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To facilitate the creation of Geronimo-specific deployment plans there is a new portlet now available. The Plan Creator wizard available from the Geronimo Administration Console makes deployment easier by walking you through a sequence of steps to auto-generate the geronimo-web.xml
for a given WAR file.
The wizard searches the references declared in the web.xml
as well as what is now defined within the code itself via annotations. Depending on the type of application the Plan Creator wizard will present a series of pages requesting specific information to resolve the references and dependencies. The wizard also offers default values which work for most of the configurations.
Depending on the type of application you are deploying, you may be presented with six separate pages to address the application's specific configuration. These pages are (in sequence):
This document offers a series of different sample application so you can have a better understanding of how this wizard works. This document is organized in the following sections:
The Plan Creator wizard will help you generate the appropriate deployment plan for the application you are deploying. The wizard currently works for Web applications and supports the following features:
The following sections provide sample applications with different features so you can better appreciate the wizard behavior.
There are four simple applications attached to give you a better idea of how the plan creator wizard would work when deploying Web applications.
This sample is a very simple database access application that uses annotations. For this example we have created a sample BankDB database on the embedded Derby as well as a database connection pool. Although we will not be covering in this section how to create a database or a connection pool we still provide in the #Attachments section some SQL sample to generate the required sample database.
The Annotations-TestJDBCAccess.zip file provides a BankDB.sql
, WebAppJDBCAccessAnnotations.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan WebAppJDBCAccessAnnotations_generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
WebAppJDBCAccessAnnotations.war
includes a Servlet, a JSP and a basic web.xml
. The following excerpt shows the annotation part the wizard has identified and will likely be prompting for additional information while deploying the application.
With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a Web browser and click on Plan Creator on the left menu.
Browse to the WebAppJDBCAccessAnnotations.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. In the resulting screen you will be configuring the Web application identity. You may want to change the default proposed values however, for this example, we will be accepting the defaults. Click Next.
In the following screen, the wizard would have identified all WAR references that need to be resolved. The references listed on this screen are specific to this application. The JDBCRef column is showing the resource name defined in ListCustomers.java
. See @Resource(name = "jdbc/MyDataSource")
from the excerpt above.
As mentioned earlier, for this example we created a database connection pool we called BankDB_Pool. From the JDBC Pools pull-down menu you can now select the appropriate connection pool and click Next.
The following screen lists all available modules and allows you specify the modules this WAR has dependencies on. This screen also provides a default selection, in this case the database connection pool will be already selected. Accept the default and click Next. For most scenarios the default values should be sufficient.
The final configuration page displays the generated deployment plan and allows you to make any additional editing. The following example shows the generated deployment plan.
The last step is to actually deploy and start the application, click on Deploy WAR.
You should receive two confirmation messages stating the application was successfully deployed and successfully started. The Launch Web App link takes your browser directly to the application you just deployed based on the context root you defined earlier. The Finish link takes you to the Plan Creator portlet again to start deploying a new application.
This sample is a simple Web application that accesses a Session EJB. It requires a JAR to be deployed before you can deploy the Web application. In the #Attachments section we have included all the files you need to test the deployment of this sample application.
The Annotations-TestEJBAccess.zip file provides the CurrencyConverterEJB.jar
that needs to be deployed first, the WebAppEjbAccessAnnotations.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan WebAppEjbAccessAnnotations_generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a Web browser and click on Deploy New on the left menu. We will now deploy the WAR prerequisite JAR file.
On the Archive: field browse to the CurrencyConverterEJB.jar
file you just extracted and click Install, this will install and start the JAR. You can verify the status of this JAR by clicking on EJB JARs link from the menu on the left. It should display something like this:
WebAppEjbAccessAnnotations.war
includes a Servlet, a JSP and a basic web.xml
. The following excerpt shows the annotation part the wizard has identified and will likely be prompting for additional information while deploying the application.
With the prerequisite JAR just installed click on Plan Creator on the left menu to proceed with the WAR installation. Browse to the WebAppEjbAccessAnnotations.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. In the resulting screen you will be configuring the Web application identity. You may want to change the default proposed values however, for this example, we will be accepting the defaults. Click Next.
