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  1. WildFly
  2. WFLY-16955

Port Exhaustion on Windows OS with Jboss Wildfly (or JBoss EAP) application server installed.

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    • Icon: Bug Bug
    • Resolution: Unresolved
    • Icon: Major Major
    • None
    • 20.0.1.Final
    • None
      1. Install Windows OS ( We have windows 2016).
      2. Install JBOSS Wildfly ( We have 20.0.1)
      3. May Install any standalone application on application server (optional)
      4. Monitor Ports Being used. 
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      On Windows operating system with JBosss Wildfly (or JBoss EAP) application server installed, even when there is no usage of services deployed in server, there is continuous increase in number of ports allocated by the Java.exe process running the application server at a steady rate. This will eventually exhaust the available ports on the system leading to system error when application needs to allocate a port for genuine reason such as serving a user request for API call.

      This is resulting in frequent server restarts, thereby causing down-time to customer. 

      Attached below is mock-up from our production-like environment for reference. There are 2 readings from 2 application servers (and respective applications deployed) taken at interval of per hour.  

        1. image-2022-09-07-17-02-16-961.png
          image-2022-09-07-17-02-16-961.png
          47 kB
        2. netstat_1.txt
          77 kB
        3. netstat_4.txt
          99 kB
        4. netstat_qceu_16Sep.txt
          84 kB
        5. Socket-Binding.txt
          0.9 kB

              bstansbe@redhat.com Brian Stansberry
              rohit.dongre Rohit Dongre (Inactive)
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                Created:
                Updated: