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This article will help you migrate JDBC applications developed for JBoss v4 to Apache Geronimo. This article is part of a series of migration articles covering different types of applications migration.

This article provides details on the JDBC implementation differences between these two application servers as well as a detailed step-by-step migration procedure for porting JDBC applications from JBoss v4 to Apache Geronimo. To define a common starting point (the source environment), this article provides steps of deploying the Online Brokerage sample application into the JBoss source environment. Then you will be guided through the application migration and deployment process in Apache Geronimo.

This article is organized in the following sections:

JDBC implementation analysis implementation

JDBC implementation might vary from one vendor to another. The purpose of this section is to provide a JDBC specific feature-to-feature comparison between JBoss and Apache Geronimo so you can clearly identify the differences and plan accordingly before migration.

Given that JBoss and Geronimo both use J2CA connectors for accessing JDBC resources, there will be an overlap of some J2CA features when comparing the platform specific JDBC features.

Note: Since Geronimo is still in its infancy, some of the features provided by JBoss might not yet be implemented in Geronimo.

Feature

Apache Geronimo

JBoss v4

JDBC access

Geronimo does not have any direct integration with JDBC but supports access through the generic J2CA framework. The TranQL project has J2CA adapters for various databases.

JDBC access in JBoss is through JDBC connectors based on the JCA specification.

JCA implementation

Geronimo supports the JCA 1.5 specification and is backward compatible to the JCA 1.0 specification.

JBoss AS 4.0 implements the JCA (Java Connector Architecture) 1.5 specification instead of the JCA 1.0 in JBoss AS 3.2.

Data sources supported

TranQL has generic wrappers for data source, ConnectionPoolDatasource, and XADataSource.

Supports 5 types of data sources:

  • no-tx-datasource
  • local-tx-datasource
  • xa-datasource
  • ha-local-tx-datasource
  • ha-xa-datasource

Data source failover

TranQL has specialized drivers for certain databases (including Apache Derby, Oracle, MySQL, DB2 and SQL Server) that provide a tighter integration with the advanced features of the driver.
It is at this level that features such as load-balancing and failover would be provided. You can also use a C-JDBC wrapper for providing database clustering and failover.

JBoss has data source failover capabilities implemented through two data sources.
1) ha-local-tx-datasource - for local transactions.
2) ha-xa-datasource - for distributed transactions

XA support

Supports XA transactions, Local Transactions, and No transaction.

Supports XA transactions, Local Transactions, and No transaction.

Connection Manager Configurability

The J2CA framework is interceptor based which allows different parts of the connection framework to be plugged in.
Although you cannot plug in a custom connection manager now, this capability can be added fairly easily.

You can plug in your own custom connection manager if required.

JTA implementation

Transaction support is provided through JOTM and HOWL.

Full support for JTA through JBossJTA.

Connection pooling and management

Custom Geronimo Code and TranQL used for connection pooling and management.

JBossCX framework used for connection pooling and management.

Legacy driver support

Geronimo also provides this through the TranQL- connector JDBC to JCA wrapper in Geronimo. Supports JDBC 3.0 and 2.1.

JBoss provides connection to RDBMS that have not yet implemented JCA- JDBC drivers through JCA wrappers for JDBC drivers.

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Sample application sampleApp

This article contains a sample application to demonstrate migrating an application from JBoss to Geronimo, called Online Brokerage. It represents an online trading scenario in which users can buy and sell stocks. The application has the following five pages:

  • Login Page
  • Registration Page
  • User Information Page
  • Available Stocks Page
  • User Portfolio Page

The following figure illustrates the application flow:

First, you accesses the Login page. From the Login page you enter the user name and password. If the user name or password is not valid the application throws an error message and rejects your login attempt. If the user name and password are correct, you are taken to the Available Stocks page where you can view all the stocks that are present for sale at that time.

You can choose to buy as many stocks as wanted, depending on the available money in the account, by clicking the Buy button.

After the transaction completes successfully you are brought back to the Available Stocks page where you can buy more stocks if required.

