Problem | The name server should be initialized only once, but there was an attempt to initialize it a second time. |
User response | This message is to aid in problem diagnosis and can be ignored if no external symptoms are experienced. |
Problem | No properties were supplied to the name server to create a bootstrap object. |
User response | This message is to aid in problem diagnosis and can be ignored if no external symptoms are experienced. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The name server could not be initialized. The database tables, used to store persistent name server data, could not be initialized. |
User response | Make sure that the database server is running and that the WAS database exists. Confirm that a connection can be made to the database using the user id and password that was specified when WebSphere was installed or reconfigured. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The name server could not be initialized. An error occurred while attempting to start the bootstrap server. |
User response | Make sure the bootstrap server port is not already in use by any other server processes. This error can occur when WebSphere's name server has already been started. In addition, make sure that the bootstrap server is being started with a user ID which has sufficient user privileges. On UNIX platforms, the server must be running as root. On Windows, the user ID must must be a local Windows user ID that is in the Administrative group and has the advanced user rights "Act as part of the operating system" and "Log on as a service." Refer to the sections in WebSphere InfoCenter on installing WebSphere Application Server and testing your installation for more information. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This is an informational message indicating the port number opened as the bootstrap port. |
User response | No action is necessary. |
Problem | This is an informational message indicating that the bootstrap port has been disabled. |
User response | No action is necessary. |
Problem | The method, new_context, part of the CosNaming::NamingContext interface, is not supported. |
User response | A client program invoked the new_context method, which is not supported. Clients should use the bind_new_context method. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The CosNaming name server cannot convert a name conversion for internal processing. This may be the result of an invalid name specified for a configured name binding. |
User response | If the message is accompanied with another Name Service warning related to configured name bindings, change the configured binding name to a valid binding name. |
Problem | An empty name (zero name components) was passed to the CosNaming server. Empty names are not valid. |
User response | If the CosNaming client is a customer-provided application, this is a user error. |
Problem | A component in a name passed to a method in WebSphere's name server implementation of CosNaming::NamingContext contained a null id or kind field. A null value for an id or kind field is invalid. |
User response | If the CosNaming client is a customer-provided application, this is a user error. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | Some unexpected error occurring which processing a CosNaming name server request. |
User response | See the trace output for more details about the origin of the problem. |
Problem | The database tables used by the name server to store name space data could not be created. The cause is probably specific to the relational database manager being used. |
User response | See the trace output for more details about the origin of the problem. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The Naming Service has detected an invalid Naming Federation between two WebSphere Base Application Servers. As a result, the Lookup operation might not work correctly. |
User response | This is an invalid Naming Service usage. Users must correct its Naming Service usage to avoid this invalid Naming Federation. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | A URL was passed to a JNDI Context method, which then invoked the JNDI Naming Manager to return the Context identified by the URL. The Naming Manager method which was invoked returned a null value. |
User response | This problem is probably the result of an incorrect configuration. Make sure that the factory for the scheme of the specified URL can be located from the value of the property, java.naming.factory.url.pkgs, found in the Context's environment. |
Problem | A URL was passed to a JNDI Context method, which then invoked the JNDI Naming Manager to return the Context identified by the URL. The Naming Manager invocation failed. |
User response | This problem is probably the result of an incorrect configuration. Make sure that the factory for the scheme of the specified URL can be located from the value of the property, java.naming.factory.url.pkgs, found in the Context's environment. The trace output may contain additional diagnostic information. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | Only JNDI clients which are running in a J2EE client or server environment can specify java: URL names in JNDI interface method calls. |
User response | Make sure that the JNDI client using a java: URL name is running in a J2EE client or server environment. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | Enterprise beans only have read access to environment naming contexts. Environment name contexts include java:comp/env and its subcontexts. |
User response | You cannot perform update operations on environment naming contexts. If you want to bind a new object, use a name that does not start with java:comp/env. |
Problem | A JNDI operation on a "java:" name must be performed on the thread of a server application request |
User response | Make sure that a J2EE application does not execute JNDI operations on "java:" names within static code blocks or in threads created by that J2EE application. Such code does not necessarily run on the thread of a server application request and therefore is not supported by JNDI operations on "java:" names. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The initial context factory for WebSphere has changed. The old one will work, but some time in the future it will no longer be available. |
