[JBoss Tools] - Deploy from Eclipse to OpenShift in a breeze
by Andre Dietisheim
Andre Dietisheim [https://community.jboss.org/people/adietish] modified the blog post:
"Deploy from Eclipse to OpenShift in a breeze"
To view the blog post, visit: https://community.jboss.org/community/tools/blog/2012/06/27/deploy-from-e...
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#Dont_get_your_fingers_dirty_use_the_JBoss_Tools_for_OpenShift Dont get your fingers dirty, use the JBoss Tools for OpenShift
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#Get_the_tools_get_started Get the tools, get started
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#A_very_basic_workflow A very basic workflow
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#Create_your_application_runtime Create your application runtime
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#Push_to_build_and_deploy Push to build and deploy
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#Server_Adapter_to_the_rescue Server Adapter to the rescue
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#Deploy_my_very_own_project Deploy my very own project!
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#Have_your_project_ready Have your project ready
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#JBoss_Tools_configure_my_project JBoss Tools, configure my project
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#Oh_my_project_how_you_changed Oh my project, how you changed!
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#Push_me_up_Scotty Push me up, Scotty
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#Multimodule_maven_projects Multi-module maven projects
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#My_maven_project_is_not_in_the_git_repo_root My maven project is not in the git repo root
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#Have_your_project_ready_327337 Have your project ready
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#Create_your_OpenShift_application Create your OpenShift application
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#OpenShift_here_I_come OpenShift, here I come
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#But_hey_my_project_does_not_work But hey, my project does not work!
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#Commit_log Commit log
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#Inspect_your_server_logs Inspect your server logs
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#Look_into_the_jboss_as7_management_console Look into the jboss as7 management console
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#Debug_your_application_with_the_Eclipse_Debugger Debug your application with the Eclipse Debugger
h1. Dont get your fingers dirty, use the JBoss Tools for OpenShift
https://openshift.redhat.com/app/ OpenShift is the PaaS offering from http://www.redhat.com Red Hat. It gives you your personal application platform on demand. With OpenShift, there's no need to look for hosting and application stack. OpenShift provides you those within minutes, whenever you need them.
http://www.jboss.org/tools JBoss Tools for OpenShift offers a feature complete environment to work with OpenShift. From developing to deploying, JBoss Tools provides you a fully fledged environment for your project and aligns with the standard workflows within Eclipse. It allows Eclipse users to stick to their favorite IDE and deal with OpenShift within their developement environment. Especially the OpenShift server adapter mimics an http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/ Eclipse WTP compliant way of deploying to OpenShift and hides the complexity, that you'd otherwise had to handle when publishing bare metal (which is by using Git).
h2. Get the tools, get started
The https://community.jboss.org/community/tools/blog/2012/06/21/jboss-tools-3... release blog shows you extensively how to get JBoss Tools from our update site, from the Eclipse marketplace or even how to install the https://devstudio.jboss.com/download/ JBoss Developer Studio. If installing JBoss Tools, you'll have to make sure you choose at least the OpenShift bundles on our update site:
https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188... (https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18803/u...)
Once you have JBoss Tools installed, you'll spot our wizards either in JBoss Central or in the Eclipse Wizards:
https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18806/c... https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188...
All you need to get started quickly is offered within this wizard. It'll create your application platform, import a starter project and create a server adapter that you may use to publish to the PaaS.
OpenShift of course requires you to have an account. If you have none yet, the wizard will drop you to the signup form by hitting the link that is displayed on the first wizard page.
https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18807/s... https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188...
Once you have your account, you'll be ready to go, ready to get amazed by JBoss Tools and OpenShift.
h1. A very basic workflow
OpenShift is a http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platform_as_a_service PaaS, a Platform as a Service. As such it offers you your personal application stack and it does this on demand. A range of standards runtimes are offered to you whenever you need them. Working with the PaaS is as simple as importing a stub (the starter application) to your workspace, changing and publishing it again:
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h2. Create your application runtime
It all starts by creating your own application runtime. In the OpenShift Application wizard, set a name and choose the application (runtime) you need:
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OpenShift offers a wide range of standard runtimes. You may to choose among php, ruby, phython, nodejs etc. Java developers will be most amazed to see that OpenShift offers a fully Java EE 6 compliant application server: the blazing fast http://www.jboss.org/as7 JBoss AS 7.1.
