asadmin> deploy Cart.ear
Application deployed successfully with name Cart.
Command deploy executed successfully
Deploying Applications |
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This chapter provides procedures and guidelines for deploying
applications and modules in the GlassFish Server Open Source
Editionenvironment by using the asadmin
command-line utility.
The following topics are addressed here:
Instructions for accomplishing these tasks by using the Administration Console are contained in the Administration Console online help.
Application deployment is a dynamic process, which means that deployed applications and modules become available without requiring you to restart the server instance. Dynamic deployment can be useful in production environments to bring new applications and modules online easily. If you do restart the server, all deployed components are still deployed and available.
The following topics are addressed here:
Instructions for accomplishing these tasks by using the Administration Console are contained in the Administration Console online help.
Use the deploy
subcommand in remote mode to deploy an assembled
application or module to GlassFish Server. If an error occurs during
deployment, the application or module is not deployed. If a module
within an application contains an error, the entire application is not
deployed. These failures prevent a partial deployment that could leave
the server in an inconsistent state.
By default, the deployment target is the default server instance,
server
. To deploy only to the default server instance, specify no
target. If you deploy the application or module only to the domain
target, it exists in the domain central repository, but no server
instances or clusters can reference the component unless you add
references.
You can also deploy a component to a specific stand-alone server
instance or cluster. When you deploy to server instances or clusters,
the application or module exists in the domain’s central repository and
is referenced by any clusters or server instances that you deployed to.
For a cluster, the preselected deployment target is server
.
If the component is already deployed or already exists, you can
forcefully redeploy if you set the --force
option of the deploy
subcommand to true. The redeploy
subcommand also accomplishes this.
See Example 2-10. You can see the enabled or disabled
status of an application or module by using the
show-component-status
subcommand.
For information about how the application or module name is derived, see Naming Standards.
Use the --altdd
or --runtimealtdd
options of the deploy
(and
redeploy
) subcommand to deploy an application or module using a
top-level alternate deployment descriptor. The --altdd
option
specifies a top-level alternate Java EE standard deployment descriptor.
The --runtimealtdd
option specifies a top-level alternate GlassFish
Server runtime deployment descriptor. See Example 2-3.
For more information about deployment descriptors associated with
GlassFish Server, see Deployment Descriptors and
Annotations.
You can also specify the deployment order of an application by using the
--deploymentorder
option of the deploy
(and redeploy
) subcommand.
This is useful for applications that must be loaded in a certain order
at server startup. Applications with lower deployment order numbers are
loaded first. See Example 2-4. If a deployment order is
not specified at the time an application is deployed, the default
deployment order of 100 is assigned. If two applications have the same
deployment order, the application that was deployed first is loaded
first at server startup.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
List deployed applications by using the
list-applications
subcommand.
Deploy the application or module by using the
deploy
subcommand.
Information about the options and properties of the subcommand is
included in this help page.
If needed, fix issues and rerun the deploy
subcommand.
Example 2-1 Deploying an Enterprise Application
This example deploys newApp.ear
to the default server, server
.
asadmin> deploy Cart.ear
Application deployed successfully with name Cart.
Command deploy executed successfully
Example 2-2 Deploying a Connector Module
This example deploys a connector module that is packaged in an RAR file.
asadmin> deploy jdbcra.rar
Application deployed successfully with name jdbcra.
Command deploy executed successfully
Example 2-3 Using an Alternate Java EE Standard Deployment Descriptor
This example deploys an application using an alternate Java EE standard deployment descriptor file that resides outside of an application archive. Specify an absolute path or a relative path to the alternate deployment descriptor file.
asadmin> deploy --altdd path_to_alternate_descriptor cart.ear
Application deployed successfully with name cart.
Command deploy executed successfully
Example 2-4 Specifying the Deployment Order of an Application
This example specifies the deployment order of two applications. The
cart
application is loaded before the horse
application at server
startup.
Some lines of output are omitted from this example for readability.
asadmin> deploy --deploymentorder 102 --name cart cart.war
...
asadmin> deploy --deploymentorder 110 --name horse horse.war
...
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help deploy
at the command line.
After deployment, the deployed application or module exists in the
central repository and can be referenced by the server instances or
clusters that you deployed to as targets. The
asadmin create-application-ref
and asadmin delete-application-ref
subcommands enable you to add or delete targets for a deployed
component. Because the application or module itself is stored in the
central repository, adding or deleting targets adds or deletes the same
version of the component on different targets.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Add and remove targets by using the
create-application-ref
and
delete-application-ref
subcommands.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing`asadmin help create-application-ref` or
asadmin help delete-application-ref
at the command line.
There are a number of commands that can be used to list deployed applications or modules and their subcomponents. Use the commands in this section in remote mode.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
List the desired applications by using the
list-applications
subcommand or the
list-sub-components
subcommand.
Information about these commands is included in these help pages.
Show the status of a deployed component by using the
show-component-status
subcommand.
