How to run application using wildfly in Eclipse? - eclipse

I am new to wildfly server. I have successfully integrated wildfly server in my eclipse and able to start it.
But when i am going to Run As from project left click or Add from Server Console in eclipse. It is not showing available project to me.
As those project as not listed so I am not able to run and debug it. While from command line, I am able to make deployment files using gradale and then deployed on wildlfy server and started it.
If some one have any findings on this that will be helpful for me.

Related

Tomcat Server problem with my SAPUI5 Project on Eclipse

so I have been having this problem for a few days now. I created a SAPUI5 project on Eclipse and created a tomcat server to run the project on localhost. But when I click on Run As -> Run on Server I get this one here: enter image description here
I have already tried out a few things to fix it, for example when I run server on localhost the front page is the tomcat server webpage. But when I try to run the project it doesn't work right. Can you help me with this issue please.

Step through debugging of web app code in Eclipse maven app running on tomcat

I am trying to set up eclipse so that I can work on a maven web application which packages as a war file without building the war file and deploying to tomcat webapps manually.
This would also allow me to step through the code. I have installed tomcat 7 and my app deploys there ok and I have pointed eclipse at the installation of tomcat but it does not seem to deploy properly even though the manual deployment works fine.
The issue I get when deploying is that eclipse informs me that tomcat was not able to start.
To deploy my app I am going "servers >> add and remove" and then deploying my application from the available list by moving it into the configured list. After doing this and starting the tomcat server I get the error message.
Can anybody help me with running the app from within eclipse based on the compiled code and not on whats in the war file as ideally my end result would be to be able to step through code I am working on without building the war file first.
Thanks
I finally sorted this out after a few hours of messing around reading numerous posts, so hopefully this answer may help someone else who gets the error message:
"Server Tomcat v7.0 Server at localhost was unable to start within 45 seconds"
Below are the steps I took:
1) Backed up my projects in my work space and then deleted the workspace
2) Recreated the workspace and imported my projects back into it
3) (this bit was crucial for me) - Added a connector to my server.xml on port 8080 as my app was set up to only run with SSL, it seems that eclipse tries to verify your app started by hitting the root of the web app and it couldnt do this due to the SSL connector.
I hope this helps someone out.

Run JHipster SpringApplication via eclipse

I'm trying to run the JHipster application via my Eclipse Juno, using jdk 1.7.
The app seems to be loading properly (no console errors), but when i'm trying to reach the server with the client side (or via Postman, by sending a request to the REST servlets in port 8080), it's not responding.
However, when i'm running "mvn spring-boot:run" in the command shell, the server is loaded successfully and is responding to the exact same requests. Also, I managed to run the same command via eclipse with some maven configuration but it seems to be running only the target files (jars) and not the source code. I still haven't been able to run the source code of this app using eclipse in order to properly debug it.
Any suggestions?
Thanks!
So the answer is quite trivial, but since I spent several hours to reach it, it might save some time for others-
Download & install STS IDE.
Import the project as existing Maven project.
Run/Debug the project.
I tried to run it via Eclipse the whole time (wasn't familiar with STS to be honest) and this probably needs some extra configuration (another comment with explanations on eclipse configuration will be much appreciated). Once you work with STS, it's easy.
You should not need STS, just Eclipse with the J2EE stuff.
I've imported the sample jhipster in Eclipse (without STS) as a Maven project and everything was OK, after installing the maven dependencies.
To run the project, run as an application and search for the Application (com.mycompany.myapp.Application)
This app works for me: https://github.com/jhipster/jhipster-sample-app. It is stuck on Boot RC5 which probably means it's a bit old. Maybe Julien can comment on that (or update it)?

One click build and deploy using Eclipse/Maven/JBoss AS 7

I was wondering if it is possible to make a Java EE application being managed by Maven and automatically deploy it to JBoss all from Eclipse. To my knowledge I current right click on my project and select "Make install". After that completes, I open the server pane and right click on my deployed ear and either select "Full Publish" or "Incremental Publish". Is there a way to condense these actions into one click? I tried to write a windows batch file but I didn't have much luck with that, and it would only work for our devs working on Windows machines. I know I can make run configurations but when I try to make one it is very intimidating and I get frustrated and give up.
Thanks for your help!
You can use JBoss Tools 3.3.0 (Current milestone M4) with the maven integration to easily deploy projects (wars or ears) to your AS7 server.
Once you defined your AS7 instance in eclipse, all you have to do is right click on your project > Run As ...> Run on Server. It'll start your app server if it's stopped, or just deploy your app if it's already running.
See http://vimeo.com/25768303
and http://community.jboss.org/en/tools/blog/2011/11/09/jboss-tools-shift-happens-in-m4
If you are using maven, you can use the cargo plugin: http://cargo.codehaus.org/Maven2+plugin
You just configure where the JBoss is installed, set the plugin to run in the phase you want (or make a new one) and you are all set.
You can also create different configurations for different profiles, so you have local, integration, test, production, etc... And just by running with the selected profile deploys the ear in the server, remote or local.
If you want more control, you can set the path of the container as a variable that you pass in the Eclipse run configuration, that way each developer can have their servers in different paths.

Tomcat & Eclipse integration

I'm developing on a Ubuntu 8.04 machine using Eclipse Ganymede. I installed Tomcat 5.5 using sudo apt-get install tomcat5.5 tomcat5.5-admin and using an Ant script I deploy my WAR file by copying it to $CATALINA_HOME/webapps.
I then created an Eclipse project and I have it output compiled source in a similar but separate directory structure under $PROJECT_ROOT/target/. I still deploy the WAR file by right clicking on the build.xml and choosing my deploy-war task.
As Tomcat is running as a deamon, automatically started up on booting, I'm not instructing it when to start or exit.
My problems with this setup are:
Using this approach I do not get any output to the Eclipse console, as Tomcat is running under the tomcat55 user and I have a different login and no access to Stdout of tomcat55.
The logging which occurs is also directed to Stdout at the moment, which I find pretty nice during development. But it's not nice when I can't see it. :-)
I don't have any servers under the Server tab and no Run configurations. This makes it impossible for me to use the Debug mode of Eclipse, which otherwise is quite convenient.
What do you think I should do to integrate them and in turn make my development environment much better?
I'd say forget the pre-packaged Tomcat. Grab the apache-tomcat-x.y.z.zip from the site, unzip it somewhere in your $HOME and add a Server to your eclipse workspace, pointing to your local installation of tomcat. Of course you need the j2ee/wtp Eclipse bundle. Works fine on Windows, can't see a reason for it not working on Linux.
Edit: You may have to fiddle with server ports if you have two tomcat installs.
Add Tomcat to the list of Eclipse servers and run your web-app on the server. If you need more details click here.
I never cared about 1 and 2, so I can't really help you with them.
regarding 3:
You don't need any servers under the server tab for debugging to work. Just start tomcat with these environment variables
export JPDA_ADDRESS=8000
export JPDA_TRANSPORT=dt_socket
and configure eclipse accordingly: run - open debug dialog - select remote java app and create a new configuration.
You need eclipse to manage a copy of tomcat, then it can debug it. The clue to the problem was that you have to push deploy-war, this means the files are leaving your development environment and entering an external server. On a properly configured development environment, you only need to save your java file, it will auto-compile and already be on the local tomcat install, which might try to auto reload the web-app, and you can refresh your browser without reloading anything on the server. Look up some more tomcat plugins, there are a few different ways to do this.
If you want to do regular debugging and relaunching of Tomcat apps, you might want to take a look at MyEclipse - it can make things a lot easier.