tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7952810330436823110.post3056708612379297044..comments2024-03-20T10:09:26.121+01:00Comments on The Grey Blog: Your Glassfish instance doesn't start. Have you checked the OSGi cache?Enrico M. Crisostomohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02688166348157974808noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7952810330436823110.post-40809605273354886132014-08-27T12:51:29.666+02:002014-08-27T12:51:29.666+02:00Hi Shaun,
It's been a long time (and upgrades...Hi Shaun,<br /><br />It's been a long time (and upgrades in between) since I'm not experiencing this issue any longer.<br /><br />However, a quick suggestion: why don't you wrap the server start/stop commands in a shell script together with the osgi-cache deletion command?<br /><br />Something like (pseudocode of the stop script):<br /><br />#!/bin/sh<br /><br />asadmin stop-domain domainname<br />rm -rf /path/to/osgi-cache<br /><br />Cheers,<br />-- EnricoEnrico M. Crisostomohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02688166348157974808noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7952810330436823110.post-27945805157430370952014-08-22T20:49:38.116+02:002014-08-22T20:49:38.116+02:00Hi,
I am stuck with this problem recently.
I have ...Hi,<br />I am stuck with this problem recently.<br />I have a question though. When you start after stopping the glassfish and removing the osgi-cache, the osgi-cache again gets created, which in my case is again stopping the glassfish to start. So if I keep on deleting the osgi-cache manually, from another window, It works fine. Can you help me with any further suggestions?shaunnoreply@blogger.com