Example 2-5 Listing Applications
The list-applications
subcommand lists all deployed Java EE
applications or modules. If the --type
option is not specified, all
components are listed. This example lists deployed applications.
asadmin> list-applications --type web
hellojsp <web>
Command list-applications executed successfully
Example 2-6 Listing Subcomponents
The list-sub-components
subcommand lists EJBs or servlets in a
deployed module or in a module of the deployed application. If a module
is not identified, all modules are listed. The --appname
option
functions only when the given module is standalone. To display a
specific module in an application, you must specify the module name and
the --appname
option. This example gets the subcomponents of module
mejb.jar
within application MEjbApp
.
asadmin> list-sub-components --appname MEjbApp mejb.jar
MEJBBean <StatelessSessionBean>
Command list-sub-components executed successfully
Example 2-7 Showing Status of a Deployed Component
The show-component-status
subcommand gets the status (enabled or
disabled) of the deployed component. This example gets the status of the
MEjbApp
component.
asadmin show-component-status MEjbApp
Status of MEjbApp is enabled
Command show-component-status executed successfully
Use the redeploy
subcommand in remote mode to overwrite a
previously-deployed application or module. You can also accomplish this
task by using the --force
option of the deploy
subcommand. Whenever
a redeployment is done, the HTTP and SFSB sessions in transit at that
time, and the EJB timers, become invalid unless you use the
--keepstate=true
option of the redeploy
subcommand.
Before You Begin
You must remove a preconfigured resource before it can be updated.
Example 2-8 Retaining HTTP Session State During Redeployment
This example redeploys the hello
web application. In a production
environment, you usually want to retain sessions. If you use the
--keepstate
option, active sessions of the application are retained
and restored when redeployment is complete.
asadmin> redeploy --name hello --keepstate=true hello.war
Application deployed successfully with name hello.
Command redeploy executed successfully.
Keep State is a checkbox option when you redeploy using the Administration Console. For instructions, see the Administration Console online help.
Example 2-9 Redeploying a Web Application That Was Deployed From a Directory
This example redeploys the hello
web application, which was originally
deployed from the hellodir
directory.
asadmin>redeploy --name hellodir
Application deployed successfully with name hellodir.
Command redeploy executed successfully.
Example 2-10 Redeploying an Application by Using asadmin deploy
--force
The --force
option is set to false
by default. This example
redeploys newApp.ear
even if has been deployed or already exists.
asadmin> deploy --force=true newApp.ear
Application deployed successfully with name newApp.
Command deploy executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help redeploy
at the command line.
Use the disable
subcommand in remote mode to immediately deactivate a
deployed application or module without removing it from the server.
Disabling a component makes the component inaccessible to clients.
However, the component is not overwritten or uninstalled, and can be
enabled by using the asadmin enable
subcommand.
An application or module is enabled by default.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Obtain the exact name of the application or module that you are
disabling.
To list deployed applications or modules, use the
list-applications
subcommand. If you do not specify
a type, all deployed applications and modules are listed. For example,
valid types can be web
, ejb
, connector
, application
, and
webservice
.
To see the status of deployed components, use the
show-component-status
subcommand.
Deactivate the application or module by using the
disable
subcommand.
Information about the options and properties of the subcommand is
included in this help page.
Example 2-11 Listing Deployed Web Applications
This example lists all deployed web applications.
asadmin> list-applications --type web
hellojsp <web>
Command list-applications executed successfully.
Example 2-12 Disabling a Web Application
This example disables the hellojsp
application.
asadmin> disable hellojsp
Command disable executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help disable
at the command line.
An enabled application or module is runnable and can be accessed by
clients if it has been deployed to an accessible server instance or
cluster. An application or module is enabled by default. Use the
enable
subcommand in remote mode to enable an application or module
that has been disabled.
An application or module that is deployed to more than one target can be enabled on one target and disabled on another. If a component is referenced by a target, it is not available to users unless it is enabled on that target.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Enable the application or module by using the
enable
subcommand.
If the component has not been deployed, an error message is displayed.
If the component is already enabled, it is re-enabled. To see the status
of deployed components, use the
show-component-status
subcommand.
Information about the options and properties of the subcommand is
included in this help page.
Example 2-13 Enabling an Application
This example enables the sampleApp
application.
asadmin> enable sampleApp
Command enable executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help enable
at the command line.
Use the undeploy
subcommand in remote mode to uninstall a deployed
application or module and remove it from the repository. To reinstate
the component, you must deploy the component again using the deploy
subcommand.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Obtain the exact name of the application or module you are
undeploying.
To list deployed applications or modules, use the
list-applications
subcommand. If you do not specify
a type, all deployed applications and modules are listed. For example,
valid types can be web
, ejb
, connector
, application
, and
webservice
.
To see the status of deployed components, use the
show-component-status
subcommand.
Undeploy the application or module by using the
undeploy
subcommand.
Information about the options and properties of the subcommand is
included in this help page.
Example 2-14 Listing Deployed Applications or Modules
This example lists all applications of type web
.
asadmin> list-applications --type web
hellojsp <web>
Command list-applications executed successfully.
Example 2-15 Undeploying an Application
This example uninstalls the hellojsp
application.
asadmin> undeploy hellojsp
hellojsp <web>
Command undeploy executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help undeploy
at the command line.
Dynamic reloading enables you to change the code or deployment
descriptors of an application or module without needing to perform an
explicit redeployment. Instead, you can copy the changed class files or
descriptors into the deployment directory for the application or module.
The server checks for changes periodically and automatically redeploys
the changes if the timestamp of the .reload
file in the root directory
for the application or module has changed.
Dynamic reloading is enabled by default, and is available only on the default server instance.
