I can definitely see how this would be useful though.
> Now a tool can let the user choose subhandlers by finding all the
> instances of custom-handler and file-handler. It then presents a pick
> list of the handlers it found. The tool doesn't need any special
> knowledge about handlers. It just knows how the list is defined and
> acts accordingly. All the UI logic can be generated from the resource
> description.
>
> And when you go to delete a handler, the management model will know that
> an async handler has subhandler references pointing to it. So, it thows
> an exception.
>
That's not the case, as the referent does not know what all refers to
it. For example, there's no way socket-binding=* can know from its own
static metadata what all the other resources are that might refer to a
socket-binding. Some custom subsystem yet to be written by an end user
may refer to it. The server itself needs to track that at runtime.
Yes, I was
assuming that the server would keep track of the references.
So once a reference value is put into the model the referent will be
notified that someone is referring to him. The action taken when a
referent is deleted could be defined in the resource that contains the
reference. I guess the actions would be values like NO_OP, REMOVE_ME,
and THROW_EXCEPTION.
> On 4/4/2012 10:41 AM, Brian Stansberry wrote:
>> Customer requested feature is ability to externalize a file from a
>> deployment archive and have it be an addition to the files in the
>> archive or to override an existing file. Use cases:
>>
>> 1) Production: can't crack the deployment archive for policy reasons,
>> but need to change some config. So they add an override deployment
>> descriptor. This AIUI is the customer requested use case.
>>
>> 2) QE: override the production config to make some settings match the QE
>> environment.
>>
>> 3) Dev: same as QE, but to match the dev environment.
>>
>> The original idea we had for this can be seen in the structure of a
>> deployment=foo.war resource in the management API. It has a "content"
>> attribute of type LIST. The LIST was to allow multiple pieces of
>> content, the first being the archive, the rest being overrides. That's
>> "approach 2)" in Stuart's original email in this thread.
>>
>> The new proposed approach (Stuart's "1)") is to have an entire new
>> resource type, peer to deployment=foo.war, called dd-override=x. That
>> resource would include attribute deployment=foo.war used to associate
>> the override with a particular deployment.
>>
>> Both cases, the override descriptor would need to be uploaded to the
>> server and stored in the data/contents dir, just like a deployment. I
>>
>> Either way, the user would need to use some sort of tooling to do the
>> upload and associate the override descriptor with a deployment.
>>
>> Stuart's approach 1) is more deployment-scanner friendly. The user does
>> whatever to get the override uploaded and registered. The scanner
>> uploads the archive and tells the server to deploy it like it does now,
>> and doesn't need to know anything about overrides. With approach 2) the
>> scanner really can't handle it; it has no way to know two separate files
>> it finds in the deployments/ dir are associated with each other.
>>
>> What I'm looking for is some perspective on how JBoss Tools would deal
>> with this kind of feature.
>>
>> On 4/4/12 8:24 AM, Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
>>> Hi brian,
>>>
>>>> Max, any thoughts on this subject? I think a tooling perspective is
critical here.
>>> I'm trying to decipher the real question but seems i'm missing some
context ;)
>>>
>>> Care to give a summary/hint ?
>>>
>>> /max
>>>
>>>> On 3/29/12 6:50 AM, Emanuel Muckenhuber wrote:
>>>>> On 03/29/2012 05:12 AM, Stuart Douglas wrote:
>>>>>> On 28/03/2012, at 5:48 AM, Emanuel Muckenhuber wrote:
>>>>>>> The part i am trying to figure out is that we basically would
have 2
>>>>>>> things doing the same. Another issue people are complaining
about is
>>>>>>> that we don't support symlinks in .war deployments. One
of the easiest
>>>>>>> ways to solve this would be to just mount a local file system
path.
>>>>>>> Where i am not sure if moving this to the dd-overrides makes
more sense.
>>>>>>> Hopefully i do remember correctly that we support VFS in our
web
>>>>>>> integration :)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I think the dd-override sounds like less work in the
beginning, but if
>>>>>>> you include invalidation of overrides i am not sure if that
is also true
>>>>>>> for all the tooling. The deployment-scanner seems to be an
edge case in
>>>>>>> general, so perhaps we it can just adapt (be smarter) once we
have some
>>>>>>> other workflows.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> I don't know if invalidation of the overrides is really that
much of a problem. If you have to specify the overrides at deployment time then you need
to make sure your environment is setup so that you will always provide that override file
whenever you deploy, which means that for developers they would need tooling support, and
for production they would need to have their deployment scripts setup to make sure that
the override is always deployed with the deployment. Both of these use cases will still
work with dd-override (i.e. you can just have tools or scripts to modify it every time
before deployment).
>>>>>>
>>>>> Hmm, redeploying works through the :replace operation, which should
>>>>> allow you to replace a single content-item, but preserve exiting
ones.
>>>>> So you would also have to provide it only once.
