# This file contains the java properties that the different command lines will # use when launched. You can specify the location of the java binaries to be # used and the java arguments to be passed to the command line. The follwoing # examples assumes that the Java virtual machine supports those options. # For instance you can specify to use the -server argument for the start-ds # command with an initial heap size of 256 Mb by setting start-ds.java-args=-server -d64 -Xms256m -XX:+UseCompressedOops \ -Duser.language=en -Duser.country=US -Djava.awt.headless=true # For big|production servers (NewSize ~= 2/3*Xmx) #start-ds.java-args=-server -d64 -Xms2G -Xmx2G -XX:NewSize=1408M \ # -XX:MaxNewSize=1408M -XX:+UseCompressedOops -XX:+UseParNewGC \ # -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC -Duser.language=en -Duser.country=US \ # -Djava.awt.headless=true # To set the java virtual machine to be used for a given command-line you must # set the property .java-home and to specify java arguments # you must set the property .java-args. # # There are certain command-lines (import-ldif, export-ldif, backup, restore) # that can work on two modes: online and offline. When they run in online mode # (the server is running and the user specifies LDAP parameters to launch the # operation) the operation is not actually performed in the Java Virtual Machine # of the command-line but on the server side. This is why when launching these # command-lines on online-mode it is preferred to use the -client argument for # the java virtual machine (and even limit the maximum size of the heap). # However when these command-lines are launched in offline mode it is # recommended to use the -server argument to launch the command-line. # This is the reason why you can specify different java properties for both # modes (for instance import-ldif.offline.java-args and # import-ldif.online.java-args). # # IMPORTANT NOTE: Once you have modified this file and set the java properties # that you want the command-lines to use you must run the command-line # bin/dsjavaproperties for the different scripts to be updated with the # specified settings. # # Examples: # Specify to overwrite the content of the environment variable OPENDJ_JAVA_HOME # (i.e. the contents of this properties file for the java home will be analyzed # before checking whether OPENDJ_JAVA_HOME is specified in the environment): #overwrite-env-java-home=true # Specify to overwrite the content of the environment variable OPENDJ_JAVA_ARGS # (i.e. the contents of this properties file for the java args will be analyzed # before checking whether OPENDJ_JAVA_ARGS is specified in the environment): #overwrite-env-java-args=true # Specify to use a particular Java Virtual Machine for the offline import: # import-ldif.offline.java-home=/usr/jdk1.7 # Specify to use -server argument when running import-ldif on server mode: import-ldif.offline.java-args=-server -d64 -Djava.awt.headless=true # Specify to use -client argument when running dsconfig: #dsconfig.java-args=-client -Djava.awt.headless=true control-panel.java-args=-client # Specify to use the java home for all the command-lines that have not # an associated property defined: #default.java-home=/usr/jdk1.6 # Specify to use the -client argument for all the command-lines that have not # an associated property defined: default.java-args=-client -Djava.awt.headless=true