Pages 2.3 (jsp-2.3
) feature.The
httpPort
attribute is set to9080
, which configures Open Liberty to listen to incoming traffic tolocalhost
on port9080
.The
autoExpand
attribute is set totrue
so that WAR files are automatically expanded when they are deployed.
The term server configuration can be used to refer to all of the files that make up the server configuration or specifically to the configuration that’s in the XML files. If it’s not clear in context, the term server XML configuration might be used to refer to the configuration in the XML files.
The following sections provide more details on configuring a server.
Configuration files
The server configuration files are processed in the following order:
server.env - Environment variables are specified in this file.
jvm.options - JVM options are set in this file.
bootstrap.properties - This file influences the startup of the Open Liberty server.
server.xml - This mandatory file specifies the server configuration and features.
server.env
The server.env
files are optional. These files are read by the bin/server
shell script and specify the environment variables that are primarily used to influence the behavior of the bin/server
script. The server.env
files are read from the following locations in order:
${wlp.install.dir}/etc/
${wlp.user.dir}/shared/
${server.config.dir}/
If the same property is set in multiple locations, then the last value that is found is used. You can also specify these environment variables in the shell environment, but the server.env
files take precedence over those variables.
The most common use of these files is to set the following environment variables:
JAVA_HOME
- Indicates which JVM to use. If the JVM is not set, the system default is used.WLP_USER_DIR
- Indicates the location of theusr
directory that contains the server configuration. Set this environment variable only in theetc/server.env
file, because other locations are relative to theusr
directory.WLP_OUTPUT_DIR
- Indicates where the server writes files. By default, the server writes to the directory structure from which the configuration is read. However, in some secure profiles, the server configuration is read-only so the server must write files to another location.
The server.env
file is in KEY=value
format, as shown in the following example:
JAVA_HOME=/opt/ibm/java
WLP_USER_DIR=/opt/wlp-usr
The following restrictions apply to the server.env
files:
Key values must not contain any spaces.
Empty lines are ignored.
Lines that start with the number sign ( # ) are ignored, except for the
# enable_variable_expansion
line, which enables variable expansion on Linux.Ensure no white space surrounds the equal sign ( = ).
All characters are literal except when expansion variables are enabled.
For more information, see Default environment variables.
Expansion variables
Expansion variables are environment or shell variables that are replaced by their values. You can specify expansion variables in the value definition of other variables. The values that these expansion variables supply can be defined as environment variables in your server configuration or shell variables in your shell environment. The caret sign ( ^ ) is used to escape a variable expansion character like the exclamation point (!) on Windows. The syntax for specifying expansion variables is operating system dependent.
Variable expansion support is enabled by default on Windows. You specify expansion variables by using the Windows delayed expansion syntax: !variable_name!
, which is replaced by the value of the variable.
The following server.env
file example shows the syntax for expansion variables on Windows.
IBM_DIR=!ProgramFiles!\IBM
JAVA_HOME=!IBM_DIR!\java
WLP_USER_DIR=!USERPROFILE!\wlp-usr
In version 22.0.0.1 and later, Open Liberty supports expansion variables in the server.env
file on Linux systems. Expansion variables are prefixed by a dollar sign ( $ ) and the variable name can optionally be enclosed in curly braces ( {} ), for example, $variable_name
or ${variable_name}
.
When you enable expansion variables for Linux, single quotation marks ( ' ), double quotation marks ( " ), and backslash ( \ ) behave the same as in the shell environment. For example, placing a string in single quotation marks prevents the expansion of variables. Placing a string in double quotation marks does not prevent the expansion of variables, and the backslash is an escape character that removes the meaning of a special character.
By default, server.env
files do not support variable expansion on Linux. The value in each KEY=value
pair is interpreted literally and you do not need to escape special characters, such as spaces. However, when you enable support for variable expansion, you must escape special characters.
To enable support for variable expansion, add the following comment at the beginning of the server.env
file.
# enable_variable_expansion
When expansion variables are enabled, you must enclose any values that contain spaces in quotation marks. You must also escape inner quotation marks. For example, the inner quotation mark is escaped in the following value:
MESSAGE1='Don\'t do that'
The following server.env
file example shows the syntax for expansion variables on Linux. The values for the WLP_USER_DIR
and LOG_DIR
environment variables contain expansion variables.
# enable_variable_expansion
JAVA_HOME=/opt/ibm/java
WLP_USER_DIR=/home/${USER}/wlp-usr
LOG_DIR=${WLP_USER_DIR}/logs
jvm.options
The jvm.options
files are optional. These files are read by the bin/server
shell script to determine what options to use when the JVM is launched for Open Liberty. jvm.options
files are read from the following locations in order:
${wlp.user.dir}/shared/jvm.options
${server.config.dir}/configDropins/defaults/
${server.config.dir}/
${server.config.dir}/configDropins/overrides/
If no jvm.options
files exist in these locations, then the server script looks for the file in ${wlp.install.dir}/etc
, if such a directory exists.
Common uses of jvm.options
files include:
Setting JVM memory limits
Enabling Java agents that are provided by monitoring products
Setting Java system properties
Setting time zones
The jvm.options
file format uses one line per JVM option, as shown in the following example:
-Xmx512m -Dmy.system.prop=property_value -Duser.timezone=time_zone_code
You don’t need to escape special characters, such as spaces. Options are read and provided to the JVM in order. If you provide multiple options, then they are all seen by the JVM. These files do not support variable substitution.
bootstrap.properties
The bootstrap.properties
file is optional.
This file is read during Open Liberty bootstrap to provide configuration for the earliest stages of the server startup. It is read by the server earlier than the server.xml
file so it can affect the startup and behavior of the Open Liberty kernel from the start. The bootstrap.properties
file is a simple Java properties file and is located in ${server.config.dir}
. A common use of the bootstrap.properties
file is to configure logging because it can affect logging behavior before the server.xml
file is read.
The bootstrap.properties
file supports a special optional property, bootstrap.include
, which specifies another properties file to also be read during the bootstrap stage. For example, this boostrap.include
file can contain a common set of bootstrap properties for multiple servers to use. Set the bootstrap.include
file to an absolute or relative file path.
server.xml
The most important and only required configuration file is the server.xml
file. The server.xml
file must be well-formed XML and the root element must be server
. The exact elements that are supported by a server depend on which features are configured, and any unknown configuration is ignored.
Open Liberty uses a principle of configuration by exception, which allows for succinct configuration files. The runtime environment operates from a set of built-in configuration default settings. You only specify configuration that overrides those default settings.
Server configuration files are read from the following locations in order:
${server.config.dir}/configDropins/defaults/
${server.config.dir}/server.xml
${server.config.dir}/configDropins/overrides/
The ${server.config.dir}/server.xml
file must be present, but the other files are optional.
You can flexibly compose configuration by dropping server-formatted XML files into directories. Files are read in alphabetical order in each of the two configDropins
directories.
The configDropins
directory offers a convenient method for adding or modifying server configuration without directly altering the server.xml
file. Located under usr/servers/server_name
, it includes two types of subdirectories:
Overrides (
usr/servers/server_name/configDropins/overrides
): This directory is used to override configurations in theserver.xml
file. For example, to change port configurations defined inserver.xml
, place the relevant configuration files here.Defaults (
usr/servers/server_name/configDropins/defaults
): This directory is for setting defaults for configuration elements that are not specified inserver.xml
. It allowsserver.xml
to remain the primary configuration source, with other default settings provided through this directory.
Changes to the configuration files placed in either the configDropins/overrides
or configDropins/defaults
directories are dynamically monitored. Additions, removals, or updates are reflected in the runtime configuration automatically.
Configurations in the configDropins/overrides
directory take precedence over configurations in the server.xml
file, which in turn take precedence over configurations in the configDropins/defaults
directory. The configurations in configDropins/overrides
and configDropins/defaults
supersede any default settings a feature specifies.
To maintain consistency across different platforms, file names are first converted to lowercase and then sorted. In scenarios where two files share an identical name but differ in case (such as extraConfig.xml
and ExtraConfig.xml
), their order of processing might be inconsistent.
Configuration variable syntax
Variables define reusable values that are substituted with actual values at runtime. In Open Liberty server configuration files, you can reference variables by using the ${variable.name}
syntax. The dollar sign ($
) indicates the start of a variable reference. Curly brackets ({}
) enclose the name of the variable.
For example, if you define a variable that is named database.url
with the value jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydb
, you can reference it in your server configuration files by using ${database.url}
. At runtime, Open Liberty replaces ${database.url}
with the actual value jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydb
.
For more information about specifying variables, see Variable substitution precedence.
