[JBoss AS7 Development] - JBoss Modules Surefire Plugin
by Kabir Khan
Kabir Khan [http://community.jboss.org/people/kabirkhan] modified the document:
"JBoss Modules Surefire Plugin"
To view the document, visit: http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-16240
--------------------------------------------------------------
This is a fork of org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-surefire-plugin:2.6:test which allows you to run tests using modular classloading provided by jboss-modules. The source for this plugin is available in github ( https://github.com/kabir/jboss-modules-surefire-plugin https://github.com/kabir/jboss-modules-surefire-plugin).
It works by suppying it with a prebuilt modules root (such as the one from a built JBoss AS 7) and a module definition file to define more modules for your test. The plugin will then create an additional modules directory from the module definition file, and then invoke org.jboss.modules.Main using the configured modules directories. Since everything is now run via jboss modules, you should not execute tests directly from your IDE, but rather run them via maven. If you want to debug the tests, do a
mvn install -Dmaven.surefire.debug=true
and attach a debugger to port 5005.
h4. Configuration
It has the configuration options of the 'real' surefire plugin ( http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html), although your mileage may vary if you start playing with the fork modes. The plugin takes a module definition file and creates a directory structure containing modules in the jboss-modules format
It has the configuration options of the http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html original surefire plugin, although your mileage may vary if you start playing with the fork modes. The plugin takes a module definition file and creates a directory structure containing modules in the jboss-modules format.
For the forked module there are some more options for configuring the modules:
*roots:*
Points to a list of exisiting module root directories, such as jboss-as7/modules
* *Type:* java.io.File[]
* *Required:* No
*cleanModulesDirectory:*
If true (default) clean out the modules directory created by the plugin each time we run the tests.
* *Type:* boolean
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.clean}
* *Default:* true
*modulesDirectory:*
The absolute path of the modules output directory created from +*moduleDefinitionFile*+
* *Type:* java.io.File
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.directory}
* *Default:* ${project.build.directory}/modules
*logModule:*
The name of the -logmodule parameter passed in to JBoss Modules (i.e. the name of the module containg the jboss logmanager). This is needed if the target project uses java.util.Logging or jboss logging, and the jboss log manager is not on the system classpath.
* *Type:* java.lang.String
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.logmodule}
*logConfiguration:*
The JBoss logging configuration if any. This must be set if the target project uses jboss logging and you want any output to be displayed
* *Type:* java.io.File
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${logging.configuration}
*moduleDefinitionFile:*
The path of the module definition file.
* Type java.io.File
* Required: Yes
* Expression: ${jboss.modules.definition}
* Default: ${project.build.testOutputDirectory}/modules/module-def.xml
In addition, when using jboss logging you will need to set the following system properties in your pom when using this plugin (full example later):
<systemProperties>
<property>
<name>java.util.logging.manager</name>
<value>org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>jboss.home.dir</name>
<value>${jboss.home}</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>org.jboss.boot.log.file</name>
<value>${jboss.home}/standalone/log/boot.log</value>
</property>
</systemProperties>
*h4. Module Definition File
*
This sets up the modules used for running your tests, which are then copied to *+modulesDirectory+* from the plugin settings. The plugin automatically sets up a module called +jboss.surefire.module+ for you which contains the plugin classes. This module is then used as the module passed in to org.jboss.modules.Main. If you want to set up more modules you can define those in the *+moduleDefinitionFile+*. The schema is very simple, and rather than duplicating the work done by jboss-modules the validation of most of the stuff is delegated to jboss-modules when loading the modules. Here is an example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<modules xmlns="urn:jboss:surefire-module:1.0" targetNs="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<test-module-resources>
<resource-root path="$junit:junit$"/>
<resource-root path="$$CLASSES$$"/>
<resource-root path="$$TEST.CLASSES$$"/>
</test-module-resources>
</test-module-dependencies>
<module name="org.jboss.as.standalone"/>
<module name="org.jboss.modules"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
<module name="my.test.module"/>
</test-module-dependencies>
<module name="my.test.module">
<resources>
<resource-root path="$some.group:some-artifact$"/>
</resources>
</module>
</modules>
+targetNs+ is the schema of the targetted jboss-modules version.
+test-module-resources+ adds the listed resources directly into the resources section of the created +jboss.surefire.module+ module.