Go to the root directory of the deployed application or module.
For an application:
domain-dir/applications/app-name
For an individually deployed module:
domain-dir/applications/module-name
Note
|
Deployment directories might change between GlassFish Server releases. |
Create or update the timestamp of the .reload
file to load the
changes.
For UNIX: touch .reload
For Windows: echo> .reload
If the .reload
file doesn’t exist, the touch
or echo
command
creates it.
Note
|
This task is best suited for use in a development environment. |
Automatic deployment involves copying an archive file into a special autodeploy directory where the archive is automatically deployed by GlassFish Server at predefined intervals. This method is useful in a development environment because it allows new code to be tested quickly. Automatic deployment is enabled by default, and is available only on the default server instance.
Use the set
subcommand to adjust the
autodeployment interval.
This sets the interval at which applications and modules are checked for
code changes and dynamically reloaded. The default is 2
.
Use the set
subcommand to enable JSP
precompilation.
Copy your archive file to the autodeploy directory.
The default location is domain-dir`/autodeploy`. The application will be
deployed at the next interval.
To undeploy an automatically deployed application or module, remove its
archive file from the autodeploy directory.
Note
|
Deployment directories might change between GlassFish Server releases. |
Example 2-16 Setting the Autodeployment Interval
This example sets the autodeployment inverval to 3 seconds (default is 2).
asadmin> set server.admin-service.das-config.autodeploy-polling-interval-in-seconds=3
Command set executed successfully.
Example 2-17 Setting JSP Precompilation
This example enables JSP precompilation (default is false).
asadmin>
set server.admin-service.das-config.autodeploy-jsp-precompilation-enabled=true
Command set executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin set --help
at the command line.
In the deployment plan for an EAR file, the glassfish-application.xml
file is located at the root. The deployment descriptor for each module
is stored according to this syntax: module-name.gf-dd-name, where the
gf-dd-name depends on the module type. If a module named MyModule
contains a CMP mappings file, the file is named
MyModule.sun-cmp-mappings.xml
. A .dbschema
file is stored at the
root level. Each /
(forward slash) is replaced by a #
(pound sign).
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Deploy the application or module by using the
deploy
subcommand with the --deploymentplan
option.
Note
|
Deployment directories might change between GlassFish Server releases. |
Example 2-18 Deploying by Using a Deployment Plan
This example deploys the application in the myrostapp.ear
file
according to the plan specified by the mydeployplan.jar
file.
asadmin>deploy --deploymentplan mydeployplan.jar myrostapp.ear
Application deployed successfully with name myrostapp.
Command deploy executed successfully.
Example 2-19 Deployment Plan Structure for an Enterprise Application
This listing shows the structure of the deployment plan JAR file for an EAR file.
$ jar -tvf mydeployplan.jar
420 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 glassfish-application.xml
370 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 RosterClient.war.glassfish-web.xml
418 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 roster-ac.jar.glassfish-application-client.xml
1281 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 roster-ejb.jar.glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
2317 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 team-ejb.jar.glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
3432 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 team-ejb.jar.sun-cmp-mappings.xml
84805 Thu Mar 13 15:37:48 PST 2003 team-ejb.jar.RosterSchema.dbschema
Example 2-20 Deployment Plan Structure for an EJB Module
In the deployment plan for an EJB module, the deployment descriptor that
is specific to GlassFish Server is at the root level. If a standalone
EJB module contains a CMP bean, the deployment plan includes the
sun-cmp-mappings.xml
and .dbschema
files at the root level. In the
following listing, the deployment plan describes a CMP bean:
$ jar r -tvf myotherplan.jar
3603 Thu Mar 13 15:24:20 PST 2003 glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
3432 Thu Mar 13 15:24:20 PST 2003 sun-cmp-mappings.xml
84805 Thu Mar 13 15:24:20 PST 2003 RosterSchema.dbschema
See Also
The deployment plan is part of the implementation of JSR 88. For more
information about JSR 88, see JSR 88 Naming and
the JSR 88 page at http://jcp.org/en/jsr/detail?id=88
.
Note
|
This task is best suited for use in a development environment. |
An expanded directory, also known as an exploded directory, contains an
unassembled (unpackaged) application or module. To deploy a directory
format instead of an archive, file, use the asadmin deploy
subcommand
in remote mode and specify a path to a directory instead of to an
archive file. The contents of the directory must be the same as the
contents of a corresponding archive file, with one exception. An
application archive file contains archive files for its modules, for
example myUI.war
and myEJB.jar
. The expanded application directory
contains expanded directories for the modules, for example myUI_war
and myEJB_jar
, instead. .
You can change deployment descriptor files directly in the expanded directory.
If your environment is configured to use dynamic reloading, you can also dynamically reload applications or modules that are deployed from the directory. For instructions, see To Reload Changes to Applications or Modules Dynamically.
Unlike archive file deployment, directory deployment does not copy the directory contents to the remote hosts. This means that for deployment to a cluster, the directory path may exist for both the DAS and the remote server instances but may not actually correspond to the same physical location. If any target server instance cannot see the deployed directory, or finds that it contains different files from those detected by the DAS, deployment fails.
Integrated development environments (IDEs) typically use directory deployment, so you do not need to deal directly with the expanded format.
