You are not entirely correct.
First you can monitor any thread pool that is in WAS via PMI. See here for counters that you may get from monitoring pool - http://www-01.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/api/content/nl/pl/SSAW57_8.5.5/com.ibm.websphere.nd.doc/ae/rprf_datacounter9.html
The thread pool is called WebContainer thread pool.
Second, you can store all these counters data to file directly using web admin console. Go to Monitoring and Tuning > Performance Viewer > Current activity
, select server, then in PMI viewer select Settings > Log
to define logging period and format. And in Modules > Thread pools > WebContainer
you can view current counter values.
This is rather for short term monitoring, than for constant logging. There is also option to load and replay the log via console later, viewing gathered data.
These counters are of course available via JMX, so you can write your custom client if you need it.
UPDATE
If you are particularly interested in Web Serivces counters then there is separate Web Services monitoring module for that. Check this page for details Monitoring the performance of web services applications.
You will be able to see:
- The number of requests dispatched to an implementation bean
- The number of requests dispatched with successful replies
- The average time in milliseconds to process full requests
- The average time in milliseconds between receiving the request and dispatching it to the bean
- The average time in milliseconds between the dispatch and receipt of a reply from the bean. This represents the time spent in business logic.
- The average time in milliseconds between the receipt of a reply from a bean to the return of a result to the client
- The average size of the SOAP request
- The average size of the SOAP reply