+test-module-dependencies+ adds the listed dependencies directly into the dependencies section of the created +jboss.surefire.module+ module. In this case we follow the jboss-modules 1.0 schema. The resource root paths containing '$' get expanded as shown in this example of what the generated +modulesDirectory+/jboss/surefire/module/main/module.xml looks like:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module name="jboss.surefire.module" xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<main-class name="org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.SurefireBooter"/>
<resources>
<!-- These two always get included -->
<resource-root path="surefire-api-2.6.jar"/>
<resource-root path="surefire-booter-1.0.0.Alpha1.jar"/>
<!-- The maven dependency $junit.junit$ gets pulled from the maven repository using the version
from your project dependencies
-->
<resource-root path="junit-4.8.1.jar"/>
<!-- $$CLASSES$$ uses the main classes directory from your project -->
<resource-root path="classes"/>
<!-- $$TEST.CLASSES$$ uses the test classes directory from your project -->
<resource-root path="test-classes"/>
</resources>
<dependencies>
<module name="org.jboss.as.standalone"/>
<module name="org.jboss.modules"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
</dependencies>
</module>
and the generated +modulesDirectory+/my/test/module/main/module.xml looks like
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module name="my.test.module" xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<resources>
<!-- This gets copied to modulesDirectory/my/test/module from the maven repository -->
<resource-root path="some-group-some-artifact-1.6.0.jar"/>
</resources>
</module>
You can have as many +modules/module entries as you like and they just get copied across. The $some.group:some.artifact$+ value gets resolved from your project's dependencies into the path to that dependency in your local maven repository. In this case (assuming your pom has a dependency on some.group:some-artifact:1.3.0, which then gets copied from the local maven repository to the module directory) +modulesDirectory+/my/test/module/main/module.xml looks like:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module name="my.test.module" xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<resources>
<resource-root path="some-artifact-1.3.0.jar'/>
</resources>
</module>
To summarize, you have the following options to set the resource-root paths.
* Full path: Nothing special happens in this case, the module will simply point to that place
* $$CLASSES$$: Copies the main classes directory from your project to the created module
* $$TEST.CLASSES$$: Copies the test classes directory from your project to the created module
* $maven.group.id*:*maven.artifact.id$: Resolves the maven dependency from your project dependencies and copies the jar to the created module
h4. Consuming the plugin from a pom
Normally you want to turn off the normal surefire plugin since that does not understand modular classloading
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.6</version>
<!-- Disable the standard surefire plugin since that runs tests without modular classloading -->
<configuration>
<skipTests>true</skipTests>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Then enable and configure the jboss modules surefire plugin (${jboss.home} is configured elsewhere in the pom and points to a built JBoss AS 7 instance)
<plugin>
<groupId>org.jboss.maven.surefire.modular</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0.Alpha1</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>test</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<!-- standard surefire options -->
<redirectTestOutputToFile>true</redirectTestOutputToFile>
<enableAssertions>true</enableAssertions>
<systemProperties>
<property>
<!-- We need to enable the log manager for jboss as -->
<name>java.util.logging.manager</name>
<value>org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager</value>
</property>
<property>
<!-- The root of the jboss installation -->
<name>jboss.home.dir</name>
<value>${jboss.home}</value>
</property>
<property>
<!-- Set the boot log location -->
<name>org.jboss.boot.log.file</name>
<value>${jboss.home}/standalone/log/boot.log</value>
</property>
<!-- If using EmbeddedServerFactory to create the AS instance (used by the
arquillian container) set a directory to copy across the
${jboss.home}/standalone directory to, to avoid pollution of standalone.xml
between runs
--> <property>
<name>jboss.embedded.root</name>
<value>target/temp-config</value>
</property>
</systemProperties>
<includes>
<include>org/jboss/as/test/surefire/**/*TestCase.java</include>
</includes>
<!-- Extra forked plugin options -->
<logModule>org.jboss.logmanager</logModule>
<logConfiguration>${jboss.home}/standalone/configuration/logging.properties</logConfiguration>
<roots>
<root>${jboss.home}/modules</root>
</roots>
</configuration>
</plugin>
h4. Running Arquillian Tests
The plugin can be used to run arquillian tests against an embedded AS 7 instance using modular classloading everywhere at runtime.
If running an Arquillian IN_CONTAINER test, Arquillian will first execute parts of the test on the client side to create the deployments, before starting an embedded AS instance and deploying the tests into the started server. The test is then run in the server as part of the deployment.
If running an Arquillian AS_CLIENT test, Arquiilian will start the embedded AS instance and then run the test on the client to connect to the started AS instance.