Before You Begin
On each cluster or stand-alone server instance to which the application or module is deployed, the directory must be accessible and must contain the same files as found by the DAS.
On Windows, if you are deploying a directory on a mapped drive, you must be running GlassFish Server as the same user to which the mapped drive is assigned. This enables GlassFish Server to access the directory.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Verify that the expanded directory contents match the archive file.
For information about the required directory contents, see the
appropriate specifications.
Deploy the directory by using the deploy
subcommand and specifying the path to the expanded directory.
Note
|
Deployment directories might change between GlassFish Server releases. |
Example 2-21 Deploying an Application From a Directory
This example deploys the expanded directory /apps/MyApp
for the
hello
application.
asadmin> deploy --name hello /apps/MyApp
Application deployed successfully with name hello.
Command deploy executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help deploy
at the command line.
You can modify the configuration of a web application or a module by modifying the deployment descriptors and then repackaging and redeploying the application.
The instructions in this section enable you to change the configuration of a deployed application without the need to modify the application’s deployment descriptors and repackage and redeploy the application. If the application or module entry is unset, its value reverts to the value, if any, that is set in the application’s deployment descriptor.
The following topics are addressed here:
Use the set-web-context-param
subcommand in remote mode to change the
configuration of a deployed application without the need to modify the
application’s deployment descriptors and repackage and redeploy the
application. By using this subcommand, you are either adding a new
parameter that did not appear in the original web module’s descriptor,
or overriding the descriptor’s setting of the parameter.
If the --ignoreDescriptorItem
option is set to true
, then the server
ignores any setting for that context parameter in the descriptor, which
means you do not need to specify an overriding value on the
set-web-context-param
subcommand. The server behaves as if the
descriptor had never contained a setting for that context parameter.
This subcommand sets a servlet context-initialization parameter of one of the following items:
A deployed web application
A web module in a deployed Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) application
Before You Begin
The application must already be deployed. Otherwise, an error occurs.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Set a servlet context-initialization parameter by using the
set-web-context-param
subcommand.
Information about the options for the subcommand is included in this
help page.
Example 2-22 Setting a Servlet Context-Initialization Parameter for a Web Application
This example sets the servlet context-initialization parameter
javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD of the web application basic-ezcomp
to
client.
asadmin> set-web-context-param --name=javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD
--description="The location where the application?s state is preserved"
--value=client basic-ezcomp
Command set-web-context-param executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help set-web-context-param
at the command line.
Use the unset-web-context-param
subcommand in remote mode to unset an
environment entry for a deployed web application or module that has been
set by using the set-web-env-entry
subcommand. There is no need to
modify the application’s deployment descriptors and repackage and
redeploy the application.
This subcommand unsets an environment entry for one of the following items:
A deployed web application
A web module in a deployed Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) application
When an entry is unset, its value reverts to the value, if any, that is
set in the application’s deployment descriptor. This subcommand cannot
be used to change the value of an environment entry that is set in an
application’s deployment descriptor. Instead, use the
set-web-context-param
subcommand for this purpose.
Before You Begin
The application must already be deployed, and the entry must have
previously been set by using the set-web-env-entry
subcommand.
Otherwise, an error occurs.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Unset an environment entry by using the
unset-web-context-param
subcommand.
Information about the options for the subcommand is included in this
help page.
Example 2-23 Unsetting a Servlet Context-Initialization Parameter for a Web Application
This example unsets the servlet context-initialization parameter
javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD of the web application basic-ezcomp
.
asadmin> unset-web-context-param
--name=javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD basic-ezcomp
Command unset-web-context-param executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help unset-web-context-param
at the command line.
Use the list-web-context-param
subcommand in remote mode to list the
parameters that have previously been set by using the
set-web-context-param
subcommand. The subcommand
does not list parameters that are set only in the application’s
deployment descriptor. For each parameter, the following information is
displayed:
The name of the parameter
The value to which the parameter is set
The value of the --ignoreDescriptorItem
option of the
set-web-context-param
subcommand that was specified when the parameter
was set
The description of the parameter or null
if no description was
specified when the parameter was set
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
List servlet context-initialization parameters by using the
list-web-context-param
subcommand.
Example 2-24 Listing Servlet Context-Initialization Parameters for a Web Application
This example lists all servlet context-initialization parameters of the
web application basic-ezcomp
that have been set by using the
set-web-context-param
subcommand. Because no description was specified
when the javax.faces.PROJECT_STAGE parameter was set, null is displayed
instead of a description for this parameter.
asadmin> list-web-context-param basic-ezcomp
javax.faces.STATE_SAVING_METHOD = client ignoreDescriptorItem=false
//The location where the application's state is preserved
javax.faces.PROJECT_STAGE = null ignoreDescriptorItem=true //null
Command list-web-context-param executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help list-web-context-param
at the command line.
An application uses the values of environment entries to customize its
behavior or presentation. Use the set-web-env-entry
subcommand in
remote mode to change the configuration of a deployed application
without the need to modify the application’s deployment descriptors and
repackage and redeploy the application. By using this subcommand, you
are either adding a new parameter that did not appear in the original
web module’s descriptor, or overriding the descriptor’s setting of the
parameter.
If you the --ignoreDescriptorItem
option is set to true
, then the
server ignores any setting for that environment entry in the descriptor,
which means you do not need to specify an overriding value on the
set-web-env-entry
subcommand. The server behaves as if the descriptor
had never contained a setting for that environment entry.