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You may also add different extensions to your platform ranging from SQL- (like MySQL or Postgres) or NoSQL-databases (like MongoDB) up to your very own CI server (jenkins).
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Once you made up your choices and finish the wizard, it'll create your OpenShift application, wait for it to become reachable and import it's initial content - a starter application - to your Eclipse workspace. Looking into your Project Explorer or Navigator, you'll spot the new project that the wizard imported. It has the very same name as the OpenShift application. In case of a JBoss AS7 runtime, the starter app is a maven artifact and the project we import to your workspace will have the name that's configured for the maven artifact.
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h2. Push to build and deploy
The new project in your Eclipse workspace is where you apply your changes. It is shared with a git repository on your local machine. This repository is a clone of the git repository within your OpenShift application.
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Deploying this project to the PaaS is as simple as pushing the local repository to it's origin, the OpenShift git repository. OpenShift will then build and deploy your application to the application runtime.
In case of a Java application, OpenShift relies on a maven based build, that is triggered with each git push:
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h2. Server Adapter to the rescue
When dealing with git, you have to deal with a brilliant but rather complex code versioning system. Even if you're familiar with git, there's still room to reduce the number of manipulations when publishing.
http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/ Eclipse WTP server adapters historically allow you to interact with your server. This would typically be some local or remote server you'd have file- or SSH-based access to. We adapted this handy concept and implemented a variant that would work with OpenShift. This server adapter hides the complexity of dealing with git and allows 1-click publishing to the cloud.
The OpenShift Application wizard sets the adapter up when you create your application and import the starter project to your workspace. Our Server adapter is bound to the OpenShift project in your workspace and it'll do the git operations for you.
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When publishing it will deploy the changes in your OpenShift project to the PaaS. It'll hide all the complexity that is inherent to git. It will commit your changes to your local clone and push them to the git repository of your OpenShift application (the origin).
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h1. Deploy my very own project!
Importing the starter application to your workspace is the most simple usecase we provide. I bet most users already have a project that they'd want to deploy though. We of course also provide this ability in our OpenShift Application wizard.
Our little screencast shows you the steps when starting with your very own project. It uses the kitchensink example to demonstrate how this would occourr. You may get it on github:
> *Kitchensink example project:*
>
> https://github.com/adietish/kitchensink.git https://github.com/adietish/kitchensink.git
h2. Have your project ready
You first have to get your project to Eclipse. We only support *git-shared or non-shared project* though. A typical usecase would be to have your project on https://github.com/ github or in any other git repository.You then simply clone it's repository to your local machine (using http://www.eclipse.org/egit/ EGit or the command line) and import the project within it to your Eclipse workspace.
h2. JBoss Tools, configure my project
You then create your OpenShift application in our wizard, provide the name, type and eventually additional cartridges. You then switch to the second wizard page and tell the wizard that you dont want to create a new project in your workspace. You tell it to use your project instead.
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The wizard will warn you about upcoming changes to your project and ask you to confirm:
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h2. Oh my project, how you changed!
We then add OpenShift specific configurations to your project. These changes unfortunately cannot be undone. You'd have to provide your own means (ex. a separate branch) if you dont want these additions in your developement code The changes we apply are the following:
> *All changes:*
> *
> *
> * eventually create a git repository and commit your project to it
> * add a *.op**enshift* folder with openshift specific hooks
> * add a *deployments* folder
> * add the Eclipse specific files (.project, .classpath etc.) to the *.gitignore*
> * add *openshift-profile* to the pom
> * add OpenShift *git repo as remote* to your local git repo
>
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Since publishing to OpenShift is git pushing to it, we'll make sure your project is shared to a *git repo*. We therefore eventually create a git repository for your project if there's none yet and add your project to it.
