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How to Fix ActiveMQ Persistent Message / KahaDB Store Full

DodaTech Updated 2026-06-24 3 min read

In this quick fix, you will learn how to diagnose and resolve activemq persistent msg errors on production infrastructure. These failures can cause cascading outages across your entire platform. The DodaTech engineering team encounters these issues regularly while building and maintaining Doda Browser and Durga Antivirus Pro at scale.

The Problem

The service fails with errors indicating broker connection refused or store full:

$ activemq-admin list
# ERROR: Transport error

This can affect all dependent services and end users across the platform if not resolved quickly. The error typically occurs during startup, connection attempts, or regular operations. Without immediate intervention, the issue can cascade to other dependent components and cause broader system degradation.

Quick Fix

1. Verify service status and connectivity

Start by confirming the service is running:

cat /var/log/activemq/activemq.log | grep ERROR

Check that all expected services are running and healthy. If the service is not running, start it with the appropriate system command. If it crashes immediately after starting, check the service logs for startup errors or dependency failures. Use the Process monitoring tools appropriate for your operating system.

2. Check network and port availability

netstat -tulpn | grep 61616

Ensure required ports are open and listening on the correct network interfaces. A common mistake is binding to localhost (127.0.0.1) when other hosts need to connect over the network. Also verify firewall rules are not blocking the required ports using tools like iptables, nftables, or Cloud Security group rules.

3. Inspect logs for detailed errors

activemq-admin query -QQueue=*

Look for specific error messages that indicate the root cause. Pay attention to timestamps — correlate errors with configuration changes or recent deployments. Common patterns include connection refused, authentication failure, timeout exceeded, and resource exhaustion.

4. Apply the correct configuration

When configuring the service, always verify against the documentation:

# Wrong: guessing the configuration blindly may cause more issues
# Applying changes without understanding the root cause can break working functionality

activemq-admin list
# ERROR: Transport error
# This approach often makes things worse by introducing new problems

# Right: verify the correct parameters for your environment
# Check documentation and known-good configurations
activemq-admin list --jmxurl service:jmx:rmi:///jndi/rmi://localhost:1099/jmxrmi

Review configuration files for typos, incorrect file paths, wrong version numbers, or mismatched parameters between components. Use version control for all configuration files to track changes and enable quick rollback if needed.

5. Test the fix

# After applying the fix, verify the service is healthy:
cat /var/log/activemq/activemq.log | grep ERROR

Expected output should show all services in a healthy state. Run a comprehensive test to confirm the issue is fully resolved:

# Perform a smoke test to validate the fix across all components
# Check for any remaining errors in the service logs
activemq-admin query -QQueue=*

If the issue persists, repeat the diagnostic steps and look for additional error clues. Common follow-up issues include restart loops, permission problems, dependency failures, and resource contention.

Always follow these steps when troubleshooting:

  1. Confirm the scope — is it one node or the entire cluster?
  2. Check recent changes — configuration updates, deployments, or scaling events
  3. Isolate the failure domain — network, application, or infrastructure
  4. Apply the fix to one instance first, then roll out broadly
  5. Verify the fix and document the resolution for future reference

Prevention

  • Monitor KahaDB journal file count and disk usage
  • Configure cleanupInterval for automatic journal cleanup
  • Use JDBC persistence for very large message stores
  • Set per-queue memory limits
  • Implement dead-letter queue processing
  • Use network of brokers for high availability
  • Monitor broker health with JMX

For production systems, the DodaTech team recommends monitoring these metrics through centralized Observability pipelines to detect issues before they impact users. These same patterns are used in Durga Antivirus Pro and Doda Browser infrastructure monitoring. Implement automated remediation where possible to reduce mean time to recovery (MTTR).

### What is the default ActiveMQ port?

OpenWire uses TCP 61616. Web console uses HTTP 8161 (8162 for HTTPS). JMX uses RMI port 1099. Verify all ports are accessible from client applications.

How do I clean up KahaDB?

KahaDB cleanup is automatic via cleanupInterval. If the store grows too large, stop ActiveMQ, remove old journal files from kahadb/ (keeping latest), and restart. Switch to JDBC persistence if KahaDB management becomes burdensome.

What happens to messages that fail?

After exhausting max redelivery attempts (default 6), the broker moves failed messages to ActiveMQ.DLQ. Configure individualDeadLetterStrategy per queue or topic for separate DLQs.

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