...
Disables XperienCentral's two factor authentication.
-Djava.awt.headless=true
...
If IPv6 is available on the operating system, the underlying native socket will be an IPv6 socket. This allows Java(tm) applications to connect as well and accept connections from both IPv4 andIPv6 hosts. If an application has a preference to only use IPv4 sockets, then this property can be set to true
. The implication is that the application will not be able to communicate with IPv6 hosts.
-Djdk.xml.xpathExprGrpLimit
This JDK system property sets the maximum number of nested groups allowed in an XPath expression. This property is used to limit the complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 10, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. GX Software recommends a value between 25 and 60.
-Djdk.xml.xpathExprOpLimit
This JDK system property sets the maximum number of operations allowed in an XPath expression. This property is used to limit the complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 10000, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. GX Software recommends a value between 400-5000.
-Djdk.xml.xpathTotalOpLimit
This JDK system property sets the maximum total number of operations allowed in all XPath expressions evaluated during the execution of an application. This property is used to limit the overall complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 1,000,000, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. GX Software recommends a value between 15,000 and 25,000.
-Dorg.jackrabbit.repositoryfile
...
A flaw in the implementation of a card-marking performance optimization in the JVM can cause heap corruption under some circumstances. This issue affects the CMS garbage collector prior to 6u18, and the CMS, G1 and Parallel Garbage Collectors in 6u18. The serial garbage collector is not affected. Applications most likely to be affected by this issue are those that allocate very large objects which would not normally fit in Eden or those that make extensive use of JNI Critical Sections (JNI Get/Release*Critical).
jdk.xml.xpathExprGrpLimit
is a system property in the Java Development Kit (JDK) that sets the maximum number of nested groups allowed in an XPath expression. This property is used to limit the complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 10, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. The value of this property can be modified using the -D
command-line option when running Java applications or by setting it programmatically using the System.setProperty()
method.
25-60
jdk.xml.xpathExprOpLimit
is a system property in the Java Development Kit (JDK) that sets the maximum number of operations allowed in an XPath expression. This property is used to limit the complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 10000, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. The value of this property can be modified using the -D
command-line option when running Java applications or by setting it programmatically using the System.setProperty()
method.
400-5000
jdk.xml.xpathTotalOpLimit
is a system property in the Java Development Kit (JDK) that sets the maximum total number of operations allowed in all XPath expressions evaluated during the execution of an application. This property is used to limit the overall complexity of XPath expressions in order to prevent potential security vulnerabilities or performance issues that may arise from processing overly complex expressions. By default, the limit is set to 1000000, but it can be adjusted as needed for specific applications or use cases. The value of this property can be modified using the -D
command-line option when running Java applications or by setting it programmatically using the System.setProperty()
method.
15,000-25,000