Rashmi,
follow these instructions to have keycloack debug accessible from eclipse:
1- Simple web application
User a simple HelloServlet to try out the debugging process before applying
you experience to wildfly.
1- Wildfly and eclipse
Like Thomas mentioned, Make sure you active the debug property while
starting wildfly. This is independent of keycloak, as keycloak is just
another web application running on wildfly. So make sure you have a simple
webapp running in wildfly standalone so you can get used to the debugging
process.
2- Wildfly in a docker container
Take your simple web application and wildfly into a docker container and
try following:
a) Make sure you start wildfly in the container in debug mode. Not matter
how you manage the docker containers in your development environment, you
will have to expose their ports so you can reach the container from and
outside the docker host. "Exposing the port means mapping the defined
wildfly ports to some other ports on the docker host. If you are using
docker-composer you have to try something like: ports:\ - "8080:8080"\
- "8787:8787". In this case see the docker-compose reference for details.
3- Accessing the docker container
Once you wildfly docker container is startet in debug mode, make sure you
can access you HelloServlet from a web browser on the same machine on
which you have your eclipse installed. If this works, use the same hostname
or ip to replace "localhost" in you eclipse debugging config. Generally
this will default to: 192.168.99.100:8787.
You did it right, you will be able to stop on the breakpoint inside your
HelloServlet.
4- Keycloak
Repeat the same procedure with your custom authenticator. Do not forget to
download the keycloak sources and include them in your the source path so
you can navigate and set break points.
Best regards
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Cordialement
Francis Pouatcha
Founder and Technical Lead Group Adorsys
LinkedIn:
http://www.linkedin.com/pub/francis-pouatcha/8/35a/542
adorsys GmbH & Co. KG, Germany:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVRkFGUNexo&authuser=0
Adorsys S.A., Cameroon: "African Software Competence Center"
Open
https://github.com/adorsys
Cell USA: +1 770 329 7026
Cell Germany: +49 172 18 16 074
Cell Cameroon: +237 51 74 71 99
On Fri, Jul 1, 2016 at 2:39 AM, Rashmi Singh <singhrasster(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks Thomas for your reply. I have a few questions on your
response. I
am still very new to docker, so please bear with me.
when you say I can set env variables in docker container, would this be
sufficient?
First connect to the docker container as:
docker exec -i -t keycloak bash
Then, once I am in the container, I run the following to set env variables?
set DEBUG_MODE=true
set DEBUG_PORT=8787
exit
Then, restart the container as:
docker restart keycloak (keycloak is the name of my container)
Also, how can I make sure that the env variable got correctly set in the
docker container? From inside the container, if I run the command "env",
should it list these new env variables if they are added successfully?
Then, when you say "......default on port 8787 which you need to expose
on your docker container or use the container interface...", what exactly
do you mean? Do you mean some sort of port forwarding? Could you tell me w
tohat exactly I need to do with my existing container named as "keycloak"
Then, on eclipse, where you mentioned the settings for the Debug
configurations, what should be the hostname there? would it be localhost?
or the default machine IP of docker which is 192.168.99.100? Or it should
be something else?
On Thu, Jun 30, 2016 at 6:29 PM, Thomas Darimont <
thomas.darimont(a)googlemail.com> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> you could add -debug flag to the standalone.sh command-line or define the
> following env variables in your docker container:
> set DEBUG_MODE=true
> set DEBUG_PORT=8787
>
> this will start keycloak with remote debugging enabled by default on port
> 8787 which you need to expose on your docker container or use the container
> interface...
>
> you can then connect to the keycloak instance inside the docker container
> via the remote debugger from your IDE.
> For eclipse just go to "Debug configurations..." -> Remote Java
> Application -> select your project with the custom authenticator -> adjust
> hostname and port and click "debug".
>
> Cheers,
> Thomas
>
> 2016-07-01 0:26 GMT+02:00 Rashmi Singh <singhrasster(a)gmail.com>:
>
>> We have a Maven project setup on Eclipse that uses some keycloak
>> features and we generate a jar that contains our AuthenticationProvider
>> classes etc.
>> We use docker for the deployment. We basically run a jboss/keycloak
>> image there
>> We have a shell script that has a bunch of commands to copy our project
>> jars from local to the keycloak image on docker container like:
>>
>> docker cp /customauthenticator-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar
>> keycloak:/home/modules/xxx.yyy.zz.keycloak.customizations
>> ....
>> docker restart keycloak
>>
>> Running this shell script deploys everything on keycloak on docker.
>> And so far we are just putting logs throughout our code to debug issues.
>> We want to be able to setup a debugging environment on our eclipse. I am
>> not sure how to achieve this when we use keycloak. Because, here we
>> basically build our modules or authenticator jars etc and copy them to
>> keycloak directories. So, it's not a standalone project war file that we
>> are directly deploying to app server as such. So, then how do we put our
>> maven project (creating jars etc) in a debug mode in eclipse? Is it
>> possible? How?
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> keycloak-dev mailing list
>> keycloak-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
>>
>
>
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