User response | Begin using the new initial context factory as soon as possible. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | A connection to the name server could not be made when attempting create an initial context. |
User response | The most like causes are that the provider URL is incorrect or that the name server identified by the provider URL is not running. Make sure that the name server is running and that the host and port in the provider URL are correct. Also, make sure that the host identified in the provider URL can be ping'ed from the machine on which the JNDI client is running. Refer to the trace output accompanying this message for more information about the root cause. |
Problem | An unknown error occurred while attempting to obtain the initial context from the ORB. |
User response | For more information about the root cause, refer to any additional trace output accompanying this message. |
Problem | While processing a JNDI bind or rebind operation on a javax.naming.Referenceable object, a call to the method, getReference(), on the object resulted in an exception. |
User response | The Referenceable object could not be processed for some unknown reason. Refer to the trace output accompanying this message for more details on the root cause. |
Problem | While executing a JNDI lookup or listBindings operation on a javax.naming.Reference object, a call to the JNDI Naming Manager to process the object failed. It is possible that some class required by the Reference object's factory could not be loaded or some exception occurred while instantiating the factory object. It is also possible that some class required by the factory to instantiate an object from the Reference object could not be loaded, or that some exception occurred while the factory was instantiating the object. |
User response | Ensure that the factory class can be loaded from the calling environment and that the class instantiated by the factory can be loaded. Actions on exceptions originating from the factory depend on the specific factory's implementation. |
Problem | The JNDI bind or rebind method was passed an object which is of a type that cannot be bound. Allowed object types include CORBA objects (which includes EJBs deployed to WebSphere), JNDI contexts of the same type as the context object being invoked, javax.naming.Referenceable, javax.naming.Reference, and java.io.Serializable. |
User response | Attempt to bind or rebind only objects of the above types. |
Problem | A JNDI context method was passed a null name. Null names are not valid. |
User response | Use an appropriate name for the desired JNDI operation. |
Problem | A JNDI context method was passed an empty name. JNDI context methods except for lookup, list, and listBindings, do not accept empty names. |
User response | Use an appropriate name for the desired JNDI operation. |
Problem | While executing a JNDI lookup or listBindings operation on a javax.naming.Reference object, a call to the JNDI Naming Manager to process the object returned the original Reference object, indicating that no processing was done. This is most likely not the intended result. It is possible that the factory class required to process the Reference could not be determined or loaded. |
User response | Make sure that the Reference object contains a factory class name. Ensure that the factory class can be loaded from the calling environment. |
Problem | Some javax.naming.Context implementation has raised an exception. Data related to the exception is included with the message. |
User response | If the exception triggering this message is the result of normal operation, the message can be ignored. If the exception is not expected, refer to the diagnostic information included with the message to help determine the cause. |
Problem | While processing a JNDI bind or rebind operation on a javax.naming.Referenceable object, a call to the method, getReference(), on the object returns null, which violates the JNDI API. |
User response | Do not let the method getReference() on the Referenceable object returns a null Reference object. According to the JNDI API, getReference() on a Referenceable object should return a non-null Reference of this object. |
Problem | The target resource cannot be resolved with the specified name relative to the default initial context. |
User response | Make sure that the JNDI name mapping in the deployment descriptor binding is correct. If the name mapping is correct, make sure the target resource can be resolved with the specified name relative to the default initial context. |
Problem | An IndirectJNDILookup object was created with an empty name. Indirect lookups require non-empty names. |
User response | Do not create IndirectJNDILookup objects with empty names. |
Problem | Some required fields/attributes are missing (empty) when create a NameSpaceBinding object or its subclass for Configured Bindings. |
User response | Do not create NameSpaceBinding object or its subclass with empty fields or attributes. |
Problem | A binding already exist in the name space with the same name as this configured binding. |
User response | Use a different name or make sure the configured binding is in the correct place in name space. |
Problem | When a binding with a compound name is configured, all intermediate contexts must either not already exist or be contexts created from other configured bindings. |
User response | Use a different name or make sure the configured binding is in the correct place in name space. |
Problem | Some error occurred when creating an intermediate context for a configured binding. |
User response | Make sure the name is valid and that it does not conflict in any way with existing bindings in the name space. |
Problem | Duplicate port number has been assigned in the same server. The server may or may not work properly. |
User response | Make sure all the endpoint in configuration for every server has an unique port number assigned, then restart the server. |
