Select 'New Remote Integration' (the instance is on a separate server to where jProfiler is installed) and follow the instructions in the wizard.Run through the Start Center to setup the JIRA application instance so it can be connected to:. Please see their Support section for assistance using it. This is a third-party application, and as such is not supported by Atlassian - it is also a paid for product. This can be done by using a third-party application, jProfiler and will assist in indicating what may be causing performance problems. One of the ways of diagnosing what is taking time for the application to respond is by attaching a profiler to it to give an exact breakdown of the time taken up by each Java Method. JIRA applications can experience performance problems from time-to-time, and debugging them can be a fairly complicated task. Please be aware that this material is provided for your information only and using it is done so at your own risk. Consequently, Atlassian cannot guarantee providing any support for it. The JProfiler Manual contains much interesting information on the profiling process, we recommend to read it in full to get most of JProfiler.The content on this page relates to platforms which are not supported for JIRA Applications. Alternatively you can ask support to add it to your static parameter set so that it survives JVM/appserver changes. Note: If you change any JVM/appserver settings in Java Control Panel the agentpath parameter will be removed so you may want to readd it. Start JVM with Java Control Panel or js shortcut command. Or you can use an absolute path to libjprofilerti.so instead. With jprofiler7 in your home directory and relative path, the example string to be added to JAVA_OPTS may look like -agentpath:jprofiler7/bin/linux-圆4/libjprofilerti.so=port=11002 The library to be loaded is in our case /bin/linux-圆4/libjprofilerti.so. Stop the JVM (you can use ‘jk’ shortcut command), add agentpath parameter to your JAVA_OPTS variable in ~/.bashrc and reread the file with ‘source ~/.bashrc’. Here are some screenshots of running JProfiler.
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