Variable substitution precedence
You can use variables to parameterize the server configuration. To resolve variable references to their values, the following sources are consulted in order, in increasing order of precedence, meaning that later sources supersede and take precedence over earlier sources:
variable default values in the
server.xml
fileenvironment variables
bootstrap.properties
Java system properties
Variables loaded from files in the
${server.config.dir}/variables
directory or other directories as specified by theVARIABLE_SOURCE_DIRS
environment variablevariable values declared in the
server.xml
filevariables declared on the command line
Variables are referenced by using the ${variableName}
syntax. Specify variables in the server configuration as shown in the following example:
<variable name="variableName" value="some.value" />
Default values, which are specified in the server.xml
file, are used only if no other value is specified:
<variable name="variableName" defaultValue="some.default.value" />
You can also specify variables at startup from the command line. If you do, the variables that are specified on the command line override all other sources of variables and can’t be changed after the server starts:
server run myserver -- --variableName=variableValue
Environment variables can be accessed as variables. You can reference the environment variable name directly. If the variable cannot be resolved as specified, the server.xml
file looks for the following variations on the environment variable name:
Replace all non-alphanumeric characters with the underscore character (
_
)Change all characters to uppercase
For example, if you enter ${my.env.var}
in the server.xml
file, it looks for environment variables with the following names:
my.env.var
my_env_var
MY_ENV_VAR
The VARIABLE_SOURCE_DIRS
environment variable specifies directories from which variables can be loaded. If this environment variable is not specified, the default location for the variable directory is ${server.config.dir}/variables
. To define a list of directories as the value for this variable, separate each directory with the path separator for your operating system. For Windows, the path separator is a semicolon (;
). For Unix-based systems, the path separator is a colon (:
).
The name of the file is used as the variable name, and the contents of the file are used as the variable value. For example, you can create a file in the variables directory that is named httpPort
with the text string 9080
as the only content. You can then use the variable ${httpPort}
in the server.xml
file and it resolves to 9080
.
If you create a file in a directory within the variables directory, then the parent directory is added to the variable name. For example, you can create a ${httpPort}
file in the ports
subdirectory within the variable directory, the variable name is ${ports/httpPort}
.
Variables in the VARIABLE_SOURCE_DIRS
directories can also be defined in properties files. If the name of the file ends in .properties
, each property in the file is used to create a variable. For example, you can create a file that is named ports.properties
with the following contents:
httpPort=9080 httpsPort=9443
With this configuration, you can specify the ${httpPort}
and ${httpsPort}
variables in your server.xml
file and their values resolve to 9080
and 9443
.
Variable values are always interpreted as a string with simple type conversion. Therefore, a list of ports (such as 80,443
) might be interpreted as a single string rather than as two port numbers. You can force the variable substitution to split on the ,
by using a list
function, as shown in the following example:
<mongo ports="${list(mongoPorts)}" hosts="${list(mongoHosts)}" />
Simple arithmetic is supported for variables with integer values. The left and right sides of the operator can be either a variable or a number. The operator can be +
, -
, *
, or /
, as shown in the following example:
<variable name="one" value="1" />
<variable name="two" value="${one+1}" />
<variable name="three" value="${one+two}" />
<variable name="six" value="${two*three}" />
<variable name="five" value="${six-one}" />
<variable name="threeagain" value="${six/two}" />
The following predefined variables exist:
wlp.install.dir
- the directory where the Open Liberty runtime is installed.wlp.server.name
- the name of the server.wlp.user.dir
- the directory of theusr
folder. The default is${wlp.install.dir}/usr
.shared.app.dir
- the directory of shared applications. The default is${wlp.user.dir}/shared/apps
.shared.config.dir
- the directory of shared configuration files. The default is${wlp.user.dir}/shared/config
.shared.resource.dir
- the directory of shared resource files. The default is${wlp.user.dir}/shared/resources
.server.config.dir
- the directory where the server configuration is stored. The default is${wlp.user.dir}/servers/${wlp.server.name}
.server.output.dir
- the directory where the server writes the workarea, logs, and other runtime-generated files. The default is${server.config.dir}
.
Configuration merging
Since the configuration can consist of multiple files, it is possible that two files provide the same configuration. In these situations, the server configuration is merged according to a set of simple rules. In Open Liberty, configuration is separated into singleton and factory configuration each of which has its own rules for merging. Singleton configuration is used to configure a single element (for example, logging). Factory configuration is used to configure multiple entities, such as an entire application or data source.
Merging singleton configuration
For singleton configuration elements that are specified more than once, the configuration is merged. If two elements exist with different attributes, both attributes are used. For example:
<server>
<logging a="true" />
<logging b="false" />
</server>
is treated as:
<server>
<logging a="true" b="false" />
</server>
If the same attribute is specified twice, then the last instance takes precedence. For example:
<server>
<logging a="true" b="true" />
<logging b="false" />
</server>
is treated as:
<server>
<logging a="true" b="false" />
</server>
Configuration is sometimes provided by using child elements that take text.