If you have insufficient funds to buy stocks the application will throw an error and will not process the transaction. The error message is shown at the top of the Available Stocks page. There is a User Info button on this page. On clicking this button you are taken to the User Info page and shown the user details.

From the Available Stocks page there is a View your Portfolio link that shows all the stocks that you own. In that page, you can select the stocks and quantity to sell. This page also shows your available cash in the User Cash field. If you try to sell more stocks than you have, the application will throw an error. The error message will be shown on the same page. For each successful sale the sale amount is added to the user's cash balance.

The quantity text box shows the quantity of stocks of a particular company that you have. The Quantity to Sell field allows you to enter the quantity of stocks to sell for a specific company. For selling and buying the radio button should be checked. This be done after entering the values. If either the quantity to sell textbox is not filled or the selection box is not checked and you press on sell a JavaScript alert will be triggered saying that the required field is empty. On entering non-numeric characters for quantity another alert will be triggered. This behavior is similar for the Available Stocks page as well.

If you are a new user, you can register by clicking the Register button in the login page. In the Registration page you will enter a user id, user name, password, address and available cash.

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Application classes and JSP pages

The Online Brokerage sample application consists of the following packages:

  • com.dev.trade.bo
    • Stock- Represents the stock of a company.
    • User- Represents the user.
  • com.dev.trade.dao
    • TradeDAO - Contains all the database access methods.
  • com.dev.trade.exception
    • DBException - Custom exception class that is thrown for all database exceptions.
  • com.dev.trade.servlet
    • TradeDispatcherServlet - Dispatches all the requests to the JSPs after performing required database functions.

The Online Brokerage also includes the following JSP pages:

  • login.jsp - The login page of the application.
  • error.jsp - The default error page of the application.
  • register.jsp - The user registration page.
  • stocks.jsp - The Available Stocks page from where the user can buy stocks.
  • userstocks.jsp - The user portfolio page which shows the user's stocks. The user can sell stocks from this page.

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Tools used

The tools used for developing and building the Online Brokerage application are:

Eclipse

The Eclipse IDE was used for development of the sample application. This is a very powerful and popular open source development tool. Integration plug-ins are available for both JBoss and Geronimo. Eclipse can be downloaded from the following URL:
http://www.eclipse.org

Apache Ant

Ant is a pure Java build tool. It is used for building the war files and populating the database for the Online Brokerage application. Ant can be downloaded from the following URL:
http://ant.apache.org

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Sample database

The database used for demostrating this application is MySQL. The name of the sample database is tradedb and it consists of the following three tables, STOCKS, USERS and TRADINGACCOUNT. The fields for each of these tables are described below.

Table Name

Fields

STOCKS

ID (PRIMARY KEY)
NAME
PRICE

USERS

USERID (PRIMARY KEY)
NAME
PASSWORD
ADDRESS
CASH

TRADINGACCOUNT

USERID
STOCKID
QUANTITY

The TRADINGACCOUNT table is used to store the stocks that are owned by each user. The USERS and STOCKS tables are used to store the user and stock details. Because this is just a sample application the amount of money that a user has is entered during user registration by the user itself.

The DDL file used for populating this database is db.sql and it is located in the brokerage/sql directory.

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The JBoss environment JBoss

This section shows you how and where the sample JBoss reference environment was installed so you can map this scenario to your own implementation.

Detailed instructions for installing, configuring, and managing JBoss are provided in the product documentation. Check the product Web site for the most updated documents.

The following list highlights the general tasks you will require to complete to install and configure the initial environment as the starting point for deploying the sample application.

  1. Download and install JBoss v4 as explained in the product documentation guides. From now on the installation directory will be referred as <jboss_home>
  2. Create a copy of the default JBoss v4 application server. Copy recursively <jboss_home>\server\default to <jboss_home>\server\<your_server_name>
  3. Start the new server by running the run.sh -c <your_server_name> command from the <jboss_home>\bin directory.
  4. Once the server is started, you can verify that it is running by opening a Web browser and pointing it to this URL: http://localhost:8080. You will see the JBoss Welcome window and be able to access the JBoss console.
  5. Once the application server is up and running, the next step is to install and configure all the remaining prerequisite software required by the sample application. This step is described in the following section.

