+++ /dev/null
-# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-# Template for jmxremote.password
-#
-# o Copy this template to jmxremote.password
-# o Set the user/password entries in jmxremote.password
-# o Change the permission of jmxremote.password to read-only
-# by the owner.
-#
-# See below for the location of jmxremote.password file.
-# ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-##############################################################
-# Password File for Remote JMX Monitoring
-##############################################################
-#
-# Password file for Remote JMX API access to monitoring. This
-# file defines the different roles and their passwords. The access
-# control file (jmxremote.access by default) defines the allowed
-# access for each role. To be functional, a role must have an entry
-# in both the password and the access files.
-#
-# Default location of this file is $JRE/lib/management/jmxremote.password
-# You can specify an alternate location by specifying a property in
-# the management config file $JRE/lib/management/management.properties
-# or by specifying a system property (See that file for details).
-
-
-##############################################################
-# File permissions of the jmxremote.password file
-##############################################################
-# Since there are cleartext passwords stored in this file,
-# this file must be readable by ONLY the owner,
-# otherwise the program will exit with an error.
-#
-# The file format for password and access files is syntactically the same
-# as the Properties file format. The syntax is described in the Javadoc
-# for java.util.Properties.load.
-# Typical password file has multiple lines, where each line is blank,
-# a comment (like this one), or a password entry.
-#
-#
-# A password entry consists of a role name and an associated
-# password. The role name is any string that does not itself contain
-# spaces or tabs. The password is again any string that does not
-# contain spaces or tabs. Note that passwords appear in the clear in
-# this file, so it is a good idea not to use valuable passwords.
-#
-# A given role should have at most one entry in this file. If a role
-# has no entry, it has no access.
-# If multiple entries are found for the same role name, then the last one
-# is used.
-#
-# In a typical installation, this file can be read by anybody on the
-# local machine, and possibly by people on other machines.
-# For # security, you should either restrict the access to this file,
-# or specify another, less accessible file in the management config file
-# as described above.
-#
-# Following are two commented-out entries. The "measureRole" role has
-# password "QED". The "controlRole" role has password "R&D".
-#
-# monitorRole QED
-# controlRole R&D
-