This subcommand sets an environment entry for one of the following items:
A deployed web application
A web module in a deployed Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) application
Before You Begin
The application must already be deployed. Otherwise, an error occurs.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Set an environment entry for a deployed web application or module by
using the set-web-env-entry
subcommand.
Information about the options for the subcommand is included in this
help page.
Example 2-25 Setting an Environment Entry for a Web Application
This example sets the environment entry Hello User
of the application
hello to techscribe
. The Java type of this entry is
java.lang.String
.
asadmin> set-web-env-entry --name="Hello User"
--type=java.lang.String --value=techscribe
--description="User authentication for Hello appplication" hello
Command set-web-env-entry executed successfully
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help set-web-env-entry
at the command line.
Use the unset-web-env-entry
subcommand in remote mode to unset an
environment entry for a deployed web application or module.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Unset a web environment entry by using the
unset-web-env-entry
subcommand.
Information about the options for the subcommand is included in this
help page.
Example 2-26 Unsetting an Environment Entry for a Web Application
This example unsets the environment entry Hello User
of the web
application hello
.
asadmin> unset-web-env-entry --name="Hello User" hello
Command unset-web-env-entry executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help unset-web-env-entry
at the command line.
Use the list-web-env-entry
subcommand to list environment entries for
a deployed web application or module. For each entry, the following
information is displayed:
The name of the entry
The Java type of the entry
The value to which the entry is set
The description of the entry or null if no description was specified when the entry was set
The value of the --ignoreDescriptorItem
option of the
set-web-env-entry
subcommand that was specified when the entry was set
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
List the environment entries by using
theolist-web-env-entry
subcommand.
Example 2-27 Listing Environment Entries for a Web Application
This example lists all environment entries that have been set for the
web application hello
by using the set-web-env-entry
subcommand.
asadmin> list-web-env-entry hello
Hello User (java.lang.String) = techscribe ignoreDescriptorItem=false
//User authentication for Hello appplication
Hello Port (java.lang.Integer) = null ignoreDescriptorItem=true //null
Command list-web-env-entry executed successfully.
See Also
You can also view the full syntax and options of the subcommand by
typing asadmin help list-web-env-entry
at the command line.
The following guidelines apply to deploying a web module in GlassFish Server:
Context Root. When you deploy a web module, if you do not specify a
context root, the default is the name of the WAR file without the .war
extension. The web module context root must be unique within the server
instance.
The domain administration server (DAS) in GlassFish Server versions
2.1.1 and later supports the deployment of multiple web applications
using the same web context root as long as those applications are
deployed to different GlassFish Server stand-alone instances. Deploying
multiple applications using the same context root within a single
instance produces an error.
Data Source. If a web application accesses a DataSource
that is not
specified in a resource-ref
in glassfish-web.xml
, or there is no
glassfish-web.xml
file, the resource-ref-name
defined in web.xml
is used. A warning message is logged, recording the JNDI name that was
used to look up the resource.
Virtual Servers. If you deploy a web application and do not specify
any assigned virtual servers, the web application is assigned to all
currently-defined virtual servers with the exception of the virtual
server with ID __asadmin
, which is reserved for administrative
purposes. If you then create additional virtual servers and want to
assign existing web applications to them, you must redeploy the web
applications.
HTTP Sessions. If a web application is undeployed, all its HTTP
sessions will be invalidated and removed, unless the application is
being undeployed as part of a redeployment and the --keepstate
deployment option was set to true. This option is not supported and
ignored in a clustered environment. See Example 2-8.
For information about HTTP session persistence, see the
GlassFish Server Open Source Edition High Availability
Administration Guide.
Load Balancing. See the GlassFish Server Open Source Edition High Availability Administration Guide for information about load balancing.
JSP Precompilation. You can precompile JSP files during deployment by
checking the appropriate box in the Administration Console, or by using
the --precompilejsp
option of the deploy
subcommand.
You can keep the generated source for JSP files by adding the
keepgenerated
flag to the jsp-config
element in glassfish-web.xml
.
For example:
<glassfish-web-app> ... <jsp-config> <property name=keepgenerated value=true /> </jsp-config> </glassfish-web-app>
If you include this property when you deploy the WAR file, the generated
source is kept in domain-dir`/generated/jsp/app-name
/module-name for
an application, or domain-dir
/generated/jsp/module-name for an
individually-deployed web module. +
For more information about JSP precompilation, see
link:dd-elements.html#beatx[`jsp-config
].
* Web Context Parameters. You can set web context parameters after
deployment. See the following sections:
To List Web Context Parameters
Web Environment Entries. You can set web environment entries after deployment. See the following sections:
Note
|
The GlassFish Server Web Profile supports the EJB 3.1 Lite specification, which allows enterprise beans within web applications, among other features. The GlassFish Server Full Platform Profile supports the entire EJB 3.1 specification. For details, see JSR 318 |
The following guidelines apply to deploying an EJB module in GlassFish Server:
JNDI Name. — If no JNDI name for the EJB JAR module is specified in
the jndi-name
element immediately under the ejb
element in
glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
, or there is no glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
file, a
default, non-clashing JNDI name is derived. A warning message is logged,
recording the JNDI name used to look up the EJB JAR module.