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Install and configure prerequisite software

In order to build and run the Online Brokerage application included in this article, you must install and configure the build tool and the database that is used by the application.

Install the database

As mentioned earlier in the article, this application is using the MySQL database that can be downloaded from the following URL:
http://www.mysql.com
The Installation and configuration of MySQL is fairly intuitive and it is well documented in the MySQL Reference Manual available at the following URL:

http://dev.mysql.com/doc/mysql/en

Note: During the instance configuration modified the security settings and specified password as the password for the root user. This user ID and password will later be used for accessing the database from the sample application.

Create sample database

Once the MySQL instance is configured you need to create the sample database that will be used by the Online Brokerage application. From a command line, type the following command to start the MySQL monitor:

mysql -u root -ppassword

Note that there is no blank between the flag -p and the password.

This will bring up the MySQL command interface as shown in the following example:

MySQL monitor interfacesolid Welcome to the MySQL monitor. Commands end with *;* or *\g*. Your MySQL connection id is 7 to server version: 4.1.14-nt Type *help;* or *\h* for help. Type *\c* to clear the buffer. mysql>

From the MySQL command interface create the tradedb sample database by typing the following command:

mysql> create database tradedb;

Configure Ant

As mentioned before, Apache Ant is used to build the binaries for the Online Brokerage application. If you do not have Ant installed this is a good time for doing it and make sure that <ant_home>\bin directory is added to the system's path variable.

Apache Ant can be downloaded from the following URL:

http://ant.apache.org

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Configure resources

In order to successfully build and deploy the Online Brokerage application and database, you will first configure some resources. This section describes how to configure a MySQL data source in JBoss.

Data source

The Online Brokerage application is a Web application that uses a data source to connect to the MySQL database. To use JBoss with MySQL, you must copy the MySQL driver into the JBoss server classpath. The driver, which is provided by the database vendor, is called Connector/J 3.0 and can be downloaded from the following URL:
http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/connector/j/3.1.html

After downloading and extracting the driver, copy the mysql-connector-java-3.1.14.jar file to the <jboss_home>\server\<your_server_name>\lib directory.

The data source configuration in JBoss is done through an XML configuration file. The JBoss installation contains sample configuration files for many popular databases including MySQL.

The sample data source configuration file for MySQL is mysql-ds.xml and it is located in the <jboss_home>\docs\examples\jca directory:

Copy the mysql-ds.xml file to the deploy directory of your JBoss server (<jboss_home>\server\<your_server_name>\deploy) and edit it as shown in the following example:

xmlUpdate the mysql-ds.xml filesolid <jndi-name>jdbc/TradeDB</jndi-name> <connection-url>jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/tradedb</connection-url> <driver-class>com.mysql.jdbc.Driver</driver-class> <user-name>root</user-name> <password>password</password> <exception-sorter-class-name> org.jboss.resource.adapter.jdbc.vendor.MySQLExceptionSorter </exception-sorter-class-name>

Delete all the other tags inside the <local-tx-datasource> tag and save the file. JBoss will automatically deploy the data source.

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Build the sample application

The Online Brokerage application included with this article provides an Ant script that you will use in order to build the application and populate the database. Download the Online Brokerage application from the following link:

Online Brokerage

After extracting the zip file, a brokerage directory is created. In that directory open the build.properties file and edit the properties to match your environment as shown in the following example:

Update the build.properties filesolid # Replace server.name with either jboss or geronimo depending on which server to deploy. server.name=jboss #Replace <JAVA_HOME> with your JDK home directory java.home=<JAVA_HOME> #Replace <JBOSS_HOME> with the root directory for your specific JBoss server <jboss_home>\servers\<server_name> jboss.home=<JBOSS_HOME> #Replace <GERONIMO_HOME> with the root directory for Geronimo geronimo.home=<GERONIMO_HOME> #fully qualified name of the JDBC driver class db.driver=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver #database URL db.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/tradedb #database userId db.userid=root #database password db.password=password #script files for creating the tables sql.file=sql/db.sql #location of the jdbc driver jar. driver.classpath=<jboss_home>/server/<your_server_name>/lib/mysql-connector-java-3.1.14-bin.jar

When specifying the driver.classpath in the build.properties file, make sure to use just the forward slash "/" , otherwise the build will not find the jar file.