Since the tests are now booted up using JBoss Modules, there is no runtime classpath to speak of, so you need to set up your modules to be able to see the arquillian classes and to be able to see the test class and the dependencies for what is executed on the client (the parts of the test run inside the server don't need anything special since that is handled for us by the server). Here is an example of a module definition file for running an Arquillian test:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<modules xmlns="urn:jboss:surefire-module:1.0" targetNs="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<test-module-resources>
<resource-root path="$org.jboss.as:jboss-as-arquillian-container-embedded$"/>
<resource-root path="$org.jboss.as:jboss-as-arquillian-container-common$"/>
<resource-root path="$$TEST.CLASSES$$"/>
</test-module-resources>
<test-module-dependencies>
<!-- Arquillian dependencies -->
<module services="import" name="org.jboss.surefire.arquillian-deps"/>
<!-- Add other test dependencies here -->
</test-module-dependencies>
<!-- Add more test modules as needed -->
</modules>
org.jboss.surefire.arquillian-deps is a module that ships with JBoss AS 7, and contains the dependencies needed for arquillian. It can be found https://github.com/jbossas/jboss-as/blob/master/build/src/main/resources/... here. In addition, the test module in this example contains the project test classes directories, and it adds the resource roots containing the JBoss AS 7 embedded Arquillian container and the common Arquillian container classes. Including these container classes makes Arquillian start up the embedded AS 7 container.
h4. TBD
* Investigate if surefire report works with this or if that needs forking too
--------------------------------------------------------------
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Create a new document in JBoss AS7 Development at Community
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13 years, 10 months
[JBoss AS7 Development] - JBoss Modules Surefire Plugin
by Paul Gier
Paul Gier [http://community.jboss.org/people/pgier] modified the document:
"JBoss Modules Surefire Plugin"
To view the document, visit: http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-16240
--------------------------------------------------------------
This is a fork of org.apache.maven.plugins:maven-surefire-plugin:2.6:test which allows you to run tests using modular classloading provided by jboss-modules. The source for this plugin is available in github ( https://github.com/kabir/jboss-modules-surefire-plugin https://github.com/kabir/jboss-modules-surefire-plugin)
h4. Configuration
It has the configuration options of the 'real' surefire plugin ( http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html), although your mileage may vary if you start playing with the fork modes. The plugin takes a module definition file and creates a directory structure containing modules in the jboss-modules format
It has the configuration options of the http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-surefire-plugin/test-mojo.html original surefire plugin, although your mileage may vary if you start playing with the fork modes. The plugin takes a module definition file and creates a directory structure containing modules in the jboss-modules format.
For the forked module there are some more options for configuring the modules:
*roots:*
Points to a list of exisiting module root directories, such as jboss-as7/modules
* *Type:* java.io.File[]
* *Required:* No
*cleanModulesDirectory:*
If true (default) clean out the modules directory created by the plugin each time we run the tests.
* *Type:* boolean
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.clean}
* *Default:* true
*modulesDirectory:*
The absolute path of the modules output directory created from +*moduleDefinitionFile*+
* *Type:* java.io.File
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.directory}
* *Default:* ${project.build.directory}/modules
*logModule:*
The name of the -logmodule parameter passed in to JBoss Modules (i.e. the name of the module containg the jboss logmanager). This is needed if the target project uses java.util.Logging or jboss logging, and the jboss log manager is not on the system classpath.
* *Type:* java.lang.String
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${jboss.modules.logmodule}
*logConfiguration:*
The JBoss logging configuration if any. This must be set if the target project uses jboss logging and you want any output to be displayed
* *Type:* java.io.File
* *Required:* No
* *Expression:* ${logging.configuration}
*moduleDefinitionFile:*
The path of the module definition file.
* Type java.io.File
* Required: Yes
* Expression: ${jboss.modules.definition}
* Default: ${project.build.testOutputDirectory}/modules/module-def.xml
In addition, when using jboss logging you will need to set the following system properties in your pom when using this plugin (full example later):
<systemProperties>
<property>
<name>java.util.logging.manager</name>
<value>org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>jboss.home.dir</name>
<value>${jboss.home}</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>org.jboss.boot.log.file</name>
<value>${jboss.home}/standalone/log/boot.log</value>
</property>
</systemProperties>
*h4. Module Definition File
*
This sets up the modules used for running your tests, which are then copied to *+modulesDirectory+* from the plugin settings. The plugin automatically sets up a module called +jboss.surefire.module+ for you which contains the plugin classes, junit and your project's target/classes and target/test-classes directories. If you want to set up more modules you can define those in the *+moduleDefinitionFile+*. The schema is very simple, and rather than duplicating the work done by jboss-modules the validation of most of the stuff is delegated to jboss-modules when loading the modules. Here is an example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<modules xmlns="urn:jboss:surefire-module:1.0" targetNs="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<test-module-dependencies>
<module name="org.jboss.as.standalone"/>
<module name="org.jboss.modules"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
<module name="my.test.module"/>
</test-module-dependencies>
<module name="my.test.module">
<resources>
<resource-root path="$some.group:some-artifact$"/>
</resources>
</module>
</modules>
+targetNs+ is the schema of the targetted jboss-modules version.