Because the EJB 3.1 specification defines portable EJB JNDI names, there
is less need for GlassFish Server specific JNDI names. By default,
GlassFish Server specific default JNDI names are applied automatically
for backward compatibility. To disable GlassFish Server specific JNDI
names for an EJB module, set the value of the
<disable-nonportable-jndi-names>
element in the
glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
file to true
. The default is false
.
Stateful Session Bean and Timer State. — Use the --keepstate
option
of the redeploy
subcommand or the <keepstate>
element in the glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
file to retain stateful session
bean instances and persistently created EJB timers across redeployments.
The --keepstate
option of the redeploy
subcommand takes precedence.
The default for both is false
. This option is not supported and
ignored in a clustered environment.
Some changes to an application between redeployments can prevent this
feature from working properly. For example, do not change the set of
instance variables in the SFSB bean class. Other examples would be
changes to EJB names, or adding or removing EJBs to or from an
application.
EJB Singletons. — EJB Singletons are created for each server instance in a cluster, and not once per cluster.
Stubs and Ties. — Use the get-client-stubs
subcommand in remote mode to retrieve stubs and ties.
Compatibility of JAR Visibility Requirements. — Use the
compatibility
element of the glassfish-application.xml
or
glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
file to specify the GlassFish Server release
with which to be backward compatible in terms of JAR visibility
requirements for applications. The current allowed value is v2
, which
refers to GlassFish Server version 2 or GlassFish Server version 9.1 or
9.1.1. Starting in Java EE 6, the Java EE specification imposes stricter
requirements than Java EE 5 did on which JAR files can be visible to
various modules within an EAR file. Setting this element to v2
removes
these Java EE 6 and later restrictions.
Deploying a stand-alone connector module allows multiple deployed Java EE applications to share the connector module. A resource adapter configuration is automatically created for the connector module.
The following topics are addressed here:
As an alternative to Step 3 through Step 6,
you can define application-scoped resources in the
glassfish-resources.xml
deployment descriptor. For more information,
see Application-Scoped Resources.
Ensure that the server is running.
Remote commands require a running server.
Deploy the connector module by using the deploy
subcommand.
Configure connector connection pools for the deployed connector module.
Use the create-connector-connection-pool
subcommand. For procedures,
see "To Create a Connector Connection Pool" in
GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Administration Guide.
Configure connector resources for the connector connection pools.
Use the create-resource-adapter-config
subcommand. For procedures, see
"To Create Configuration Information for a Resource
Adapter" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Administration Guide.
If needed, you can override the default configuration properties of a
resource adapter.
This step associates a connector resource with a JNDI name.
Configure a resource adapter.
Use the create-resource-adapter-config
subcommand. For procedures, see
"To Create Configuration Information for a Resource
Adapter" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Administration Guide.
If needed, you can override the default configuration properties of a
resource adapter.
If needed, create an administered object for an inbound resource
adapter.
Use the create-admin-object
subcommand. For procedures, see
"To Create an Administered Object" in GlassFish Server
Open Source Edition Administration Guide.
Redeployment of a connector module maintains all connector connection pools, connector resources, and administered objects defined for the previously deployed connector module. You do not need to reconfigure any of these resources.
However, you should redeploy any dependent modules. A dependent module uses or refers to a connector resource of the redeployed connector module. Redeployment of a connector module results in the shared class loader reloading the new classes. Other modules that refer to the old resource adapter classes must be redeployed to gain access to the new classes. For more information about class loaders, see "Class Loaders" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Application Development Guide.
During connector module redeployment, the server log provides a warning indicating that all dependent applications should be redeployed. Client applications or application components using the connector module’s resources may throw class cast exceptions if dependent applications are not redeployed after connector module redeployment.
To disable automatic redeployment, set the --force
option to false
.
In this case, if the connector module has already been deployed,
GlassFish Server provides an error message.
A connector module can be deployed as a Java EE component in a Java EE application. Such connectors are only visible to components residing in the same Java EE application. Deploy this application as you would any other Java EE application.
You can create new connector connection pools and connector resources
for a connector module embedded within a Java EE application by
prefixing the connector name with app-name`#. For example, if an
application `appX.ear
has jdbcra.rar
embedded within it, the
connector connection pools and connector resources refer to the
connector module as appX#jdbcra
.
An embedded connector module cannot be undeployed using the name app-name`#`connector-name. To undeploy the connector module, you must undeploy the application in which it is embedded.
The association between the physical JNDI name for the connector module
in GlassFish Server and the logical JNDI name used in the application
component is specified in the GlassFish Server-specific XML descriptor
glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
.
Deployment is necessary for application clients that communicate with EJB components or that use Java Web Start launch support. Java Web Start is supported for application clients and for applications that contain application clients. By default, Java Web Start is enabled in application clients and in GlassFish Server.
Note
|
The Application Client Container is supported only in the GlassFish Server Full Platform Profile, not in the Web Profile. |
The following topics are addressed here:
Assemble the necessary client components.
The client JAR file is created.
Assemble the EJB components that are to be accessed by the client.
The EJB JAR file is created.
Assemble the client and EJB JAR files together in an EAR.
An EAR file contains all the components of the application.
Deploy the application.
Instructions are contained in To Deploy an Application or
Module.