From a command prompt or shell go to the brokerage directory and run ant. This will build the war file and place it directly in the brokerage directory. The war created by the ant build contains a JBoss specific deployment descriptor, the jboss-web.xml file in the WEB-INF directory of the WAR is shown in the following example.

xmlJBoss deployment descriptorsolid <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <jboss-web> <context-root>/brokerage</context-root> <resource-ref> <res-ref-name>jdbc/TradeDB</res-ref-name> <res-type>javax.sql.DataSource</res-type> <jndi-name>java:jdbc/TradeDB</jndi-name> </resource-ref> </jboss-web>

The resource-ref element is used to map the resource referred to by the name jdbc/TradeDB in the web.xml file to the resource with the JNDI name java:jdbc/TradeDB i.e. the MySQL datasource.

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Deploy the sample application

To deploy the Online Brokerage application in JBoss, copy the brokerage.war file you just built with Ant to the following directory:

<jboss_home>\server\<your_server_name>\deploy

If JBoss is already started, it will automatically deploy and start the application; otherwise, the application will be deployed and started at the next startup.

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Test the sample application

To test the application, open a Web browser and access the following URL:

http://localhost:8080/brokerage

This brings up the login screen of the Online Brokerage application. Enter j2ee as the user name and password as the password and click login. This takes you to the available stocks page illustrated in the following figure. The application is now configured and running.

Pro Tip

If you want to use another root password for the database, replace the occurrences of password with the required password. This has to be changed in the following three places:

  1. MySQL instance configuration.
  2. Data source configuration file.
  3. build.properties file used by the Ant build script.

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The Geronimo environment Geronimo

Download and install Geronimo from the following URL:

http://geronimo.apache.org/downloads.html

The release notes available there provide clear instructions on system requirements and how to install and start Geronimo. Throughout the rest of this article we will refer to the Geronimo installation directory as <geronimo_home>.

TCP/IP ports conflict

If you are planning to run JBoss and Geronimo on the same machine consider to change the default service ports on, at least, one of these servers.

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Configure resources

In Geronimo the JDBC resources are implemented using J2EE connectors. Therefore, you need to write a Geronimo specific deployment plan for deploying a JDBC datasource. Additionally, while doing the deployment you need to provide the deployer with the tranql-connector-ra-1.3.rar file. This RAR file contains the connection pool management logic for Geronimo.

For running the Online Brokerage application in Geronimo, you will be using the same MySQL database that was used with JBoss. So the only task you do in order to prepare the Geronimo environment is to configure the data source.

Configure the data source

The first thing you do is to copy the MySQL database driver into the Geronimo repository so that you can refer to it in the data source deployment plan.

The Geronimo repository is located at <geronimo_home>/repository. Inside this directory, create a directory called mysql/mysql-connector-java/3.1.14-bin and copy the mysql-connector-java-3.1.14-bin.jar file into it. Now, you create the data source deployment plan.

Different types of data sources

There are three types of data sources that Geronimo supports:

  • Global data source - Visible to all the applications on a Geronimo Instance.
  • Application scoped data source - Visible to a single application within which it is defined.
  • Module scoped data source - Visible to a single module within which it is defined.

