Dynamic web application in eclipse using MAVEN 3.04 - eclipse

From past 90 hours I am trying to know how to use Maven in my web project, generate a war file and deploy it into my JBoss 4.2 Server.
I am not getting.
I am reading all kinds of blogs, googling almost all time, trying out all kinds of way to build a dynamic web project with maven, but trying out different methods make a simple thing more complex.
Few examples tell me how to run, few tell me to change the folder structure, few tell me transfer the contents of web content but nothing is matching my requirements. In some of the examples war file is getting generated, but of some big name, and it does not contain the jars inside. Uff.
I know maven is easy and makes our lives better but learning it for the first time makes it complex.
My requirement is simple.
1) Build a Dynamic web project in eclipse indigo. (Preferably in JAVA perspective )
2) Enable Maven dependencies, in eclipse.
3) Update pom.xml to add dependencies.
4) Finish the web application i want to do by writing classes, html pages, deployment descriptors.
5) Build the war file using maven "IN ECLIPSE ONLY". (the WAR file must have user specific name and not some name like "V1- Snapshot dash dash dash")
6) Deploy my war file in jboss 4.2 server deployment location. (Preferably from eclipse )
7) Run my localhost server and my application from the browser.
And Done.
By spending time on it I am understanding how beautiful is maven, but I am not able to achieve what I want.
Please help me by giving me a detailed procedure on how to use maven to meet my requirements above.

Fist I would suggest to use the newest Eclipse (Juno) with Maven support (m2e and wtp-m2e).
The first step is to define your pom with the appropriate dependencies and the correct packaging type which is in your case war.
If you really need a different naming you should leave Maven, cause maven makes assumptions about the naming of your artifacts which usually isn't a problem. The default version patterns as 1.0.0-SNAPSHOT etc.
If you wan't to deploy the war into JBoss there exist a number of possibilites to do such things and if you like to run your application locally it sounds you wan't to do some kind of testing (integration testing) which is supported by Maven (see maven-failsafe-plugin).
Furthermore you must learn if you like to use Maven to understand that not Eclipse is anymore the leader of the project configuration. This job has been moved to Maven or in other words into the pom file. If you like to use the project in Eclipse you need to import this project into Eclipse.
Apart from the above i would suggest to go to a Maven training to lear all that stuff which is more effective than learning it yourself.

Related

Build vs Deploy vs Publish (Eclipse IDE)

I'm a newbie to J2ee though not a complete newbie. I'm unable to find a good resource (book or video) that could help me understand what exactly happens when we build, deploy and publish. I have a fair idea though. So my questions are -
Is there a good resource out there that can help me understand these concepts? I've read some books on struts and servlets/jsp but they don't delve into eclipse and how/what it does. The eclipse documentation has been helpful but only slightly.
When we build an application the the java files are converted into the class files and stored in the java build path. What else happens during build? Many people use the term 'library dependencies', what does this mean? Also, when people refer to dependencies do they refer to files like xml and tld?
At what stage (build or run on server) does the container check to see if the dependencies are alright? Say for instance, if the servlet class/name in the web.xml file.
Is it appropriate to say that build is basically compilation while deploying the project and running it is the same as executing it?
Familiarity with the servlet specification would help you (perhaps some older version would be quicker to read like 2.4), but general understanding of what you build and how you do it in Eclipse is what you are after.
The way I see it is that during the build Eclipse creates almost complete version of WAR (or some other archive, if you use EJBs for instance) and by publishing you deploy it to some server (this is practically the same thing although Eclipse might just configure the server to use exploded WAR that it just prepared instead of copying it to some "deploy" dir that you are supposed to do if you work without an IDE).
If you configure your project well, the build can only mean compilation, but if you have more ceremony in it, then some source generation and moving files around might happen too.
To address your second question, library dependencies can be files that reside in WEB-INF/lib for instance. Read the spec to know what should be there and what should not. Eclipse tries to copy there all defined dependencies of your project.

How to Create a Spring+Primefaces+Hibernate (no maven) project in eclipse?