If you are using the appclient
script to run the application
client, retrieve the client files.
The client artifacts contain the ties and necessary classes for the
application client. In this release of GlassFish Server, the client
artifacts include multiple files. You can use either the
get-client-stubs
subcommand or the --retrieve
option of the deploy
subcommand, but you do not need to use both.
Use the deploy
subcommand with the --retrieve
option to retrieve the client files as part of deploying the
application.
Use the get-client-stubs
subcommand to retrieve
client files for a previously-deployed application.
Test the client on the GlassFish Server machine in one of the following ways:
If Java Web Start is enabled for the application client, use the Launch link on the Application Client Modules.
Run an application client by using the appclient
script.
The appclient
script is located in the as-install`/bin` directory.
If you are using the default server instance, the only required option
is -client
, which points to the client JAR file. For example:
appclient -client converterClient.jar
The -xml parameter, which specifies the location of the sun-acc.xml
file, is also required if you are not using the default instance.
See Also
For more detailed information about the appclient
script, see
appclient
(1M).
For more detailed information about creating application clients, see "Developing Java Clients" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Application Development Guide. This chapter includes information on the following topics:
Accessing EJB components and JMS resources from application clients
Connecting to a remote EJB module through a firewall
Using Java Web Start and creating a custom JNLP file
Using libraries with application clients
Specifying a splash screen, login retries, and other customizations
If Java Web Start is enabled, the default URL format for an application
is http://`host:port
/`context-root. For example:
http://localhost:80/myapp
The default URL format for a standalone application client module is
http://`host:port
/`module-id. For example:
http://localhost:80/myclient
To set a different URL for an application client, set the context-root
subelement of the java-web-start-access
element in the glassfish-application-client.xml
file.
If the context-root or module-id is not specified during deployment, the
name of the EAR or JAR file without the .ear
or .jar
extension is
used. For an application, the relative path to the application client
JAR file is also included. If the application or module is not in EAR or
JAR file format, a context-root or module-id is generated. Regardless of
how the context-root or module-id is determined, it is written to the
server log. For details about naming, see Naming
Standards.
Before You Begin
This task applies if you want to use the appclient
script to run the
application client on a system other than where the server runs.
Create the application client package JAR file.
Use the package-appclient
script in the as-install`/bin` directory.
This JAR file is created in the as-install`/lib/appclient` directory.
Copy the application client package JAR file to the client machine.
Extract the contents of the JAR file.
For example: jar xf
filename`.jar`
Configure the sun-acc.xml
file.
If you used the package-appclient
script, this file is located in the
appclient/appserv/lib/appclient
directory by default.
Configure the asenv.conf
(asenv.bat
on Windows) file.
This file is located in appclient/appserv/bin
by default if you used
the package-appclient
script.
Copy the client JAR file to the client machine.
You are now ready to run the client.
See Also
For more detailed information about Java Web Start and the
package-appclient
script, see appclient
(1M).
After application clients are downloaded, they remain on the client until they are manually removed. Use the Java Web Start control panel to discard downloaded application clients that used Java Web Start.
If you undeploy an application client, you can no longer use Java Web Start, or any other mechanism, to download that application client because it might be in an inconsistent state. If you try to launch an application client that was previously downloaded (even though the server side of the application client is no longer present), the results are unpredictable unless the application client has been written to tolerate such situations.
You can write your application client so that it detects failures in
contacting server-side components, but continues running. In this case,
Java Web Start can run an undeployed application client while the client
is cached locally. For example, your application client can be written
to detect and then recover from javax.naming.NamingException
when
locating a resource, or from java.rmi.RemoteException
when referring
to a previously-located resource that becomes inaccessible.
A lifecycle module, also called a lifecycle listener module, provides a means of running long or short Java-based tasks within the GlassFish Server environment, such as instantiation of singletons or RMI servers. Lifecycle modules are automatically initiated at server startup and are notified at various phases of the server life cycle. All lifecycle module interfaces are in the as-install`/modules/glassfish-api.jar` file.
For general information about lifecycle modules, see "Developing Lifecycle Listeners" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Application Development Guide.
You can deploy a lifecycle module using the create-lifecycle-module
subcommand. Do not use asadmin deploy
or related commands.
You do not need to specify a classpath for the lifecycle module if you
place it in the domain-dir`/lib` or domain-dir`/lib/classes` directory
for the Domain Administration Server (DAS). Do not place it in the lib
directory for a particular server instance, or it will be deleted when
that instance synchronizes with the GlassFish Server.
After you deploy a lifecycle module, you must restart the server. During server initialization, the server instantiates the module and registers it as a lifecycle event listener.
Note
|
If the |
Note
|
If you installed the Web Profile, web services are not supported unless
the optional Metro Web Services Stack add-on component is downloaded.
Without the Metro add-on component, a servlet or EJB component cannot be
a web service endpoint, and the |
The following guidelines apply when deploying a web service in GlassFish Server:
Web Service Endpoint. Deploy a web service endpoint to GlassFish
Server as you would any servlet or stateless session bean. If the
deployed application or module has a web service endpoint, the endpoint
is detected automatically during deployment. The GlassFish Server
-specific deployment descriptor files, glassfish-web.xml
and
glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
, provide optional web service enhancements in
their webservice-endpoint
and
webservice-description
elements.
