[jboss-as7-dev] dmr.js

Jason Greene jgreene at redhat.com
Wed Apr 10 09:44:15 EDT 2013


Well last time you didn't like the low level JSON interface (e.g. no deployment API that wraps it, uploads require an http upload and a management op).

You also would have to implement the auth protocol yourself. As to the http server side, we take patches! :)

On Apr 10, 2013, at 7:56 AM, Max Rydahl Andersen <manderse at redhat.com> wrote:

> On Tue, Apr 09, 2013 at 12:01:47PM -0400, Jason Greene wrote:
>> Just to be extra clear. Transparent / silent local authentication which is handled by the native protocol requires that the client implement the auth protocol. This is not possible from a web browser since JS code is not allowed to read arbitrary files. So for this reason we do not have support for it over http.
> 
> Yes, but a java client could so it would be great for us - would have avoided us from remoting binary bugs in tooling.
> 
> This of course assumes there are less compatibility bugs in the autentication layer than in remoting :)
> 
> /max
> 
>> On Apr 9, 2013, at 6:03 AM, Max Rydahl Andersen <manderse at redhat.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> This is cool - how does the authentication work/not work ?
>>> 
>>> Found this on github:
>>> "It requires a patched AS7 instance if not running on the same host.
>>> Some browsers require extra steps to get the authentication working, but Firefox should work out of the box."
>>> 
>>> http://haraldpehl.blogspot.de/2013/03/independent-jboss-admin-console.html explains it a bit but
>>> what is the patch needed for AS7 and with all these quirks do you think we can make it portable/usable for
>>> writing a webapp that connects remotely ?
>>> 
>>> /max
>>> 
>>> On Tue, Apr 09, 2013 at 08:11:59AM +0200, Heiko Braun wrote:
>>>> Here's a code sample:
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> <script>
>>>> // access EC2 demo instance
>>>> http = new XMLHttpRequest();
>>>> http.withCredentials = true;
>>>> http.open("POST", "http://as7-preview.dyndns.org:9990/management", true);
>>>> 
>>>> // async response handler
>>>> http.onreadystatechange =function()
>>>> {
>>>>  if (http.readyState==4 && http.status==200)
>>>>  {
>>>>      // decode response
>>>>      response = dmr.ModelNode.fromBase64(http.responseText);
>>>>      alert(response.get("result").asString());
>>>>  }
>>>> }
>>>> 
>>>> // content type headers for DMR API
>>>> http.setRequestHeader("Content-type","application/dmr-encoded");
>>>> http.setRequestHeader("Accept","application/dmr-encoded");
>>>> 
>>>> // create an operation
>>>> op = new dmr.ModelNode();
>>>> op.get("operation").set("read-attribute");
>>>> op.get("address").setEmptyList();
>>>> op.get("name").set("release-version");
>>>> 
>>>> // send as base64 encoded
>>>> http.send(op.toBase64String());
>>>> 
>>>> </script>
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> On Apr 8, 2013, at 1:20 PM, Heiko Braun <hbraun at redhat.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> If you want to use the DMR API form plain JS and need all the typing build in, the dmr.js might be your friend:
>>>>> 
>>>>> https://github.com/hal/dmr.js
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> Regards, Heiko
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
>>>>> jboss-as7-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>>>> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jboss-as7-dev
>>> 
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