Use the mqsichangeproperties command to modify broker properties and properties of broker resources.
Use the mqsichangeproperties command to change properties that are associated with a broker and relate to inter-broker communications, the JVM, and the HTTP listener component (which includes the HTTP and HTTPS (SSL) support for the HTTPInput and HTTPReply nodes). You can also use the Configuration Manager Proxy (CMP) API to change properties.
Use the mqsireportproperties command
to view properties that are associated with a broker.
You must specify
either -b httplistener or -c ConfigurableService.
You
must specify either -b httplistener or -c ConfigurableService.
For compatibility with previous versions, you can also specify the value ComIbmXmlParserFactory for the ObjectName.
You
can specify more than one property name together with a corresponding
value, using commas as separators, provided that you use a valid value
for the corresponding property; for example, -n Name1,Name2
-v Value1,Value2.
Do not leave a space after
each comma in the list of names and corresponding values.
Use "" to specify an empty PropertyValue string.
mqsichangeproperties WBRK_BROKER -c JDBCProviders -o DB2EXTRA -n connectionUrlFormat
-v "jdbc:db2://[serverName]:[portNumber]/[databaseName]:user=[user];password=[password];"
On Windows systems, the user ID that is used to run this command must be a member of the Administrators group on the local computer.
On Linux and UNIX systems, the user ID that is used to run this command must be a member of the mqbrkrs group.
Always enter the command on a single line; in some examples, a line break has been added to enhance readability.
Changes to broker components
The following examples specify the -b parameter to identify a particular broker component.
mqsichangeproperties TEST -b httplistener -o HTTPListener -n enableSSLConnector -v true
mqsichangeproperties TEST -b httplistener -o HTTPSConnector -n sslProtocol -v TLS
Changes to properties associated with execution groups
The following examples include the -e parameter to specify the execution group to change.
mqsichangeproperties TEST -e default -o DynamicSubscriptionEngine -n clientPingInterval -v 200
mqsichangeproperties TEST -e default -o DynamicSubScriptionEngine -n multicastEnabled -v true
mqsichangeproperties TEST -e exgroup1 -o ComIbmJVMManager -n jvmDebugPort -v 8018
mqsichangeproperties TEST -e AddressSampleProvider -o ComIbmJVMManager -n keystoreType -v JKS
Changes to configurable services
The following examples include the -c parameter to specify the type of configurable service to change.
mqsichangeproperties WBRK6_DEFAULT_BROKER -c JMSProviders -o WebSphere_MQ -n jarsURL -v file://D:\SIBClient\Java