For this migration exercise you will be using a Global data source. For instructions on configuring and using the other two types of data sources see the the following developerWorks article:

http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/opensource/library/os-ag-jdbc/

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Create the data source deployment plan

First, create an xml file called mysql-geronimo-plan.xml. Copy the plan shown in the following example and paste it in the xml file.

xmlData source deployment plansolid <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <connector xmlns="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/j2ee/connector-1.2"> <dep:environment xmlns:dep="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/deployment-1.1"> <dep:moduleId> <dep:groupId>user</dep:groupId> <dep:artifactId>jdbcdatasource</dep:artifactId> <dep:version>2.0</dep:version> <dep:type>car</dep:type> </dep:moduleId> <dep:dependencies> <dep:dependency> <dep:groupId>mysql</dep:groupId> <dep:artifactId>mysql-connector-java</dep:artifactId> <dep:version>3.1.14-bin</dep:version> <dep:type>jar</dep:type> </dep:dependency> </dep:dependencies> </dep:environment> <resourceadapter> <outbound-resourceadapter> <connection-definition> <connectionfactory-interface> javax.sql.DataSource </connectionfactory-interface> <connectiondefinition-instance> <name>TradeDS</name> <config-property-setting name="UserName"> root </config-property-setting> <config-property-setting name="Password"> password </config-property-setting> <config-property-setting name="Driver"> com.mysql.jdbc.Driver </config-property-setting> <config-property-setting name="ConnectionURL"> jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/tradedb </config-property-setting> <config-property-setting name="CommitBeforeAutocommit"> false </config-property-setting> <config-property-setting name="ExceptionSorterClass"> org.tranql.connector.NoExceptionsAreFatalSorter </config-property-setting> <connectionmanager> <local-transaction/> <single-pool> <max-size>10</max-size> <min-size>0</min-size> <blocking-timeout-milliseconds> 5000 </blocking-timeout-milliseconds> <idle-timeout-minutes> 30 </idle-timeout-minutes> <match-one/> </single-pool> </connectionmanager> </connectiondefinition-instance> </connection-definition> </outbound-resourceadapter> </resourceadapter> </connector>

The listing above shows the plan for deploying a J2EE connector which will provide JDBC access to the database. The root element is the <connector> element. This element has the following four attributes:

  • xmlns - specifies the XML namespace.
  • configId - specifies the name Geronimo uses to refer to the connector internally.
  • parentId - specifies the parent of this configuration.

Other important elements and attributes are:

  • connectionfactory-interface - Must be javax.sql.DataSource.
  • connectiondefinition-instance - Contains the configuration properties required to connect to the database.
  • connectionmanager - Contains the configuration settings for the geronimo connection manager.
  • config-property-setting - Specifies the value of a single configuration property of the connector.
  • name - Name of the data source.
  • local-transaction - The presence of this element enables the resource adapter to support local transactions. If the no-transaction element is present instead of local-transaction, then the resource adapter will not support transactions. If the xa-transaction element is present instead of local-transaction, then the resource adapter will support xa-transactions.
  • single-pool - Contains the connection pool configuration properties such as max-size and min-size for a single pool. If the no-pool element is present instead of single-pool, then the connections will not be pooled. If partitioned-pool element is present instead of single-pool, then there will be a number of connection pools based on the partition type.
  • max-size - Maximum number of connections allowed simultaneously.
  • min-size - Minimum size of the connection pool.
  • blocking-timeout-milliseconds - Time for which a caller will be made to wait for a connection, if all the connections in the pool are currently in use, before throwing an exception.
  • idle-timeout-minutes - Time in minutes after which a connection will timeout if it is idle.

The following table shows the configuration properties that are specified by the config-property-setting element.

Configuration Property

Meaning

Driver

Fully qualified class name of the JDBC driver.

ConnectionURL

The JDBC connection URL. This can contain parameters when supported by the driver. For example, for MySQL to use named pipes instead of TCP/IP you can attach ?socketFactory=com.mysql.jdbc.NamedPipeSocketFactory to the JDBC connection URL.

UserName

The user name needed to connect to the database.

Password

The password needed to connect to the database.

CommitBeforeAutocommit

In case the JDBC driver does not commit the pending data changes when setAutoCommit (true) is called.

ExceptionSorterClass

To provide information to the pool whether the Exceptions that occur are fatal or not.

After creating the MySQL deployment plan we need to deploy the connection pool datasource by running the deployer tool.

Start the Geronimo Instance as the deployer tool requires the server to be up and running.