Problem | The non-clustered application server with name and node specified in the XML file has not been configured in this cell. |
User response | Make sure the node name and server name identify a configured non-clustered server. |
Problem | The cluster with the name specified in the XML file has not been configured in this cell. |
User response | Make sure the cluster name indentifies a configured cluster. |
Problem | A configured binding was defined with an invalid parameter value. |
User response | Correct the configured binding setting shown in the error message. |
Problem | This is an informational message logged during name server startup indicating that the name server is registering as a Security service listener. This means that name server security will be enforced. |
User response | This message is informational only. No action is required. |
Problem | This is an informational message logged during name server startup indicating that the Naming component is not registering as a Security service listener. This means that name server security will not be enforced. |
User response | This message is informational only. No action is required. |
Problem | NMSV0750W: During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | NMSV0750W: Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The context can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | NMSV0751W: During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an error occurred while attempting to add the binding to the name space. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | NMSV0751W: If the problem cannot be resolved with the included error information, remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The context can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | NMSV0752W: During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | NMSV0752W: Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The context can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | NMSV0753W: During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | NMSV0753W: Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The object can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | NMSV0754W: During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | NMSV0754W: Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The object can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The object can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | During server startup, while the name server was reading in the specified XML file, an invalid binding entry was found. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | Remove the bad binding entry from XML file. The object can then be rebound if necessary. |
Problem | The binding name for the entry is invalid. The name must be a valid CORBA INS name string for a single name component. The entry is being ignored. Until the problem is corrected, update operations on contexts backed by the specified XML file are disabled. |
User response | Change the binding name to a valid name which does not conflict with other binding names, or remove the bad binding entry from XML file and rebind the object if necessary. |
Problem | In order for the name server to process any persistent name binding information, it needs a Configuration Repository client handle to access persistent name binding XML files. An attempt to acquire a Configuration Repository handle failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | In order to read in persistent name binding data from an XML file during name server initialization, the name server must extract the XML file from the Configuration Respository. The extract operation failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | In order to process an update operation on a persistent name binding, the name server must check out the persistent name binding XML file from the Configuration Respository. The checkout operation failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | In order to process an update operation on a persistent name binding, the name server must check out the persistent name binding XML file from the Configuration Respository, update the file, and check it in. The checkin operation failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | After experiencing some problem processing a persistent name binding XML file, a Configuration Respository request to unlock the file failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | The name server experienced some problem processing a persistent name binding XML file. The update operation failed. |
User response | Restart the server. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | Unexpected exception encountered when loading configuration file. As a result, name server custom property settings may be ignored. |
User response | Action required depends on the root cause of the problem. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | Unexpected exception encountered when loading the specified configuration file. As a result, the name server's system name space structure may not reflect the entire cell configuration. |
User response | Action required depends on the root cause of the problem. Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | Name bindings were found in the deployment manager's node configuration. Node-scoped configured bindings are bound in the name space under the node's node persistent root. Since there is no node persistent persistent root for the deployment manager's node, this node is not a valid location for node-scoped configured name bindings. |
User response | Make sure that you have selected the right node and scope for the configured bindings. |
Problem | Two servers with the same name were found in the specified node. As a result, the name server's system name space structure may not reflect the entire cell configuration. All server names within a node must be unique. |
User response | Make sure that all server names are unique within a node. |
Problem | The bootstrap address configuration for the specified server does not contain a host name. As a result, the name server's system name space structure will not include the specified server. |
