serverStatus command
Use the serverStatus command to obtain the status of one or all of the servers configured on a node.
For more information about where to run this command, see the Using command line tools article.
Syntax
The command syntax is as follows:serverStatus <server>|-all [options]The first argument is required. The argument is either the name of the server for which status is desired, or the -all keyword which requests status for all servers defined on the node.
Parameters
The following options are available for the serverStatus command:
- -quiet
- Suppresses the progress information that the serverStatus command prints in normal mode.
- -logfile <fileName>
- Location of the log file to which trace information is written. By default, the log file is named serverStatus.log and is created in your logs directory.
- -profileName
- Defines the profile of the Application Server process in a multi-profile installation. The -profileName option is not required for running in a single profile environment. The default for this option is the default profile.
- -replacelog
- Replaces the log file instead of appending to the current log.
- -trace
- Generates trace information into a file for debugging purposes.
- -username <name>
- User name for authentication if security is enabled. Acts the same as the -user option.
- -user <name>
- User name for authentication if security is enabled. Acts the same as the -username option.
- -password <password>
- Password for authentication if security is enabled.
- -help
- Prints a usage statement.
- -?
- Prints a usage statement.
Usage scenario
The following examples demonstrate correct syntax:
serverStatus server1 serverStatus -all (returns status for all defined servers) serverStatus -trace (produces the serverStatus.log file)
Related tasks
Use command line tools
Reference topic