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Chapter 8. Miscellaneous changes
This section provides an overview of the various miscellaneous changes happening in this release.
8.1. Changes to delivery of JBoss EAP Natives and Apache HTTP Server
JBoss EAP 8.0 natives are delivered differently in this release than in JBoss EAP 6. Some components include Red Hat JBoss Core Services product, which is a set of supplementary software that is common to many of the Red Hat JBoss middleware products. The new product allows for faster distribution of updates and a more consistent update experience. The JBoss Core Services product is available for download in a dedicated location on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
The following table lists the differences in the delivery methods between the releases.
Package JBoss EAP 6 JBoss EAP 8.0 AIO Natives for Messaging
Delivered with the product in a separate "Native Utilities" download
Included within the JBoss EAP distribution.
Apache HTTP Server
Delivered with the product in a separate "Apache HTTP Server" download
Delivered with the new JBoss Core Services product
mod_cluster, mod_jk, isapi, and nsapi connectors
Delivered with the product in a separate "Webserver Connector Natives" download
Delivered with the new JBoss Core Services product
JSVC
Delivered with the product in a separate "Native Utilities" download
Delivered with the new JBoss Core Services product
OpenSSL
Delivered with the product in a separate "Native Utilities" download
Delivered with the new JBoss Core Services product
tcnatives
Delivered with the product in a separate "Native Components" download
Support for tcnatives was removed in JBoss EAP 7
Additional changes for JBoss EAP Natives and Apache HTTP Server
You should also be aware of the following changes:
Support was dropped for mod_cluster and mod_jk connectors used with Apache HTTP Server from Red Hat Enterprise Linux RPM channels. If you run Apache HTTP Server from Red Hat Enterprise Linux RPM channels and need to configure load balancing for JBoss EAP 8.0 servers, you can do one of the following:
- Use the Apache HTTP Server provided by JBoss Core Services.
- You can configure JBoss EAP 8.0 to act as a front-end load balancer. For more information, see Configuring JBoss EAP as a Front-end Load Balancer in the JBoss EAP 7.4 Configuration Guide.
- You can deploy Apache HTTP Server on a machine that is supported and certified and then run the load balancer on that machine. For the list of supported configurations, see Overview of HTTP Connectors in the JBoss EAP 7.4 Configuration Guide.
You can find more information about JBoss Core Services in the Apache HTTP Server Installation Guide.
- You can configure JBoss EAP 8.0 to act as a front-end load balancer. For more information, see Configuring JBoss EAP as a Front-end Load Balancer in the JBoss EAP Configuration Guide.
- You can deploy Apache HTTP Server on a machine that is supported and certified and then run the load balancer on that machine. For the list of supported configurations.
- You can find more information about JBoss Core Services in the Apache HTTP Server Installation Guide.
8.2. Changes to deployments on Amazon EC2
Several changes have been made to the Amazon Machine Images (AMI) in JBoss EAP 7. This section briefly summarizes some of those changes.
- The way you start non-clustered and clustered JBoss EAP instances and domains in Amazon EC2 has changed significantly.
-
In JBoss EAP 6, configuration depended on the
User Data:
field. In JBoss EAP 7, the AMI scripts that parsed the configuration in theUser Data:
field and started the servers automatically on instance startup have been removed. - Red Hat JBoss Operations Network agent was installed in the JBoss EAP 6. Starting with JBoss EAP 7.0, you must install it separately.
For details on deploying JBoss EAP 7 on Amazon EC2, see Deploying JBoss EAP on Amazon Web Services.
8.4. Changes to the add-user script
The add-user
script behavior has changed in JBoss EAP 7 due to a change in password policy. JBoss EAP 6 had a strict password policy. As a result, the add-user
script rejected weak passwords that did not satisfy the minimum requirements. Starting with JBoss EAP 7, weak passwords are accepted and a warning is issued. For more information, see Setting Add-User Utility Password Restrictions in the JBoss EAP 7.4 Configuration Guide.
8.5. Removal of OSGi support
When JBoss EAP 6.0 GA was first released, JBoss OSGi, an implementation of the OSGi specification, was included as a Technology Preview feature. With the release of JBoss EAP 6.1.0, JBoss OSGi was demoted from Technology Preview to Unsupported.
In JBoss EAP 6.1.0, the configadmin
and osgi
extension modules and subsystem configuration for a standalone server were moved to a separate EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone-osgi.xml
configuration file. Because you should not migrate this unsupported configuration file, the removal of JBoss OSGi support should not impact the migration of a standalone server configuration. If you modified any of the other standalone configuration files to configure osgi
or configadmin
, those configurations must be removed.
For a managed domain, the osgi
extension and subsystem configuration were removed from the EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/domain.xml
file in the JBoss EAP 6.1.0 release. However, the configadmin
module extension and subsystem configuration remain in the EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/domain.xml
file. Starting with JBoss EAP 7, this configuration is no longer supported and must be removed.
8.6. Changes in SOAP with Attachments API for Java
Update the user-defined SOAP handlers to comply with the SAAJ 3.0 specification when migrating to JBoss EAP 8.0.
Additional resources