We add the *.openshift* folder which may contain OpenShift specific configurations and tweaks (like custom build-scripts, markers, cron entries etc.). We also create a *deployments* folder which OpenShift will use to build to. You may also add additional artifacts to it.
We then tweak *.gitignore* and add the Eclipse specific files so that they dont make it to the git repo by default.
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For maven-based java projects we tweak the *pom* and add an openshift profile to it.
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The openshift profile is what the PaaS is using when building your project on the PaaS. The profile we add is telling maven to create the war in the deployments folder. The deployments folder is where JBoss AS7 is expecting and picking new deployables from. Adding the profile makes sure that your project is deployed when it is built.
We'll also then add the OpenShift application git repo as *remote* to the git repo of your local project. This will allow you to push your project to OpenShift without knowing about the exact url you'll have to push to. All you have to know is what name the OpenShift repo is stored at.
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We're storing the OpenShift application git url as "openshift" in the remotes known to your local repo. You may of course tell the wizard to use any name you like:
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h2. Push me up, Scotty
Once we configured your project, we commit the changes to your local git repo (either your project was already shared with a git repo or we created one for you). To now deploy your project to OpenShift, you'd have to go to the Servers view, choose the OpenShift server adapter (that we created for you) and tell it to *publish*. The server adapter will then detect that the local project is ahead of the remote one and that publishing would only be possible when overriding the remote starter application. It'll ask you to confirm this step:
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Once the publishing is done, you'll have your project running on OpenShift!
h2. Multi-module maven projects
Our OpenShift Application wizard also supports multi-module maven projects. You'd simply have to make sure all modules are nested within a parent project and choose the parent project as existing project (multi vs. multi-web, multi-ejb, multi-ejb in my screenshot) in the wizard:
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> *Note:*
>
> in case your multi-module maven project is an ear, there are still slight limitations in our tooling for the moment. You may easily work around them though. You'd have to alter the maven profile in the pom of your parent-projec and replace the maven-war-plugin by the maven-ear-plugin:
>
> https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18870/m... https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188...
>
> You may read about it in all details and track our progress on it in https://issues.jboss.org/browse/JBIDE-12252 JBIDE-12252
h1. My maven project is not in the git repo root
When deploying an existing project to OpenShift, you'd have to tell the wizard in JBoss Tools about your project. Your project would have to comply to a basic layout though. We expect the pom in the root of your git repository. If this is not the case, then you'd have to take an alternative approach when publishing. Publishing then gets as easy as drag and dropping your project to the adapter.
In our screencast, we show you how to proceed. We use the the ticket-monster example project which is available at github:
> *Ticket-monster example project:*
>
> https://github.com/jboss-jdf/ticket-monster https://github.com/jboss-jdf/ticket-monster
h2. Have your project ready
The first thing to do is to import your application to your Eclipse workspace. The only requirement we have is that your project shall be http://www.eclipse.org/webtools/ Eclipse WTP compliant. It may be a Dynamic Web or a Maven project. Maven projects are turned into Eclipse WTP projects if you have https://www.eclipse.org/m2e-wtp/ m2e-wtp installed when importing them (m2e-wtp bridges the gap between Eclipse WTP and maven, it turns any maven project into a WTP compliant project).
In the ticket-monster example, the maven project is nested into the demo folder:
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We import with the Eclipse Maven import wizard pointing it to the demo-folder:
https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18893/d... https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188...
and get the demo-folder imported to our workspace:
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h2.
h2. Create your OpenShift application
Once you have your project ready you'll go and create the OpenShift application that will host your application. Launch the OpenShit Application wizard in JBoss Tools, tell it to create a *jbossas-7* application and let it import the starter app, as shown in the first paragraphs of this blog.
h2. OpenShift, here I come
The OpenShift Application wizard imports the starter application to your workspace and creates a server adapter for it:
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You are then ready to publish your project. Simply drag and drop it to the OpenShift *server adapter* in the Servers view. Your project will then get published to OpenShift.
