Max Rydahl Andersen [
http://community.jboss.org/people/maxandersen] modified the
document:
"Hacking on AS7"
To view the document, visit:
http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-15596
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h4. 1. Create a github account
http://github.com http://github.com
h4. 2. Fork jboss-as into your account
http://github.com/jbossas/jboss-as http://github.com/jbossas/jboss-as
h4. 3. Clone your newly forked copy onto your local workspace
$ git clone git@github.com:[your user]/jboss-as.git
Initialized empty Git repository in /devel/jboss-as/.git/
remote: Counting objects: 2444, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (705/705), done.
remote: Total 2444 (delta 938), reused 2444 (delta 938)
Receiving objects: 100% (2444/2444), 1.71 MiB | 205 KiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (938/938), done.
$ cd jboss-as
h4. 4. Add a remote ref to upstream, for pulling future updates
git remote add upstream
git://github.com/jbossas/jboss-as.git
h4. 5. Use maven (via build.sh) (make sure you use maven 3)
$ ./build.sh install
.....
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Reactor Summary:
[INFO]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: BOM ..................... SUCCESS [1.834s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Parent Aggregator ....... SUCCESS [0.022s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Domain Core ............. SUCCESS [3.051s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Server Manager .......... SUCCESS [0.204s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Server .................. SUCCESS [0.283s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Domain Controller ....... SUCCESS [0.084s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Process Manager ......... SUCCESS [0.314s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Remoting ................ SUCCESS [0.390s]
[INFO] JBoss Application Server: Build ................... SUCCESS [5.696s]
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
h4. 6. Pulling later updates from upstream
$ git pull --rebase upstream master
* branch
master -> FETCH_HEAD
Updating 3382570..1fa25df
Fast-forward
{parent => bom}/pom.xml | 70 ++++----------
build/pom.xml | 13 +--
domain/pom.xml | 10 ++
.../src/main/resources/examples/host-example.xml | 2 +-
.../resources/examples/jboss-domain-example.xml | 28 +++---
.../main/resources/schema/jboss-domain-common.xsd | 12 +--
.../main/resources/schema/jboss-domain-host.xsd | 2 +-
domain/src/main/resources/schema/jboss-domain.xsd | 17 ++--
pom.xml | 100 ++++++++++++++++++--
process-manager/pom.xml | 3 +-
10 files changed, 156 insertions(+), 101 deletions(-)
rename {parent => bom}/pom.xml (85%)
(--rebase will automatically move your local commits, if you have any, on top of the
latest branch you pull from, you can leave it off if you do not). Please note that
--rebase is very important if you do have commits. What happens is that when git pull
can't fast forward, it does a merge commit, and a merge commit puts the sucked in
changes ON TOP of yours whereas a rebase puts them BELOW yours. In other words a merge
commit makes the history a graph, and we prefer a cleaner, easier to follow linear history
(hence the rebasing). Further once you do a merge commit it will be difficult to rebase
the history before that commit (say you want to combine two commits to one later) as
described in point 12.
One way to not forget --rebase the rebase option is you may want to create an alias
$ git config --global alias.up "pull --rebase"
and then just use the new alias instead of pull
$ git up upstream master
One last option, which some prefer, is to avoid using pull altogether, and just use fetch
+ rebase (this is of course more typing)
h4. 7. Pushing pulled updates (or local commits if you aren't using topic branches) to
your private github repo (origin)
$ git push
Counting objects: 192, done.
Delta compression using up to 4 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (44/44), done.
Writing objects: 100% (100/100), 10.67 KiB, done.
Total 100 (delta 47), reused 100 (delta 47)
To git@github.com:[your user]/jboss-as.git
3382570..1fa25df master -> master
You might need to say -f to force the changes. Read the note on 12 though before you do
it.
h4. 8. Discuss your planned changes (if you want feedback)
* On the forums -
http://community.jboss.org/en/jbossas/dev/jboss_as7_development
http://community.jboss.org/en/jbossas/dev/jboss_as7_development
* On IRC -
irc://irc.freenode.org/jboss-as7 or
https://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=jboss-as7
(
http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=jboss-as7)
h4. 9. Make sure there is a JIRA somewhere for the enhancement/fix
http://jira.jboss.org http://jira.jboss.org
h4. 10. Create a simple topic branch to isolate that work (just a recommendation)
git checkout -b my_cool_feature
h6. Note: See tips section for how to use a nice git prompt for tracking what branch you
are in!
h4. 11. Make the changes and commit one or more times (Don't forget to push)
git commit -m 'JBAS-XXXX Frunubucate the Fromungulator'
git commit -m 'JBAS-YYYY Tripple Performance of Fromungulation'
git push origin my_cool_feature
+Note that git push references the branch you are pushing and defaults to master, *not
your working branch*.+
h4. 12. Rebase your branch against the latest master (applies your patches on top of
master)
git fetch upstream
git rebase -i upstream/master
# if you have conflicts fix them and rerun rebase
# The -f, forces the push, alters history, see note below
git push -f origin my_cool_feature
The -i triggers an interactive update which also allows you to combine commits, alter
commit messages etc. It's a good idea to make the commit log very nice for external
consumption. Note that this alters history, which while great for making a clean patch, is
unfriendly to anyone who has forked your branch. Therefore you want to make sure that you
either work in a branch that you don't share, or if you do share it, tell them you are
about to revise the branch history (and thus, they will then need to rebase on top of your
branch once you push it out).
h4. 13. Get your changes merged into upstream
1. Make sure your repo is in sync with other unrelated changes in upstream before
requesting your changes be merged into upstream by repeating step 12.