>>>>>
>>>>> But yeah, once you call :remove it would also invalidate all the
>>>>> overrides. However the lifecycle seems more straightforward and there
is
>>>>> the option that you just disable the deployment as well.
>>>>>
>>>>> I do see that this does not work that well for the
deployment-scanner,
>>>>> but then there is no deployment-scanner in the domain. So for me that
is
>>>>> more an issue of the scanner and should perhaps better be solved
there.
>>>>>
>>>>> Emanuel
>>>>>
>>>>>> If on the other hand these descriptors only change infrequent,
then dd-override has a major advantage, in that it can just be setup once and then left
alone.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Stuart
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 03/27/2012 08:04 PM, Brian Stansberry wrote:
>>>>>>>> It's not immediately critical. But a little voice
inside my ear tells me
>>>>>>>> we'll be *strongly* pressured to support it at some
point. People love
>>>>>>>> the deployment scanner. And I think once people get used
to being able
>>>>>>>> to have override descriptors they will love that as
well.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Override descriptors are very nice for keeping a base
deployment but
>>>>>>>> adapting it for different environments. I'd thought
of it as more of a
>>>>>>>> production thing (a workaround to a corporate policy that
says a jar
>>>>>>>> can't be cracked open and change) but David convinced
me it's more of a
>>>>>>>> developer or staging thing (override the production
settings with
>>>>>>>> dev-workstation-specific settings). And once you are
talking developers,
>>>>>>>> you are also talking deployment scanner.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> A big question I'd like to see talked through on this
thread is how best
>>>>>>>> to do tooling around this (including CLI and web
console.) What's
>>>>>>>> easiest for the user, in common workflows?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> In option 1, the dd-override is a separate resource from
the deployment.
>>>>>>>> That means it can be independently controlled. Good and
bad there. Good,
>>>>>>>> it can be added once and then left alone while the war,
whatever is
>>>>>>>> tweaked and redeployed many times. Bad, it's a
separate thing.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Conversely, with 2, the content items are part of a list
attribute of
>>>>>>>> the deployment resource. The good and bad points are the
opposite of 1.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On 3/27/12 12:47 PM, Emanuel Muckenhuber wrote:
>>>>>>>>> Hmm, so we really have to support the
deployment-scanner use case? I
>>>>>>>>> mean beside some API/address differences - the (not
implemented)
>>>>>>>>> deployment content thing is basically doing the same.
Just wondering if
>>>>>>>>> i missed something obvious?
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> On 03/27/2012 03:55 PM, Brian Stansberry wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On 3/27/12 12:34 AM, Stuart Douglas wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> We have had a few requests for the ability to
override deployment descriptors without having to open up a deployment archive and
manually change the descriptor. I think there are two different approach that we can use
to accomplish this, and I am was wondering what other people thought.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 1) Allow the user to specify alternate
deployment descriptors as part of the deployment process
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> At deployment time the user would be able to
select specific deployment descriptors to override. I don't really like this approach,
as it means that this information must also be provided on every re-deployment. It is also
not really compatible with the deployment scanner, and would require changes to every
client that does deployment to properly support it.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 2) Allow the user to specify deployment
descriptor overrides before a deployment takes places. These descriptors would be stored
in the content repository, and the corresponding information in the model. When a
deployment is performed that matches the deployment name in the model the deployment
descriptors from the content repository are merged into the deployment.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> e.g. to add the descriptor you would do
something like:
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
/dd-override:my-deployment-descriptor:add(deployment="test.ear",
file="test.jar/META-INF/ejb-jar.xml", content=…)
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> or for domain mode
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>
/server-group=foo/dd-override:my-deployment-descriptor:add(deployment="test.ear",
file="test.jar/META-INF/ejb-jar.xml", content=…)
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> For domain mode, this should be basically a
parallel to the existing
>>>>>>>>>> deployment=* handling:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> a) The override is a top level resource, adding
an item to the
>>>>>>>>>> "pallette" that is usable in any
server-group:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
/dd-override=my-deployment-descriptor:add(deployment="test.ear",
>>>>>>>>>> file="test.jar/META-INF/ejb-jar.xml",
content=…)
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> b) The server-group part is just a mapping that
says "use this from the
>>>>>>>>>> pallette:
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>
/server-group=foo/dd-override=my-deployment-descriptor:add
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Actually, this last bit is probably unnecessary,
since the HC can figure
>>>>>>>>>> out what dd-overrides are required from the
deployment="test.ear"
>>>>>>>>>> attribute on the
dd-override=my-deployment-descriptor resource.
>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Then when test.ear is deployed the contents
if the overridden deployment descriptor will be override test.jar/META-INF/ejb-jar.xml.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> 2) is the approach that I prefer, as I think
it gives the most flexibility.
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> What does everyone think?
>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> Stuart
>>>>>>>>>>>
_______________________________________________
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>>>>>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>>>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
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>>>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
>>>>>>> jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>>>
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>>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>> --
>>>> Brian Stansberry
>>>> Principal Software Engineer
>>>> JBoss by Red Hat
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