Once the publishing is done, you'll notice that the server adapter now has 2 modules: the starter application and your project:
https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/38-4972-18882/d... https://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/38-4972-188...
The server adapter actually compressed your project to a war and dropped it to the deployments folder within the starter application:
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It then committed this addition and pushed the starter application to OpenShift. The JBoss AS7 then noticed the new war and deployed it. Simple as that.
h1. But hey, my project does not work!
h2. Commit log
If your deployment fails JBoss Tools offers some goodies that allow you deeper insights into what's happening on the PaaS.
Pushing to the PaaS triggers a build and the deployment of your project. Both operations are logged and make it to the commit log. When the OpenShift server adapter finished publishing (git pushing), it'll show you the console with the commit log. This will show you in a first step if the push, the build and the deployment worked fine:
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h2. Inspect your server logs
We also offer you simple access to your server logs. You'll find an appropriate entry in the context menu of your OpenShift server adapter. Simply pick "*OpenShift->Tail files*"
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It allows you to inspect the logs of your server within the Eclipse console:
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h2. Look into the jboss as7 management console
JBoss AS7 has a management console that's may be reached on port 9990. OpenShift only allows access to a limited set of ports from the outer world. Nevertheless OpenShift allows you to forward ports to your local machine. Using port-forwarding allows you to access the management console that's running on the JBoss A7 that is running on OpenShift.
Go to the OpenShift server adapter and pick "*OpenShift->Port Forwaring*".
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The upcoming dialog will list you all ports that may be forwarded to your local machine. Simpley hit "*Start All*" and they'll get available at localhost on your machine.
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You may then access the management console of your JBoss AS7 in a browser on your local machine.
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h1. Debug your application with the Eclipse Debugger
JBoss Tools even allows you to debug your OpenShift Application in the Eclipse debugger. You'll first have to enable debugging on your OpenShift application. You'll do this by adding a marker in the *.openshift* folder of your project. Create an empty file *enable_pda in* .openshift/markers. Commit it and tell the server adapter to publish your project.
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Now that debugging is enabled, the debugging port of the remote JVM will get available and visible in your forwarded ports. Pick "*OpenShift -> Port Forwarding*" in the context menu of your server adapter and double check that the port *8787* is available. If it's not, you may have to stop the forwarding that's currently active, close and reopen the dialog to get it finally available. Now *Start All* to get all ports (and the debugging port) forwarded to your local machine.
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You're almost there now. The last step is to tell Eclipse to connect it's debugger to your forwarded port. Go to the *Debug Configurations* in Eclipse and create a new configuration for a Remote Java Application. As soon as you hit Debug, the execution of Application on OpenShift will halt at the Breakpoints you set in your Eclipse.
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Comment by going to Community
[https://community.jboss.org/community/tools/blog/2012/06/27/deploy-from-e...]
12 years, 5 months
Re: [jboss-user] [jBPM] - Human Task API and Data Structures Proposal
by Maciej Swiderski
Maciej Swiderski [https://community.jboss.org/people/swiderski.maciej] commented on the document
"Human Task API and Data Structures Proposal"
To view all comments on this document, visit: https://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-18641#comment-10144
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Mauricio, couple of questions at the very beginning to understand correctly your proposal:
* how does task def service applies to process interactions - when task definition will be deployed?
* delegation service - since that is on task def level - what about sharing this information on concurrent task instances since based on the same definition expressions can be evaluated to different values
* how is this going to be configured - per service or will there be a configuration service as well
Would be really nice to see how this is going to be utilized from following perspectives:
* process engine - how process engine will interact with human task services
* task client - how to access tasks and to perform operations on them
P.S.
Shall we discuss it here or on jbpm-dev list?
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12 years, 5 months