In these cases, the configuration is merged by using all of the values specified. The most common scenario is configuring features. For example:
<server>
<featureManager>
<feature>servlet-4.0</feature>
</featureManager>
<featureManager>
<feature>restConnector-2.0</feature>
</featureManager>
</server>
is treated as:
<server>
<featureManager>
<feature>servlet-4.0</feature>
<feature>restConnector-2.0</feature>
</featureManager>
</server>
Merging factory configuration
Factory configuration merges use the same rules as singleton configuration except elements are not automatically merged just because the element names match. With factory configuration it is valid to configure the same element and mean two different logical objects. Therefore, each element is assumed to configure a distinct object. If a single logical object is configured by two elements, the id
attribute must be set on each element to indicate they are the same thing. Variable substitution on an id
attribute is not supported.
The following example configures two applications. The first application is myapp.war
, which has a context root of myawesomeapp
. The other application is myapp2.war
, which has myapp2
as the context root:
<server>
<webApplication id="app1" location="myapp.war" />
<webApplication location="myapp2.war" />
<webApplication id="app1" contextRoot="/myawesomeapp" />
</server>
Include processing
You can include additional configuration resources in your server configuration by using the include element. When a server configuration file contains an include reference to another resource, the server processes the contents of the referenced resource as if they were included inline in place of the include
element.
In the following example, the server processes the contents of the other.xml
file before it processes the contents of the other2.xml
file:
<server>
<include location="other.xml" />
<include location="other2.xml" />
</server>
You can set the location
attribute for the include
element to a relative or absolute file path, a directory, or to a URI for a remote resource.
When you specify a directory as the location
value, the server processes only the files that are directly within the specified directory and ignores any subdirectories. The server processes the files within the directory in alphabetical order.
<server>
<include location="./common/"/>
</server>
In this example, configuration files within the ./common/
directory are processed alphabetically on server startup.
When the server processes configuration files within directories, it switches the file names into lowercase and sorts them alphabetically to ensure that the file processing order is consistent and predictable. However, if two files are specified in the same directory with the same name except for case variations (such as extraConfig.xml
and ExtraConfig.xml
), the ordering behavior is indeterminate.
When you specify a directory in the include
location, you must append a slash (/
) to the directory name. For example, location="./common/"
. Omitting the slash after the directory name (location="./common"
) results in an error.
When you include configuration from a URI for a remote resource, the location
attribute must point to a single remote resource file and not a directory. For example, https://website.com/path/to/server.xml
is supported, but https://website.com/path/to/directory
is not.
By default, the include resource must exist. If the resource might not be available, set the optional
attribute to true
, as shown in the following example:
<server>
<include location="other.xml" optional="true" />
</server>
When you include a resource, you can specify the onConflict
attribute to change the normal merge rules. You can set the value of the onConflict
attribute to IGNORE
or REPLACE
any conflicting config:
<server>
<include location="other.xml" onConflict="IGNORE" />
<include location="other2.xml" onConflict="REPLACE" />
</server>
For configuration files that are brought in from a directory by using the include
element, the onConflict
attribute is applied to each file in that directory separately. For example:
<server>
<include location="/directory/" onConflict="REPLACE" />
</server>
Functionally, this configuration is the same as including each file separately with its own onConflict
attribute, as shown in the following example:
<server>
<include location="a.xml" onConflict="REPLACE" />
<include location="b.xml" onConflict="REPLACE" />
</server>
Configuration references
Most configuration in Open Liberty is self-contained, but it is often useful to share configuration. For example, the JDBC driver configuration might be shared by multiple data sources. You can refer to any factory configuration element that is defined as a direct child of the server
element.
A reference to configuration always uses the id
attribute of the element that is being referenced. The configuration element that makes the reference uses an attribute that always ends with Ref
, as shown in the following example:
<server>
<dataSource jndiName="jdbc/fred" jdbcDriverRef="myDriver" />
<jdbcDriver id="myDriver" />
</server>
Dynamic updates
The server monitors the server XML configuration for updates and dynamically reloads when changes are detected. Changes to non-XML files (server.env
, bootstrap.properties
, and jvm.options
) are not dynamic because they are only read at startup. Any server XML configuration file on the local disk is monitored for updates every 500ms. You can configure the frequency of XML configuration file monitoring. For example, to configure the server to monitor every 10 minutes, specify:
<config monitorInterval="10m" />
To disable file system polling and reload only when an MBean is notified, specify:
<config updateTrigger="mbean" />
Log messages
When the server runs, it might output log messages that reference configuration. The references in the log use an XPath-like structure to specify configuration elements. The element name is given with the value of the id
attribute inside square brackets. If no id
is specified in the server configuration an id
is automatically generated. Based on the following server XML configuration example, the dataStore
element and the child dataSource
are identified in the logs as dataStore[myDS]
and dataStore[myDS]/dataSource[default-0]
.
<server>
<dataStore id="myDS">
<dataSource />
</dataStore>
</server>