Deploy JBoss ESB on JBoss AS get BUILD FAILED - deployment

At first excuse me because my question sample asked in this link: How to Deploy a JBoss ESB on a Jboss AS, But I can not post any comment on it and it does not have a best answer yet or any useful solution!
I'm using ubuntu 11.04,my server is jboss-as-7.1.1.Final with jbossesb-4.11, I followed readme.txt file on Install folder of jbossesb-4-11, but after run "ant deploy" command I get this output:
user#computer:~/Library/jbossesb-4.11/install$ ant deploy
Buildfile: /home/user/Library/jbossesb-4.11/install/build.xml
check.deploy.props:
dependencies.source:
dependencies.jbossesb:
dependencies:
init.bindings.props:
undeploy.bindings:
undeploy.jbossas5:
undeploy.jbossas6:
undeploy:
BUILD FAILED
/home/user/Library/jbossesb-4.11/install/build.xml:574: Directory does not exist: /home/user/Library/jboss-as-7.1.1.Final/server/default/lib
I specified jboss server path in deployment.properties file correctly but I don't know what's the problem!
In additional, In help pdf books there is a command: "cp -pR all all.original" (before run "ant deply") that shows there is a [all] folder in the [jboss-as-7.1.1.Final] folder, But I don't have such a folder in my server folder!
Thanks in advance for any help :)

JBoss ESB does not support deployment on AS 7.

Related

Question on Tomcat Server not starting via Eclipse

Please follow Getting error while starting Tomcat Server 9 in Eclipse though command line run is successfull for my query.
I would appreciate an early response.
Best,
Arushi
Here are screens:
Change the directory to WEB-INF. It worked fine after that. Which is after tomcat/../web-inf/
Before that check
whether the tomcat folder have root access.
In cmd, you will run as a user. But eclipse can't.
I had the same problem in Linux.
After giving the access permission, no error message.
If it is running in cmd, then it might be due to permission.
Did you stopped Tomcat before deploying in eclipse?
Stop tomcat using cmd and run in eclipse.
Restart the server again.
If same persists then reinstall it.
I hope these steps will solve your problem.
Update: I installed 201912 version of Eclipse, deleted Tomcat folder from /usr/local/. Followed all steps in https://wolfpaulus.com/tomcat/ and am able to access Tomcat Server without any issue. Thanks to all for the great help!! Will mark this as solved.

FAIL - Failed to deploy application at context path

Before I explain the problem, I just want to point out that I am completely new to NetBeans and Tomcat and I am doing a school project. That being said, the problem is exactly what the title says. Here is the output when I try to run a simple Hello World jsp:
In-place deployment at
C:\Users\lostl\OneDrive\Documents\NetBeansProjects\Project3\build\web
Deployment is in progress...
deploy?config=file%3A%2FC%3A%2FUsers%2Flostl%2FAppData%2FLocal%2FTemp%2Fcontext7180600714574256491.xml&path=/Project3
FAIL - Failed to deploy application at context path [/Project3]
C:\Users\lostl\OneDrive\Documents\NetBeansProjects\Project3\nbproject\build-impl.xml:1058: The module has not been deployed.
See the server log for details.
BUILD FAILED (total time: 0 seconds)
I am using Apache NetBeans 11.2 and Tomcat 9 if it is relevant.
Here is what I tried:
I checked the server log and it displays absolutely nothing.
I tried setting the context path directly to Project3 (i.e. including the -C:/... before Project3) in the context.xml file under META-INF folder.
I tried restarting NetBeans and cleaning and building the project.
I tried running NetBeans under admin privileges.
I might seem like such an idiot for not knowing how to fix this since no one else seems to have this problem, but please help me out.
If you have installed the Apache Tomcat appart from Netbeans, maybe your apache service is already running and it conflicts with Netbeans. You may stop the apache service and then run the application in Netbeans.
Because Netbeans start the apache service in a diffent way, so you don´t need to install the aplication on apache´s folder.
Check out the Windows Services (Services App) and stop the Apache Tomcat if running, then from Netbeans menu select Run->Run Project. Netbean will start Tomcat and deploy your web app onto the Tomcat server.
I fixed it. All I had to do was restart my computer. I feel so dumb.
clean your project if clean project failed to delete some file then,
Just check there must be a java process running at background.
If you are using windows 10 then follow these steps
open command prompt and type below commands
tasklist | findstr java (hit enter now you can see a task list with pid number )
taskkill /F /PID "PID_OF_JAVA_PROCESS" (where PID_OF_JAVA_PROCESS--> task pid hit enter)
now run the project again
I faced this problem and found a solution. It is very simple. All you need to do is stop the Tomcat services or restart your computer and run your program.

