At line 5 changed 4 lines. |
__1.__ Build AppFuse as usual: ant war; |
__2.__ Create a directory, for example, felini and on it another sub-directory: lib; |
__3.__ Copy your war file to felini and copy your JBDC Driver and jta.jar to lib directory; |
__4.__ Other thing, in order to turn on JSP compilation in [Winstone|http://winstone.sourceforge.net/], you'll need to place the following jar files into the lib folder under the current directory (or the folder identified by the --commonLibFolder directive): jasper-compiler.jar, jasper-runtime.jar, ant.jar, commons-logging-api.jar, commons-el.jar (Jasper 2 only) - These are required if you are using Jasper 2.0. You can get them from the tomcat binary distribution; |
__1.__ Build AppFuse as usual (project name: {{felini}}): {{ant war}}; |
|
__2.__ Create a directory, for example, {{felini}} and on it a sub-directory: {{lib}}; |
|
__3.__ Download [Winstone|http://winstone.sourceforge.net/] into the {{felini}} directory, the version I will use is: {{winstone-0.8.1.jar}}; |
|
__4.__ Copy your war file to {{felini}} directory; |
|
__5.__ Other thing, in order to turn on JSP compilation in [Winstone|http://winstone.sourceforge.net/], you'll need to place the following jar files into the {{lib}} folder under the current directory (or the folder identified by the --commonLibFolder directive): jasper-compiler.jar, jasper-runtime.jar, ant.jar, commons-logging-api.jar, commons-el.jar (Jasper 2 only) - These are required if you are using Jasper 2.0. You can get them from the tomcat binary distribution; |
|
__6.__ From the {{felini}} directory run: |
<pre>java -jar winstone-0.8.1.jar --warfile=feline.war --useJasper</pre> |
|
That's it! No more no less! But wait, it has more ... |
|
%%note __NOTE:__ This is from Winstone docs: |
<h2><a name="embedding">Embedding Winstone</a></h2> |
<p>The design of Winstone has always allowed its easy embedding within another application. It's as simple |
as:</p> |
<pre> // at startup |
Map args = new HashMap(); |
args.put("webroot", "<my webroot dir>"); // or any other command line args, eg port |
Launcher.initLogger(args); |
Launcher winstone = new Launcher(args); // spawns threads, so your application doesn't block |
|
... (your application code) |
|
// before shutdown |
winstone.shutdown(); </pre> |
|
<p>From v0.8 though, there is also the ability to embed in the opposite direction: that is, to |
<b>embed your warfile into the winstone JAR itself</b>. This allows an all-in-one container plus |
web-application JAR file to be downloaded, and then unpacked at execution time.</p> |
<p>To use this, simply unpack the winstone JAR, and place your WAR file inside the unpacked |
folder at the top level (with the same parent as the folder named "winstone"). Then rename |
your WAR file to "embedded.war", and repack the jar as before (make sure to preserve the |
META-INF and manifest).</p> |
<p>Now if you type: <code>"java -jar winstone.jar"</code>, your application should |
automatically deploy as the ROOT web application. Try <code>http://localhost:8080/</code> to |
check it out.</p> |
<p>If you need to add any default command-line arguments (eg ports or prefixes), you can embed |
a properties file in exactly the same way, except that the file must be named |
"embedded.properties".</p> |
%% |
|
|
Thanks Matt, for this space and Rick Knowles for their attention and support on [Winstone|http://winstone.sourceforge.net/]. |