by
At present the tasks support:
Task | Application Servers | |
serverdeploy | Nested Elements | |
generic | Generic task | |
jonas | JOnAS 2.4 | |
weblogic | Weblogic |
The serverdeploy
task is used to run a "hot" deployment tool for
vendor-specific J2EE server. The task requires nested elements which define
the attributes of the vendor-specific deployment tool being executed.
Vendor-specific deployment tools elements may enforce rules for which
attributes are required, depending on the tool.
Attribute | Description | Required |
action | This is the action to be performed. For most cases this will be "deploy". Some tools support additional actions, such as "delete", "list", "undeploy", "update"... | Yes |
source | A fully qualified path/filename of the component to be deployed. This may be an .ear, .jar, .war, or any other type that is supported by the server. | Tool dependant |
The serverdeploy task supports a nested classpath
element to set the classpath.
Attribute | Description | Required |
classpath | The classpath to be passed to the JVM running the tool. The classpath may also be supplied as a nested element. | Tool dependant |
server | The address or URL for the server where the component will be deployed. | Tool dependant |
username | The user with privileges to deploy applications to the server. | Tool dependant |
password | The password of the user with privileges to deploy applications to the server. | Tool dependant |
Also supported are nested vendor-specific elements.
arg
and jvmarg
elements.
A JVM will be spawned with the provided attributes. It is recommended
that a vendor-specific element be used over the generic one if at all
possible.
The following attributes are supported by the generic element.
Attribute | Description | Required |
classname | This is the fully qualified classname of the Java based deployment tool to execute. | Yes |
The generic element supports nested <arg> and <jvmarg> elements.
This example shows the use of generic deploy element to deploy a component using a Java based deploy tool:
<serverdeploy action="deploy" source="${lib.dir}/ejb_myApp.ear"> <generic classname="com.yamato.j2ee.tools.deploy.DeployTool" classpath="${classpath}" username="${user.name}" password="${user.password}"> <arg value="-component=WildStar"/> <arg value="-force"/> <jvmarg value="-ms64m"/> <jvmarg value="-mx128m"/> </generic> </serverdeploy>
The WebLogic element contains additional attributes to run the
weblogic.deploy
deployment tool.
Valid actions for the tool are deploy
, undeploy
,
list
, update
, and delete
.
If the action is deploy
or update
,
the application
and source
attributes must be set.
If the action is undeploy
or delete
,
the application
attribute must be set. If the username
attribute is omitted, it defaults to "system". The password
attribute is
required for all actions.
Attribute | Description | Required |
application | This is the name of the application being deployed | Yes |
component | This is the component string for deployment targets.
It is in the form <component>:<target1>,<target2>...
Where component is the archive name (minus the .jar, .ear, .war
extension). Targets are the servers where the components will be deployed |
no |
debug | If set to true, additional information will be printed during the deployment process. | No |
This example shows the use of serverdeploy to deploy a component to a WebLogic server:
<serverdeploy action="deploy" source="${lib.dir}/ejb_myApp.ear"> <weblogic application="myapp" server="t3://myserver:7001" classpath="${weblogic.home}/lib/weblogic.jar" username="${user.name}" password="${user.password}" component="ejb_foobar:myserver,productionserver" debug="true"/> </serverdeploy>
This example shows serverdeploy being used to delete a component from a WebLogic server:
<serverdeploy action="delete" source="${lib.dir}/ejb_myApp.jar"/> <weblogic application="myapp" server="t3://myserver:7001" classpath="${weblogic.home}/lib/weblogic.jar" username="${user.name}" password="${user.password}"/> </serverdeploy>
The JOnAS element contains additional attributes to run the
JonasAdmin
deployment tool.
Valid actions for the tool are deploy
, undeploy
,
list
and update
.
You can't use user
and password
property with this
task.
Attribute | Description | Required |
jonasroot | The root directory for JOnAS. | Yes |
orb | Choose your ORB : RMI, JEREMIE, DAVID, ... If omitted, it defaults to the one present in classpath. The corresponding JOnAS JAR is automatically added to the classpath. If your orb is DAVID (RMI/IIOP) you must specify davidhost and davidport properties. | No |
davidhost | The value for the system property : david.CosNaming.default_host . |
No |
davidport | The value for the system property : david.CosNaming.default_port . |
No |
classname | This is the fully qualified classname of the Java based
deployment tool to execute. Default to org.objectweb.jonas.adm.JonasAdmin |
No |
The jonas element supports nested <arg> and <jvmarg> elements.
This example shows the use of serverdeploy to deploy a component to a JOnAS server:
<serverdeploy action="deploy" source="${lib.dir}/ejb_myApp.jar"> <jonas server="MyJOnAS" jonasroot="${jonas.root}"> <classpath> <pathelement path="${jonas.root}/lib/RMI_jonas.jar"/> <pathelement path="${jonas.root}/config/"/> </classpath> </jonas> </serverdeploy>
This example shows serverdeploy being used to list the components from a JOnAS server and a WebLogic server:
<serverdeploy action="list"/> <jonas jonasroot="${jonas.root}" orb="JEREMIE"/> <weblogic application="myapp" server="t3://myserver:7001" classpath="${weblogic.home}/lib/weblogic.jar" username="${user.name}" password="${user.password}"/> </serverdeploy>
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