maven was6:installApp TransferFailed

I'm trying to deploy my ear to a remote Websphere 8.5 with maven plugin was6 via SOAP.
I set up the correct ear with correct host, node,cell,server, port etc.
But when I try to install app I got WASX7017E: ConnectException - Connection refused with a TransferFailedException
In logs, there is nothing in local and remote neither. As I see with netstat when I run the mvn installApp there are many connection trying on serverside whiches have status TIME_WAIT.
The plugin seems to be working with v8.5 cause other functions for example wsListApp work.
I tried to google it but with no results.
Does anyone get this error before me? Or has anyone idea what should I do?
Thank you.
was6-maven-plugin generates a temporal ant file under "target\was6-maven-plugin\" folder and then calls $WAS_HOME\bin\ws_ant.sh/bat utility using -f option with the previously generated ant file.
If you don't use the clean target, the files should continue there so you can use ws_ant to find the real error and find if there is an error on your configuration or in the plugin.
If you find an error in the plugin, please open an issue here: http://jira.codehaus.org/browse/MWAS
In this link you'll find all the options available in the wsInstallApp target:
http://pic.dhe.ibm.com/infocenter/wasinfo/v8r5/index.jsp?topic=%2Fcom.ibm.websphere.javadoc.doc%2Fweb%2Fapidocs%2Fcom%2Fibm%2Fwebsphere%2Fant%2Ftasks%2FInstallApplication.html
Regards,
Javier Murciego

Configuration of authentication for deploy in GlassFish

I'm studyng the EJB 3 with the Oracle's tutorial, Ant 1.8 and Glassfish 3.1.2.2 (in Windows 7).
In the first example I build correctly the EAR, but when I run
ant deploy
by cmd, I receive this message
deploy:
[echo] deploys the application in cart - build/cart.ear
[echo] C:\installati\glassfish-3_1_2_2\glassfish3\glassfish/bin/asadmin.bat
--host localhost --port 4848 deploy --name cart --forc
e=true --upload=true --dbvendorname SQL92 build/cart.ear
[exec] Authentication failed for user: null
[exec] (Usually, this means invalid user name and/or password)
[exec] Command deploy failed.
The tutorial doesn't say anything about security configurations and I don't know very well Glassfish.
I tried to use the command add-resources (following this similar thread) but I don't know the syntax of this file.
I don't think there's a problem about configuration of path, because the bat are correctly runned...
I see the answer to question, but it's not my situation...
Has someone found sometime a similar problem?
I solved: I'm re-installed Glassfish.
After the reinstallation, most of examples (not all) are working correctly without authentication hypothesis.
Maybe my problem was born using a solution found in the web for another problem, and unperceively I had misdirect something in deploy's process of GlasshFish.