I am new to J2EE. I would like to create a Spring+Primefaces+Hibernate project.
I googled for it.
But I found all projects examples show in internet contains maven. My questions are
Is it possible to create a spring+primefaces+hibernate project in eclipse without Maven? If no, what is need of maven?
How to add the jar file of primefaces and spring and hibernate in eclipse?
Will the spring controller xml file (spring context or dispatcher servlet) be created automatically or manually?I mean Spring MVC.
Will the hibernate file (mapping file) also be created automatically or manually?
If possible, can anyone guide me to tutorial (preferably video) to implement the same?
I am using tomcat 7 and Eclipse - kepler.
Any help is appreciated.
If this is downvoted , do specify the reason also.
Although it's not a 'must' to use Maven or any other build tool, you should strongly consider using one.Eclipse Kepler has by default maven support but feel free to use other build tools(Gradle, Ant) or none(see 2.).Maven and the other build tools remove the headache of scaffolding, searching for dependencies(external jars like spring-mvc, hibernate, some db drivers), even deploying applications in a server.
If you chose not to use a build tool you have to manually get your project dependencies and enter them
into your project's buildpath(Right Click -> Build Path then enter their location).As you have noticed this step can be really really time consuming...
No, you have to manually create the configuration unless you use another project that already has what you need, again this might get easier with a build tool(maven archetypes for example)
The same as 3.
You won't have a hard time finding resources about these technologies, they are being used practically everywhere, and I think the Spring team has some videos in their YouTube channel.
Hope that helps a little!
1:* The fundamental difference between Maven and Ant is that Maven's design regards all projects as having a certain structure and a set of supported task work-flows (e.g., getting resources from source control, compiling the project, unit testing, etc.). While most software projects in effect support these operations and actually do have a well-defined structure, Maven requires that this structure and the operation implementation details be defined in the POM file. Thus, Maven relies on a convention on how to define projects and on the list of work-flows that are generally supported in all projects.
This design constraint resembles the way that an IDE handles a project, and it provides many benefits, such as a succinct project definition, and the possibility of automatic integration of a Maven project with other development tools such as IDEs, build servers, etc.
But one drawback to this approach is that Maven requires a user to first understand what a project is from the Maven point of view, and how Maven works with projects, because what happens when one executes a phase in Maven is not immediately obvious just from examining the Maven project file. In many cases, this required structure is also a significant hurdle in migrating a mature project to Maven, because it is usually hard to adapt from other approaches.
In Ant, projects do not really exist from the tool's technical perspective. Ant works with XML build scripts defined in one or more files. It processes targets from these files and each target executes tasks. Each task performs a technical operation such as running a compiler or copying files around. Targets are executed primarily in the order given by their defined dependency on other targets. Thus, Ant is a tool that chains together targets and executes them based on inter-dependencies and other Boolean conditions.
The benefits provided by Ant are also numerous. It has an XML language optimized for clearer definition of what each task does and on what it depends. Also, all the information about what will be executed by an Ant target can be found in the Ant script.
A developer not familiar with Ant would normally be able to determine what a simple Ant script does just by examining the script. This is not usually true for Maven.
However, even an experienced developer who is new to a project using Ant cannot infer what the higher level structure of an Ant script is and what it does without examining the script in detail. Depending on the script's complexity, this can quickly become a daunting challenge. With Maven, a developer who previously worked with other Maven projects can quickly examine the structure of a never-before-seen Maven project and execute the standard Maven work-flows against it while already knowing what to expect as an outcome.
It is possible to use Ant scripts that are defined and behave in a uniform manner for all projects in a working group or an organization. However, when the number and complexity of projects rises, it is also very easy to stray from the initially desired uniformity. With Maven this is less of a problem because the tool always imposes a certain way of doing thi
2:* You have to download all required jars file for hibernate/spring/primefaces from internet and place them in your project build path or in lib folder.
3:* Spring configuration files need to be created by you so that you can get the concept.
4:* Hibernate mapping files can be created by using reverse Engineering techniques for hibernate from where you can generates hbm files or you can use annotations if you dont want xml.
I suggest you to first create a sample java project in eclipse then download all required jars and place them in lib folder. Then configure hibernate in projects and spring integration.