User response | Make sure all bootstrap addresses include a host name and port number. |
Problem | The bootstrap address configuration for the specified server does not contain a port number. As a result, the name server's system name space structure will not include the specified server. |
User response | Make sure all bootstrap addresses include a host name and port number. |
Problem | Encountered another server configured with the same bootstrap host and port as this server. The conflicting server is being ignored. As a result, the name server's system name space structure may not reflect the entire cell configuration. |
User response | Make sure that all servers are configured with the correct bootstrap addresses and that all bootstrap ports on a host are unique. |
Problem | Encountered two servers configured with the same bootstrap address. The one specified in the error message is being ignored. As a result, the name server's system name space structure may not reflect the entire cell configuration. |
User response | Make sure that all servers in the cell are configured with the correct bootstrap host and that all bootstrap ports on a host are unique. |
Problem | Cannot find the specified server in the cell configuration. A cluster member is probably incorrectly specified in the cluster configuration. |
User response | Make sure that members configured for a cluster include only servers which exist in the cell configuration. |
Problem | Every server opens the bootstrap port defined for it unless it has been disabled. The bootstrap port of a server can be disabled only if the server is running as a standalone server. Managed servers, node agents, and deployment managers, for example, cannot have their bootstrap port disabled. |
User response | Do not set the BootstrapPortEnabled name server custom property to false for a server not configured as a standalone server. |
Problem | Some Name Server configuration warning have been issued prior to this message. Most likely the name space will not be constructed correctly. |
User response | Try to resolve previous warnings first. |
Problem | Name Server configuration warning have been issued with some additional information. |
User response | Look into this additional information to resolve this warning. |
Problem | Changes have been made to the configuration which affect the name server running in the process associated with this message. The server process must be restarted for these changes to take effect. |
User response | Restart the server which received this warning message. |
Problem | Changes have been made to the configuration which affect the name server running in the process associated with this message. An error occurred while attempting to update the name space. The name space may not accurately reflect the current configuration. |
User response | Restart the server which received this warning message. |
Problem | Changes have been made to the configuration which affect the name server running in the process associated with this message. An error occurred while processing the new configuration data in an effort to update the name space to reflect the configuration changes. The name space may not accurately reflect the current configuration. |
User response | Restart the server which received this warning message. |
Problem | A wrong value has been specified in name server custom property. |
User response | Make sure the property value is valid. For BootstrapPortEnabled name server custom property, the value must be either "true" or "false". For naming.systemNameSpace.scope, valid values are "cell", "node", and "server". |
Problem | Changes have been made to the name server custom property which affect the name server running in the process associated with this message. The server process must be restarted for these changes to take effect. |
User response | Restart the server which received this warning message. |
Problem | This is an informational message indicating a name server custom property setting. |
User response | No action is necessary. |
Problem | Some unexpected error occurred. |
User response | Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | An error occurred while attempting to serialize an object. This error probably occurred during a JNDI bind or rebind operation. |
User response | One possible cause is that some object encountered during the serialization process is not serializable. For more information about the root cause, see the trace output which accompanies this message. |
Problem | An error occurred while attempting to deserialize an object. This error probably occurred during a JNDI lookup or listBindings operation. |
User response | The most likely cause for this problem is not having the required class or classes in the JNDI client CLASSPATH. The trace output should contain more details, such as the class name that could not be found. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | This exception is unexpected. The cause is not immediately known. |
User response | If the problem persists, see problem determination information on the WebSphere Application Server Support page at http://www.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/was/support/. |
Problem | The com/ibm/websphere/naming/jndiprovider.properties file could not be loaded |
User response | Ensure that the .jar file contaning the com/ibm/websphere/naming/jndiprovider.properties file is located where it can be found by the classloader. If the file is accessable to the classloader, look for any other messages that may identify the problem. |
Problem | An undocumented naming error occurred. |
User response | Refer to the diagnostic data provided to determine the root cause of the problem. |
Problem | A property in the file com/ibm/websphere/naming/jndiprovider.properties is set with the class name of the initial context factory implementation to use. Since the property is not set, the class loader is apparently not locating the containing jar file. |
User response | In your specific WebSphere installation, find the jar file that contains com/ibm/websphere/naming/jndiprovider.properties and make sure your runtime environment is set up so that the class loader will be able to locate it. |