From a command line change directory to <geronimo_home>/bin and run the following command:

deploy --user system --password manager deploy <brokerage_home>\plan\mysql-geronimo-plan.xml <geronimo_home>\repository\org\tranql\tranql-connector-ra\1.3\tranql-connector-ra-1.3.rar

where brokerage_home is the path of the brokerage directory.This will deploy the data source.
Now you are ready to proceed with the migration.

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Step-by-step migration migration

Geronimo does not support accessing external resources(JDBC datasources) by setting JNDI properties at runtime as shown in the following example:

solid Context ctx = null; Hashtable env = new Hashtable(); env.put(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY, "Geronimo specific factory"); env.put(Context.PROVIDER_URL, "provider URL for geronimo"); ctx = new InitialContext(env)

This is because reference resolution is done at deploy time and is based on the JSR-77 object names of the target component. In order to migrate the Online Brokerage application to Geronimo, you first replace the jboss-web.xml file with a geronimo-web.xml file which is the Geronimo-specific descriptor file.

The geronimo-web.xml file is located in the <brokerage_home>\web\descriptors\geronimo directory and looks like the following example.

xmlgeronimo-web.xmlsolid <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?> <web-app xmlns="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/j2ee/web-1.1" xmlns:naming="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/naming-1.1"> <dep:environment xmlns:dep="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/deployment-1.1"> <dep:moduleId> <dep:groupId>BrokerageApp</dep:groupId> <dep:artifactId>MySqlDS</dep:artifactId> <dep:version>2.0</dep:version> <dep:type>car</dep:type> </dep:moduleId> <dep:dependencies> <dep:dependency> <dep:groupId>user</dep:groupId> <dep:artifactId>jdbcdatasource</dep:artifactId> <dep:version>2.0</dep:version> <dep:type>car</dep:type> </dep:dependency> </dep:dependencies> </dep:environment> <context-root>/brokerage</context-root> <resource-ref> <ref-name>jdbc/TradeDB</ref-name> <resource-link>TradeDS</resource-link> </resource-ref> </web-app>

As shown in the example, the parent for this configuration is the MySQL J2EE connector. The naming:resource-ref element maps the TradeDS data source to the name jdbc/TradeDB. The context-root element gives the context-root of the application.

These are the only changes required to run this application on Geronimo.

In order to build the .war file for Geronimo, you can modify the build.properties file that is provided with the sample application to remove the jboss-web.xml and include the geronimo-web.xml. This is done by changing the server.name property to geronimo. Also you must specify the property geronimo.home in the build script.

The two values that you need to modify are:

server.name=geronimo
geronimo.home=<geronimo_home>

The build.properties is used by the build script to pick up the J2EE specs for Geronimo. If your jboss.home property is still valid, it is not required to set this property. If this property is not set and the jboss.home is also not valid then you will get compilation errors. You must set the driver.classpath to point to the new driver jar. Now from the command prompt go to the brokerage directory and run ant. This builds the war file and places it directly in the brokerage directory.

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Deploy the migrated sample application

To deploy the migrated Online Brokerage application, make sure the Geronimo server is up and running.

From a command line, change directory to <geronimo_home>\bin and type the following command:

deploy --user system --password manager deploy <brokerage_home>/brokerage.war

Once the application is deployed, open a Web browser and access the following URL:

http://localhost:8080/brokerage

Login with the same user name and password you used when testing the application from JBoss.

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Summary summary

This article has shown you how to migrate a sample application, from JBoss to the Apache Geronimo application server. You followed step-by-step instructions to build the application, deploy and run it, and then migrate it to the Geronimo environment.

The following list summarizes the major differences found during this sample application migration.

  1. In the Geronimo specific deployment descriptor the resource reference name is mapped to the name of the datasource unlike in the JBoss specific deployment descriptor where the resource name is mapped to the JNDI name of the datasource.
  2. In order to deploy a datasource in JBoss, you can just copy the configuration file to the deploy directory but in Geronimo you must use the deployer tool.
  3. At this time, Geronimo does not support accessing external resources (i.e.:JDBC datasources) by setting JNDI properties at runtime. This resources must be specified at deployment time.

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