Installing Tomcat 7 as Service on Windows Server 2008

I want to install my tomcat v7.0.12 as a service on my Windows 2008 Server.
On the tomcat page I found this tutorial. But there isn't a service.bat file in my installation dir.
In the service overview of WS2008 it isn't possible easily create a new service like new->service ...
To Start Tomcat7 Service :
Open cmd, go to bin directory within "Apache Tomcat 7" folder. You will see some this like C:\..\bin>
Enter above command to start the service: C:\..\bin>service.bat install. The service will get started now.
Enter above command to start tomcat7w monitory service. If you have issue with starting the tomcat7 service then remove the service with command : C:\..\bin>tomcat7 //DS//Tomcat7
Now the service will no longer exist. Try the install command again, now the service will get installed and started: C:\..\bin>tomcat7w \\MS\tomcat7w
You will see the tomcat 7 icon in the system tray. Now, the tomcat7 service and tomcat7w will start automatically when the windows get start.
You can find the solution here!
Install the service named 'Tomcat7'
C:\>Tomcat\bin\service.bat install
There is a 2nd optional parameter that lets you specify the name of the service, as displayed in Windows services.
Install the service named 'MyTomcatService'
C:\>Tomcat\bin\service.bat install MyTomcatService
Looks like now they have the bat in the zip as well
note that you can use windows sc command to do more
e.g.
sc config tomcat7 start= auto
yes the space before auto is NEEDED
I just had the same issue and could only install tomcat7 as a serivce using the "32-bit/64-bit Windows Service Installer" version of tomcat:
http://tomcat.apache.org/download-70.cgi
I have spent a couple of hours looking for the magic configuration to get Tomcat 7 running as a service on Windows Server 2008... no luck.
I do have a solution though.
My install of Tomcat 7 works just fine if I just jump into a console window and run...
C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.26\bin\start.bat
At this point another console window pops up and tails the logs
(tail meaning show the server logs as they happen).
SOLUTION
Run the start.bat file as a Scheduled Task.
Start Menu > Accessories > System Tools > Task Scheduler
In the Actions Window: Create Basic Task...
Name the task something like "Start Tomcat 7" or something that makes sense a year from now.
Click Next >
Trigger should be set to "When the computer starts"
Click Next >
Action should be set to "Start a program"
Click Next >
Program/script: should be set to the location of the startup.bat file.
Click Next >
Click Finish
IF YOUR SERVER IS NOT BEING USED: Reboot your server to test this functionality
There are a lot of answers here, but many overlook a few points. I ran into the same issue and it was likely due to a combination of being a complete neophyte when it comes to tomcat. Even more I am rather new to web servers in general. I consider myself somewhat proficient user of windows, but I guess not proficient enough. In particular I don't work with services too much.
I did not have a startup.bat or any bat files. I only downloaded the 32-bit/64-bit Windows Service Installer. The bin that is created for that download is small - only 4 files. My colleagues were surprised that I did not have a catalina.bat etc... and I was too. Only the below four files in the bin. And no %CATALINA_HOME% or %TOMCAT_HOME% etc...
bootstrap.jar
tomcat-juli.jar
Tomcat7.exe
Tomcat7w.exe
With this setup I had some frustrations as setting parameters is done via the gui widget - very helpful I might add.
So nearly all the answers I have perused were not immediately applicable as many said, "go to bin and issue the startup.bat file" I am a neophyte but not so much to not be able to look into the bin and start such a file it is existed!
For my simple purposes (again remember that I am a neophyte at tomcat and even web servers) all I wanted to do was to be able to startup and shutdown the tomcat server from a cmd prompt window. Nothing too heavy duty. I am embarrassed to say how simple it is. It is probably evident to anyone with a shred of experience with services and such.
To Start server: <Tomcat Root>/bin>Tomcat7.exe start
To Stop server: <Tomcat Root>/bin>Tomcat7.exe stop
Found here - http://crunchify.com/how-to-start-stop-apache-tomcat-server-via-command-line-setup-as-windows-service/
I did not realize there was a separate download the 64-bit Windows zip file that has a tomcat server and all the standard array of cmd line tomcat management tools. This zip file has all the common startup/shutdown scripts, batch files for windows, including catalina.bat/.sh etc... Then all the above answers make sense and are rather trivial.
Remember I am a neophyte when it comes to tomcat and web servers. It appears these two downloads are somewhat mutually exclusive in the sense that if I download and install the 32-bit/64-bit Windows Service Installer version and the 64-bit Windows zip file the startup.bat file in the 64-bit Windows zip file version will not run or interact with the 32-bit/64-bit Windows Service Installer tomcat instance. But I am not sure about this point.
Edit service.bat – Swap two lines so that they appear in following order:
if not “%JAVA_HOME%“ == ““ goto got JdkHome
if not “%JRE_HOME%“ == ““ goto got JreHome
Open cmd and run command service.bat install
Open Services and find Apache Tomcat 7.0 Tomcat7. Right click and Properties. Change its startup type to Automatic (with delay).
Reboot machine to verify if the service started automatically
its done through service.bat file in apache tomcat7
visit this blog ..
install tomcat7 on windows
I had a similar problem, there isn't a service.bat in the zip version of tomcat that I downloaded ages ago.
I simply downloaded a new 64-bit Windows zip version of tomcat from http://tomcat.apache.org/download-70.cgi and replaced my existing tomcat\bin folder with the one I just downloaded (Remember to keep a backup first!).
Start command prompt > navigate to the tomcat\bin directory > issue the command:
service.bat install
Hope that helps!