Web Service Management. Web service management is fully supported in the Administration Console. After the application or module is deployed, click the Web Service component. The table in the right frame lists deployed web service endpoints.
For more information about web services, see "Developing Web Services" in GlassFish Server Open Source Edition Application Development Guide.
To deploy an OSGi bundle using the Administration Console, select Other from the Type drop-down list and check the OSGI Type checkbox.
To deploy an OSGi bundle using the asadmin deploy
command, set the
--type
option to the value osgi
. For example:
asadmin> deploy --type=osgi MyBundle.jar
To automatically deploy an OSGi bundle, copy the bundle archive to the domain-dir`/autodeploy/bundles` directory.
Note
|
For components packaged as OSGi bundles ( |
In this GlassFish Server release, reconfiguration of a JDBC connection pool due to attribute or property changes can be transparent to the applications or modules that use the pool, even if pool reconfiguration results in pool recreation. You do not need to redeploy the application or module.
To enable transparent pool reconfiguration, set the
dynamic-reconfiguration-wait-timeout-in-seconds
property. This
property specifies the timeout for dynamic reconfiguration of the pool.
In-progress connection requests must complete before this timeout
expires or they must be retried. New connection requests wait for this
timeout to expire before acquiring connections to the reconfigured pool.
If this property exists and has a positive value, it is enabled.
You can set this property in the glassfish-resources.xml
file. For
more information, see the property descriptions under
jdbc-connection-pool
.
For JDBC connection pools that are not application-scoped, use the set
subcommand to set this property. For example, to configure mypool
on
myserver
, type the following all on one line:
asadmin> set myserver.resources.jdbc-connection-pool.mypool.property.
dynamic-reconfiguration-wait-timeout-in-seconds=30
You can define an application-scoped JDBC resource or other resource for an enterprise application, web module, EJB module, connector module, or application client module. This allows single-step deployment for resource-dependent modules and applications. An application-scoped resource has the following characteristics:
It is available only to the module or application that defines it.
It cannot be referenced or looked up by other modules or applications.
It is created during deployment, destroyed during undeployment, and recreated during redeployment.
It is free from unexpected resource starvation or delay in acquiring connections because no other application or module competes for accesses to it.
The following resource types can be application-scoped:
JDBC connection pools
JDBC resources
Connector connection pools
Connector resources
Resource adapters
External JNDI resources
Custom resources
Admin object resources
JavaMail resources
Deployment Descriptor. An application-scoped resource is defined in the
glassfish-resources.xml
deployment descriptor file. This file is
placed in the META-INF
directory of the module or application archive.
For web applications or modules, this file is placed in the WEB-INF
directory. If any submodule archives of an enterprise application
archive have their own glassfish-resources.xml
files, the resource
definitions are scoped to those modules only. For more information about
the glassfish-resources.xml
file, see
GlassFish Server Deployment Descriptor Files
and Elements of the GlassFish Server
Deployment Descriptors.
Naming. Application-scoped resource JNDI names begin with java:app
or
java:module
. If one of these prefixes is not specified in the JNDI
name, it is added. For example, application-scoped databases have JNDI
names in the following format: `java:app/jdbc/`DataSourceName or
`java:module/jdbc/`DataSourceName. This is in accordance with the naming
scopes introduced in the Java EE 6 Specification.
Errors. Application-scoped resource definitions with same resource name,
resource type, attributes, and properties are duplicates. These generate
WARNING
level log messages and deployment continues. Definitions with
the same resource name and type but different attributes or properties
are conflicts and cause deployment failure. When an application or
module tries to look up a scoped resource that does not belong to it, a
naming exception is thrown.
Redeployment. When an application or module is undeployed, its scoped
resources are deleted. During redeployment, resources are destroyed and
recreated based on changes in the glassfish-resources.xml
file. To
preserve old resource definitions during redeployment, use the
preserveAppScopedResources
property of the redeploy
(or deploy
--force=true
) subcommand. For example:
asadmin> redeploy --property preserveAppScopedResources=true MyApp.ear
asadmin> deploy --force=true --property preserveAppScopedResources=true MyApp.ear
For more information, see redeploy
(1) and
deploy
(1).
Listing. Use the --resources
option of the list-applications
subcommand to list application-scoped resources. Use the
--subcomponents
option in addition to list scoped resources for
enterprise application modules or for module subcomponents. To list
scoped resources for subcomponents only, use the --resources
option of
the list-subcomponents
subcommand
For more information, see list-applications
(1) and
list-sub-components
(1).
Restrictions. Use of application-scoped resources is subject to the following restrictions:
resource-adapter-config
and connector-work-security-map
— These
can only be specified in the glassfish-resources.xml
file of the
corresponding connector module. In an enterprise application, the
resource-adapter-config
or connector-work-security-map
for an
embedded connector module must be specified in the
glassfish-resources.xml
file of the connector module. You cannot
specify a resource-adapter-config
or connector-work-security-map
in
an application for a connector module that is not part of the
application.
Resource to connection pool cross references — A module-level
jdbc-resource
cannot reference an application-level
jdbc-connection-pool
. Likewise, a module-level connector-resource
cannot reference an application-level connector-connection-pool
.
Global resources — Defining java:global
JNDI names is not supported.
Cross definitions — Defining java:app
JNDI names at the module level
is not supported.
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