In the following screen, the wizard would have identified all WAR references that need to be resolved. The references listed on this screen are specific to this application. The EJBRef column is showing the resource name defined in ConverterHandler.java
. See @EJB(name = "ejb/Converter")
from the excerpt above.
From the EJBs Deployed pull-down menu select the JAR you deployed earlier ConverterBean (default/CurrencyConverterEJB/1199912901187/jar)
and click Next.
The following screen list all available modules and allows you specify additional modules this WAR has dependencies on. This screen also provides a default selection, in this case the EJB JAR you deployed previously will be already selected. Accept the default and click Next. For most scenarios the default values should be sufficient.
The final configuration page displays the generated deployment plan and allows you to make any additional editing. The following example shows the generated deployment plan.
The last step is to actually deploy and start the application, click on Deploy WAR.
You should receive two confirmation messages stating the application was successfully deployed and successfully started. The Launch Web App link takes your browser directly to the application you just deployed based on the context root you defined earlier. Finish takes you to the Plan Creator portlet again to start deploying a new application.
This is a simple Web application that accesses a JMS Connection Factory and a JMS destination. Producer servlet sends 5 messages to a JMS queue and the Consumer servlet synchronously receives messages from the same queue.
The Annotations-TestJMSAccess.zip file provides the WebAppJMSAccessAnnotations.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan WebAppJMSAccessAnnotations_generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
WebAppJMSAccessAnnotations.war
includes the two Servlets mentioned above, a JSP and a basic web.xml. The following excerpts show the annotation part the wizard has identified and will likely be prompting for additional information while deploying the application.
With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a web browser and click on Plan Creator on the left menu.
Browse to the WebAppJMSAccessAnnotations.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. In the resulting screen you will be configuring the web application identity. You may want to change the default proposed values however, for this example, we will be accepting the defaults. Click Next.
In the following screen, the wizard would have identified all WAR references that need to be resolved. The references listed on this screen are specific to this application. The JMS Ref column is showing the resource names defined in the servlets shown above. See @Resource(name="jms/TestConnectionFactory")
and @Resource(name="jms/TestQueue")
. The following image shows the factories and destinations already defined in Geronimo, you may want to define your own factories and destinations for your application specifically before running this wizard. For this example we will just accept the defaults and click Next.
The following screen list all available modules and allows you specify the modules this WAR has dependencies on. This screen also provides a default selection, in this case the database connection pool will be already selected. Accept the default and click Next. For most scenarios the default values should be sufficient.
The final configuration page displays the generated deployment plan and allows you to make any additional editing. The following example shows the generated deployment plan.
The last step is to actually deploy and start the application, click on Deploy WAR.
You should receive two confirmation messages stating the application was successfully deployed and successfully started. The Launch Web App link takes your browser directly to the application you just deployed based on the context root you defined earlier. Finish takes you to the Plan Creator portlet again to start deploying a new application.
So far we have shown you how easy is to deploy a web application when using annotations. The following section focuses on applications not using annotations, this is mainly for applications based on the previous J2EE specification.
To make it easier to compare we are providing a similar set of applications as in the previous section(JDBC, EJB and JMS) but without the advantage of using annotations. In addition we are also including a security configuration application to cover the additional functionality we didn't cover in the previous section.
This is basically the same sample application we used in the Sample with annotations section, but obviously without annotations. Once again for this example we created a sample database and a connection pool. However, the emphasis of this section is on the web.xml file which contains the resource reference required for this application to run.
The noAnnotations-TestJDBCAccess.zip file provides a BankDB.sql
, WebAppJDBCAccess.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
WebAppJDBCAccess.war
includes a Servlet, a JSP and web.xml
. The following sample illustrates the web.xml
, in this example the Plan Creator wizard will look into the <resource-ref>
section.
With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a web browser and click on Plan Creator on the left menu. Browse to the WebAppJDBCAccess.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. The subsequent configuration pages are identical to what we described in the Sample with annotations section so we will skip the step-by-steps details. The end result is the same, the Plan Creator wizard has generated the deployment plan directly from the provided web.xml. To facilitate comparison we are providing both generated deployment plans side-by-side, note that only the <artifactId>
and <context-root>
are different in order to make these applications unique when deployed on the same server.