2. Email a pull request to mailto:jbossas-pull-requests@lists.jboss.org
jbossas-pull-requests(a)lists.jboss.org (if I haven't subscribed the list, do it
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jbossas-pull-requests here) with a link to your
repo, a description of the changes, and who reviewed (if any)
3. After review a maintainer will merge your patch, update/resolve issues by request, and
reply when complete
4. Don't forget to switch back to master and pull the updates1. git checkout master
git pull upstream master
h4. Appendix A. Adding a new external dependency
1. Edit pom.xml and add a property of the form "version.groupId.artifactId"
which contains the Maven version of the dependency. Add your dependency to the
<dependencyManagement> section, and use the property for the version. If your new
dependency has any transitive dependencies, be sure to <exclude> them (or if
possible, update the project so that all its dependencies are of *provided* scope).
2. Add your dependency to any AS modules that require it, but only with group/artifact.
3. Edit build/pom.xml and add your dependency with only group/artifact.
4. Create a directory in build/src/modules corresponding to the *module's* name (which
will differ from the Maven group/artifact name; look at other modules to get a feel for
the naming scheme), with a version of "main", like this:
"build/src/modules/org/jboss/foo/main".
5. Create a module.xml file inside the "main" directory. Use a module.xml from
another similar module as a template.
6. Edit build/build.xml and add a <module-def> element. The name listed in the
<module-def> element corresponds to the *module* name. The group/artifact listed in
the nested maven-resource element(s) refer to the *Maven* group/artifact name.
7. *Important:* Make sure you did not introduce any transitive dependencies by using
"mvn dependency:tree". If you did, be sure to add <exclusion>s for each
of them to your dependency as described above.
8. *Important:* Do *not* introduce a dependecy on the "*system*" module. If you
need access to JDK classes which are not covered by any other dependency, use the
"javax.api" module as a dependency.
Please be sure to preserve the alphabetical ordering of all POMs and the build.xml file.
h4. Appendix B. Adding a new AS submodule
1. Create the directory corresponding to the submodule and add it to the root pom.xml
file. The convention is to leave off the "jboss-as-" portion, so
"jboss-as-remoting" becomes "remoting".
2. Create a POM for your submodule (use another submodule as a template). Make sure all
dependencies you specify do *not* include a version. The group ID should be
"org.jboss.as", and the artifact ID should begin with "jboss-as-" and
there should be a proper <name> for the new module.
3. Add the new submodule to the top section of the <dependencyManagement> of the
top-level pom.xml. The version should be set to "${project.version}". This
section is sorted alphabetically by artifact name so please preserve that ordering.
4. Add the new submodule to the modules section element of the top-level pom.xml
5. Add your submodule dependency to any AS modules that require it, but only with
group/artifact.
6. Edit build/pom.xml and add the new submodule with only group/artifact.
7. Create a directory in build/src/modules corresponding to the submodule, with a version
of "main", like this:
"build/src/main/resources/modules/org/jboss/as/new-subsystem/main".
8. Create a module.xml file inside the "main" directory. Use a module.xml from
another subsystem as a template.
9. Edit build/build.xml and add a <module-def> element for the subsystem. Use the
module name and Maven coordinates from steps 6 and 2 respectively. Use another submodule
as a template.
Please be sure to preserve the alphabetical ordering of all POMs and the build.xml file.
h4. Appendix C. Profiling with JProfiler
Performance tuning is an important part of AS7 development. In order to use JProfiler on
a standalone AS 7 instance, first you need to add the following to your standalone.conf
file:
JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Djboss.modules.system.pkgs=com.jprofiler -agentlib:jprofilerti
-Xbootclasspath/a:/path/to/jprofiler/bin/agent.jar"
The "jboss.modules.system.pkgs" property tells JBoss Modules to allow the
"com.profiler" classes to be found from any class loader, which is essential to
allow the JProfiler agent to run.
It's easiest to then just set up your JProfiler session as "Remote", and
start the server and the profiler in any order. That's it!
h4. Appendix D. Importing into Eclipse
The directory "ide-configs/eclipse" contains both formatter and code templates.
Use these to pass the CheckStyle enforcer during the build if coding from Eclipse.
h4. Tips & Tricks!
h4. Creating a Git status prompt in your terminal
This makes it easy to not forget what branch you are working in and quickly tell if you
have changes. The following will adjust the PS1 on unix (or cygwin on Windows). Note that
it assumes a compiled version of git, which is also the case for the OSX packages. If you
are using the bundled rpm version, change the completion path to
"/etc/bash_completion.d/git"
GIT_COMPLETION_PATH="/usr/local/git/contrib/completion/git-completion.bash"
if [ -f "$GIT_COMPLETION_PATH" ]; then
GIT_PS1_SHOWDIRTYSTATE=true
. "$GIT_COMPLETION_PATH"
ADD_PS1='$(__git_ps1)'
fi
if [[ ${EUID} == 0 ]] ; then
PS1="\[\033[01;31m\]\h\[\033[01;34m\] \w\[\033[33m\]$ADD_PS1\[\033[34m\]
\$\[\033[00m\] "
else
PS1="\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[01;34m\] \w\[\033[33m\]$ADD_PS1\[\033[34m\]
\$\[\033[00m\] "
fi
h4. IDE Integration
h5. Eclipse
Follow the steps mentioned here
http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-16718
http://community.jboss.org/wiki/HackingAS7usingEclipse
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