How to set up JRebel in a Tomcat environment

I'm having a hard time getting JRebel to work in my current development environment.
I have multi module maven projects. Currently, the Tomcat instance is controlled via service (tomcat monitor) and the deployed web apps are configured with a XML located at ${catalina.home}/conf/Catalina/localhost where the docBase attribute points ${absolute maven project path}/target/app (and the attribute reloadable is true). So every time I do a maven build I only have to manually restart tomcat if there any classes changed. If the modifications occurred in the static resources (JSP, HTML, JS,
etc..) a page refresh will do it.
On my first attempt, I configured the web apps to run on a tomcat server running inside Eclipse. The maven plugin provided was also configured with success: all my sub-modules inherited the plugin configuration and I can saw in the tomcat startup the output messages from JRebel indicating the absolute project paths that were been listen. The only problem is that Eclipse WTP / Tomcat plugins don't go weel with War overlay feature in eclipse. After starting the server, only the resources present in the last web app (the module that have other War as dependencies) were deployed.
So, I returned to my original configuration development and introduced JRebel to it. I passed the JRebel java options to the Tomcat Vm, all maven modules had the rebel.xml (listening to the correct resource folders), but nothing happens. I can't see the usual JRebel messages and I experimented changing a JSP in the source folder and do a page refresh but the file ins't automatically redeployed (in this case a simple copy from the source folder the the ${maven.projec}/target/app will do the trick).
My two questions are:
It's possible to over come that eclipse WTP issue?
What is a funcional development environment involving maven eclipse and a external tomcat?
Any help would be much appreciated!
UPDATE 1
So, I got it. Kind of...I'm still struggling with the war modules overlaying. I have a main web app module that depends on several webapps modules. Because the rebel.xml it's generated dynamically via jrebel maven plugin when the main webapp build occurs, only the it's jrebel.xml prevail. All the other are squashed. The rebel.xml for the jars modules are at the right places (inside the jar file).
I can get it work if I create a custom rebel.xml for the main webapp that points to all the absolute directories containing the source files (static files such as JSP, HTML, JS, CSS, images, etc.) of the depending web apps. But this is worthless for my team development environments. I'm using maven properties but we've have two different maven multi-module hierarchy that don't know about each other and I can't use a root pom to connect them. So these kind of properties will not be enough to guarantee that the absolute paths generated on each developer machine in the rebel.xml are correct.
For now, I'm trying to tackle using some kind of maven plugin to do the rebel.xml merge. For the record without success yet.
This is becoming another issue a bit different of the original question :) Maybe I should through another question.
UPDATE 2
I got it working!..finally.
I used the XSLT Generator Maven Plugin to help me merge the various rebel.xml files. Also had to use the fabulous Maven Copy Plugin because the xslt transformation occurred after the final war packaging and I had to add the resulting rebel.xml to that WAR.
If someone needs the configuration files details down't hesitate asking.
Hope's this helps someone out there.
I got it working!..finally. I used the XSLT Generator Maven Plugin to help me merge the various rebel.xml files. Also had to use the fabulous Maven Copy Plugin because the xslt transformation occurred after the final war packaging and I had to add the resulting rebel.xml to that WAR.

Efficient dev cycle with Maven, Tomcat/Glassfish, Archetype?