+test-module-dependencies+ adds the listed dependencies to the +jboss.surefire.module+ module directly into the dependencies section of the created module. In this case we follow the jboss-modules 1.0 schema. In this case the +modulesDirectory+/jboss/surefire/module/main/module.xml looks like:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module name="jboss.surefire.module" xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<main-class name="org.apache.maven.surefire.booter.SurefireBooter"/>
<resources>
<resource-root path="surefire-api-2.6.jar"/>
<resource-root path="surefire-booter-1.0.0.Alpha1.jar"/>
<resource-root path="junit-4.8.1.jar"/>
<resource-root path="test-classes"/>
</resources>
<dependencies>
<module name="org.jboss.as.standalone"/>
<module name="org.jboss.modules"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
<module name="org.jboss.threads"/>
</dependencies>
</module>
You can have as many +modules/module entries as you like and they just get copied across. The $some.group:some.artifact$+ value gets resolved from your project's dependencies into the path to that dependency in your local maven repository. In this case (assuming your pom has a dependency on some.group:some-artifact:1.3.0, which then gets copied from the local maven repository to the module directory) +modulesDirectory+/my/test/module/main/module.xml looks like:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module name="my.test.module" xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0">
<resources>
<resource-root path="some-artifact-1.3.0.jar'/>
</resources>
</module>
h4. Consuming the plugin from a pom
Normally you want to turn off the normal surefire plugin since that does not understand modular classloading
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.6</version>
<!-- Disable the standard surefire plugin since that runs tests without modular classloading -->
<configuration>
<skipTests>true</skipTests>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Then enable and configure the jboss modules surefire plugin (${jboss.home} is configured elsewhere in the pom and points to a built JBoss AS 7 instance)
<plugin>
<groupId>org.jboss.maven.surefire.modular</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0.Alpha1</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<goals>
<goal>test</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<!-- standard surefire options -->
<redirectTestOutputToFile>true</redirectTestOutputToFile>
<enableAssertions>true</enableAssertions>
<systemProperties>
<property>
<name>java.util.logging.manager</name>
<value>org.jboss.logmanager.LogManager</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>jboss.home.dir</name>
<value>${jboss.home}</value>
</property>
<property>
<name>org.jboss.boot.log.file</name>
<value>${jboss.home}/standalone/log/boot.log</value>
</property>
</systemProperties>
<includes>
<include>org/jboss/as/test/surefire/**/*TestCase.java</include>
</includes>
<!-- Extra forked plugin options -->
<logModule>org.jboss.logmanager</logModule>
<logConfiguration>${jboss.home}/standalone/configuration/logging.properties</logConfiguration>
<roots>
<root>${jboss.home}/modules</root>
</roots>
</configuration>
</plugin>
h4. Coming up (after Christmas)
* Will investigate if surefire report works with this or if that needs forking too
* Integrate this plugin with the JBoss AS 7 Arquillian container so that the Arquillian test runner is booted up in a modular classloader. This should enable us to get rid of the current workarounds
--------------------------------------------------------------
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13 years, 11 months
[JBoss AS7 Development] - ManagementConsoleModelStructure
by Heiko Braun
Heiko Braun [http://community.jboss.org/people/heiko.braun%40jboss.com] modified the document:
"ManagementConsoleModelStructure"
To view the document, visit: http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-16474
--------------------------------------------------------------
A human readable version of the jboss_7_0.xsd, that outlines the different concepts:
h2. *AS 7.0 Management Model (Domain)*
*Domain*
Paths
Profiles
Profile(name)
Include(profile-name)
*Subsystems*
[...]
Interfaces
Socket binding groups
Socket Binding(name,default-interface)
System propertie s
Property(name,value)
*Deployments*
Deployment(name, runtime-name, sha1, start)
*Server Groups*
Server Group(name, profile-name)
JVM
Socket-binding-group
Deployments
System-properties
*Host(name)*
Paths
System properties
Property(name,value)
+Host Controller management socket+
+Domain Controller config+
Interfaces
JVM configurations
Servers
* Server*(name, group, start)
Paths
Priority
Cpu-affinity
Interface-specs
Socket-binding-group
System-properties
VM
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/102-16474-4-1150... http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/102-16474-4-...
h2. *AS 7.0 Management Model (Standalone)*
*Server(name)*
Paths
+Management socket+
Profile(name)
*Subsystems*
[...]
Interfaces
Socket binding group
Socket Binding(name,default-interface)
System properties
Property(name,value)
*Deployments*
Deployment(name, runtime-name, sha1, start)
--------------------------------------------------------------
Comment by going to Community
[http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-16474]
Create a new document in JBoss AS7 Development at Community
[http://community.jboss.org/choose-container!input.jspa?contentType=102&co...]
13 years, 11 months