Appendix A. Editing Profiles with the Built-In Text Editor
Abstract
When you have a lot of changes and additions to make to a profile's configuration, it is usually more convenient to do this interactively, using the built-in text editor for profiles. The editor can be accessed by entering the
profile-edit
command with no arguments except for the profile's name (and optionally, version); or adding the --pid
option for editing OSGi PID properties; or adding the --resource
option for editing general resources.
A.1. Editing Agent Properties
Overview
This section explains how to use the built-in text editor to modify a profile's agent properties, which are mainly used to define what bundles and features are deployed by the profile.
Open the agent properties resource
To start editing a profile's agent properties using the built-in text editor, enter the following console command:
JBossFuse:karaf@root> profile-edit Profile [Version]
Where
Profile
is the name of the profile to edit and you can optionally specify the profile version, Version, as well. The text editor opens in the console window, showing the current profile name and version in the top-left corner of the Window. The bottom row of the editor screen summarizes the available editing commands and you can use the arrow keys to move about the screen.
Specifying feature repository locations
To specify the location of a feature repository, add a line in the following format:
repository.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
gives the location of a single feature repository (only one repository URL can be specified on a line).
Specifying deployed features
To specify a feature to deploy (which must be available from one of the specified feature repositories), add a line in the following format:
feature.ID=FeatureName
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and FeatureName
is the name of a feature.
Specifying deployed bundles
To specify a bundle to deploy, add a line in the following format:
bundle.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the bundle's location.
Note
A bundle entry can be used in combination with a
blueprint:
(or spring:
) URL handler to deploy a Blueprint XML resource (or a Spring XML resource) as an OSGi bundle.
Specifying bundle overrides
To specify a bundle override, add a line in the following format:
override.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the bundle's location.
Note
A bundle override is used to override a bundle installed by a feature, replacing it with a different version of the bundle. For example, this functionality is used by the patching system to install a patched bundle in a container.
Specifying deployed FABs
To specify a Fuse Application Bundle (FAB) to deploy, add a line in the following format:
fab.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the FAB's location.
Specifying etc/config.properties
properties
To specify Java system properties that affect the Apache Karaf container (analogous to editing
etc/config.properties
in a standalone container), add a line in the following format:
config.Property=Value
Specifying etc/system.properties
properties
To specify Java system properties that affect the bundles deployed in the container (analogous to editing
etc/system.properties
in a standalone container), add a line in the following format:
system.Property=Value
If the system property,
Property
, is already set at the JVM level (for example, through the --jvm-opts
option to the fabric:container-create
command), the preceding fabric:profile-edit
command will not override the JVM level setting. To override a JVM level setting, set the system property as follows:
system.karaf.override.Property=Value
Specifying libraries to add to Java runtime lib/
To specify a Java library to deploy (equivalent to adding a library to the
lib/
directory of the underlying Java runtime), add a line in the following format:
lib.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the library's location.
Specifying libraries to add to Java runtime lib/ext/
To specify a Java extension library to deploy (equivalent to adding a library to the
lib/ext/
directory of the underlying Java runtime), add a line in the following format:
ext.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the extension library's location.
Specifying libraries to add to Java runtime lib/endorsed/
To specify a Java endorsed library to deploy (equivalent to adding a library to the
lib/endorsed/
directory of the underlying Java runtime), add a line in the following format:
endorsed.ID=URL
Where
ID
is an arbitrary unique identifier and URL
specifies the endorsed library's location.
Example
To open the
mq-client
profile's agent properties for editing, enter the following console command:
JBossFuse:karaf@root> profile-edit mq-client
The text editor starts up, and you should see the following screen in the console window:
Profile:mq-client 1.0 L:1 C:1 # # Copyright (C) Red Hat, Inc. # http://redhat.com # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. # repository.activemq=mvn:org.apache.activemq/activemq-karaf/${version:activemq}/xml/features repository.karaf-standard=mvn\:org.apache.karaf.assemblies.features/standard/${version:karaf}/ xml/features ^X Quit ^S Save ^Z Undo ^R Redo ^G Go To ^F Find ^N Next ^P Previous
Type
^X
to quit the text editor and get back to the console prompt.