So far i've been using tomcat and glassfish to develop a testing webapp, without maven. And the usual development-till-deploy cycle is simple :
develop in eclipse ide, with a WebContent folder, which is the root webapp folder that has the WEB-INF, web.xml, WEB-INF/lib, n all. The compiled classes location in eclipse is set to WEB-INF/classes.
after coding, i could just click on the reload button in glassfish admin console for that specific webapp. In tomcat, i believe it's reload also in the tomcat manager.
i could access the web application in the browser
Now if i would like to create a new webapp, that'll make use of latest stuffs of jsf, spring, jpa, hibernate, postgresql :
what recommendation of archetype should i use in the creation of the project ?
can i still use my previous steps of development? because i think it's very easy without having to repackage everything into a war file, or copying it into the tomcat's webapp folder everytime i want to test. Saving the files in eclipse, hit on the reload in the admin console / tomcat manager, and i could instantly test the updated webapp.
Or what do you usually do in the webapp development cycle ? Please share your experiences, =)
Thank you !
Development Cycle with Maven and Friends
Use Maven to drive your code-build-test-deploy-release cycle.
Start with Maven Archetype that suits closest to your web-app. This will create the whole folder structure for you and will add Jar depencies.
Use an embeded light-weight server like Jetty, this will be very fast on dev machine without sucking resources and is highly configurable. Plus, you can set it to auto-reload changes.
Most of Maven project are supposed to be test-driven. Of which Maven takes care of using it's surefire plug-in. So, every build will have a test phase.
You can define multiple profile for various environments (test, dev, prod, Win, Unix..). These profile will alter the behaviour of the project to be compatible with the environment.
Use Cargo, again a Maven plugin to deploy your builds on test or production server, which can be Glassfish, Tomcat, Jetty or any oter webserver.
Use Liquibase with or without Maven :) to manage your database changes the same way you manage your code change.
I came from almost similar project as yours in my previous company. Development with Maven makes things so smooth and the change is appreciable.
A little Google search shows that someone has worked on archetypes for JSF and JPA with Spring
Edit#1 -- added more details
Feasibility and Ease of Use
Maven is born out of neccessity to simplify the dev process for large and distributed code.
Maven is very well integrated with Eclipse -- so it's painless.
Jetty keeps monitoring source folders, so your changes gets deployed almost immediately.
You can customize the build to skip tests, to not build dependecies. When you just edit a UI component, Jetty will silently copy it to "target" folder.
If you're worried about copying and redeploying. You must read THIS to see how efficiently things are done, keeping in mind that you don't have to compile-test-deploy everytime you change a JSP or HTML.
That said, I would like to mention that Maven might be a challanging learning. This is an object oriented way of development cycle, to say. Most of us, who are used to build script, can find a bit tedious/verbose initially.
Resources
I would suggest to go through the following resources
Maven Book - Maven basics
Automated Deployment with Maven - going the whole nine yards If you can, literally follow this pattern.
Maven 2 Effective Implementation -- this book really helped us a lot.
for the q2 :
You can still run/debug app with tomcat from within the IDE (eclipse) even if you change the directory structure. (like the maven dir structure instead of eclipse's dynamic web dir structure)
Project properties - >
project facets - >
Dynamic Web Module ->
Click the appearing "further configuration available"
and set your content dir and context root.
You dont have to package everytime you want to run/debug it.
Another option is using Jetty
And I am sure there are more options others will tell as well.

How to deal with Maven projects containing several internal artifacts?

I'm about to start working on a web-application and I'll be using Maven. I want the web-application to be an individual artifact. The web-application will end up depending on a couple of self written libraries (for example text-formatting), and each of these libraries should be an individual artifact.
What's the recommended way of achieving this separation while making it simple to code for both artifacts? I was thinking of creating one project for each artifact and import them one by one in Eclipse. However, if the pom for web-application has a dependency pointing at the self written library, I'll end up having to deploy a snapshot every time I want to see if the change I made stopped the web-application from crashing (in example).
I hope you understand what I am getting at. I'll be working with a couple more developers, and we're using Nexus to maintain our shared artifact repository.
I was thinking of creating one project for each artifact and import them one by one in Eclipse.
Yes, that's the recommended way.
However, if the pom for web-application has a dependency pointing at the self written library, I'll end up having to deploy a snapshot every time I want to see if the change I made stopped the web-application from crashing
During development, you can use "workspace resolution" i.e. configure Eclipse to resolve dependencies from the workspace. This way changes are immediately visible from the webapp. This is possible whether you are using m2eclipse or the maven eclipse plugin (and is actually the default behavior for both).
Below, an illustration for m2eclipse:
A good maven plugin for eclipse is capable of "workspace resolution", i.e. it will recognize if the dependency is also present in the workspace, and refer to the other project directly rather than adding a JAR to the build path.