This example is based on the same sample application we used in the Sample with annotations section but without annotations. In the #Attachments section we have included all the files you need to test the deployment of this sample application.
The noAnnotations-TestEJBAccess.zip file provides the CurrencyConverterEJB.jar
that needs to be deployed first, the WebAppEjbAccess.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
WebAppEjbAccess.war
includes a Servlet and the web.xml
. In the annotations example we provided a servlet as well but for this sample all the processing is done directly by the JSP. The following sample illustrates the web.xml
, in this example the Plan Creator wizard will look into the <ejb-ref>
section.
WebAppEjbAccess.war
requires you deploy the EJB JAR first. If you have not done some while testing the annotation samples make sure you deploy it now. With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a web browser and click on Deploy New on the left menu. On the Archive: field browse to the CurrencyConverterEJB.jar
file you just extracted and click Install, this will install and start the JAR.
After you installed the required EJB JAR click on Plan Creator on the left menu. Browse to the WebAppEjbAccess.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. The subsequent configuration pages are identical to what we described in the Sample with annotations section so we will skip the step-by-steps details. The end result is the same, the Plan Creator wizard has generated the deployment plan directly from the provided web.xml. To facilitate comparison we are providing both generated deployment plans side-by-side, note that only the <artifactId>
and <context-root>
are different in order to make these applications unique when deployed on the same server.
Once again we are basing this sample application from the one we used in the annotations section. There is a Producer servlet that sends 5 messages to a JMS queue and a Consumer servlet that synchronously receives messages from the same queue.
The noAnnotations-TestJMSAccess.zip file provides the WebAppJMSAccess.war
which is the WAR we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
WebAppJMSAccess.war
includes the two Servlets mentioned above, a JSP and the web.xml
. The following sample illustrates the web.xml
, in this example the Plan Creator wizard will look into the <resource-ref>
,<message-destination-ref>
and <message-destination>
sections.
With the server up and running access the Geronimo Administration Console with a Web browser and click on Plan Creator on the left menu. Browse to the WebAppJMSAccess.war
you just extracted and click on Configure. The subsequent configuration pages are nearly identical to what we described in the Sample with annotations section so we will skip the step-by-steps details. The end result is the same, the Plan Creator wizard has generated the deployment plan directly from the provided web.xml
.
Once again we are providing both generated deployment plans side-by-side to facilitate comparison. These two sample applications are slightly different so you can see some additional variations in the generated deployment plan.
This sample application is a basic time reporting system that uses Servlets, JSPs and Java EE declarative security. In addition to above features it uses Geronimo's embedded Derby database to store user information of the system. Even though this application uses a database to hold user information, it is merely for configuration purposes. This sample application is a slight variation from the one covered in Geronimo v2.0 Documentation. The focus of this document is on the Plan Creator wizard so we will not cover in much detail this application's inner working, please refer to Web application security sample for further details.
The noAnnotations-TestSecuritySettings.zip provides a number of SQL scripts and deployment plans to facilitate set up the environment the security sample application requires to run. The provided files are 1_TimeReportDB.sql
, 2_dbPoolPlan.xml
, 3_securityRealmPlan.xml
. In addition there is a 0_Readme.txt
which is a condensed set of intructions to deploy this sample application, timereport.war
which is the application we will be deploying and a sample of the generated deployment plan timereport_generatedPlan.xml
. Download and extract the zip file to a directory of your convenience.
Before we continue with the security application itself we need to create some additional configurations using the provided plans.
1_TimeReportDB.sql
on this new database.<geronimo_home>\repository\org\tranql\tranql-connector-ra\1.3\tranql-connector-ra-1.3.rar
as the Archive: and 2_dbPoolPlan.xml
as the Plan. This will create the new database pool TimeReportPool.3_securityRealmPlan.xml
as the Plan. This will create the TimeReportRealm security realm.Now that we have configured the environment we go back to the application. timereport.war
provides 2 Servlets, several JSPs and the web.xml
we will be focusing on. In addition this WAR contains the sources and full java docs. The following sample illustrates the web.xml
, here are defined all the security constraints, realms and roles the Plan Creator wizard will use to generate the Geronimo specific deployment plan.
timereport.war
you just extracted and click on Configure.1_TimeReportDB.sql
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