Getting Started Guide
For Use with Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1
Abstract
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1. About Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7
Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7 (JBoss EAP) is a middleware platform built on open standards and compliant with the Java Enterprise Edition 7 specification.
JBoss EAP includes a modular structure that allows service enabling only when required, improving startup speed.
The management console and management command-line interface (CLI) make editing XML configuration files unnecessary and add the ability to script and automate tasks.
JBoss EAP provides two operating modes for JBoss EAP instances: standalone server or managed domain. The standalone server operating mode represents running JBoss EAP as a single server instance. The managed domain operating mode allows for the management of multiple JBoss EAP instances from a single control point.
In addition, JBoss EAP includes APIs and development frameworks for quickly developing secure and scalable Java EE applications.
1.2. About the Getting Started Guide
The purpose of this guide is to get you up and running with JBoss EAP quickly. It covers administrative tasks such as basic installation, management, and configuration for JBoss EAP. This guide also helps developers get started writing Java EE 7 applications by using the JBoss EAP quickstarts.
To learn more, see the entire JBoss EAP documentation suite.
Chapter 2. Administering JBoss EAP
2.1. Downloading and Installing JBoss EAP
This guide provides basic instructions for downloading and installing JBoss EAP using the ZIP installation, which is platform independent.
See the Installation Guide for additional details, including instructions for installing JBoss EAP using the graphical installer or RPM package installation methods.
2.1.1. Installation Prerequisites
Verify that the following prerequisites have been met before installing JBoss EAP.
Common Prerequisites
- Your system is supported according to the JBoss EAP 7 supported configurations.
- Your system is up-to-date with Red Hat issued updates and errata.
ZIP Installation Prerequisites
- The user who will run JBoss EAP has read and write access for the installation directory.
- The desired Java development kit has been installed.
-
For Hewlett-Packard HP-UX, an
unzip
utility has been installed. -
For Windows Server, the
JAVA_HOME
andPATH
environment variables have been set.
2.1.2. Download JBoss EAP
The JBoss EAP ZIP file is available from the Red Hat Customer Portal. The ZIP file installation is platform-independent.
- Log in to the Red Hat Customer Portal.
- Click Downloads.
- Click Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform in the Product Downloads list.
- In the Version drop-down menu, select 7.1.
- Find Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1.0 in the list and click the Download link.
2.1.3. Install JBoss EAP
Once the JBoss EAP ZIP installation file has been downloaded, it can be installed by extracting the package contents.
If necessary, move the ZIP file to the server and location where JBoss EAP should be installed.
NoteThe user who will be running JBoss EAP must have read and write access to this directory.
Extract the ZIP archive.
$ unzip jboss-eap-7.1.0.zip
NoteFor Windows Server, right-click the ZIP file and select Extract All.
The directory created by extracting the ZIP archive is the top-level directory for the JBoss EAP installation. This is referred to as EAP_HOME
.
2.2. Starting and Stopping JBoss EAP
2.2.1. Starting JBoss EAP
JBoss EAP is supported on Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Windows Server, Oracle Solaris, and Hewlett-Packard HP-UX, and runs in either a standalone server or managed domain operating mode. The specific command to start JBoss EAP depends on the underlying platform and the desired operating mode.
Servers are initially started in a suspended state and will not accept any requests until all required services have started, at which time the servers are placed into a normal running state and can start accepting requests.
Start JBoss EAP as a Standalone Server
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh
For Windows Server, use the EAP_HOME\bin\standalone.bat
script.
This startup script uses the EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.conf
file, or standalone.conf.bat
for Windows Server, to set some default preferences, such as JVM options. You can customize the settings in this file.
JBoss EAP uses the standalone.xml
configuration file by default, but can be started using a different one. For details on the available standalone configuration files and how to use them, see the Standalone Server Configuration Files section.
For a complete listing of all available startup script arguments and their purposes, use the --help
argument or see the Server Runtime Arguments section.
Start JBoss EAP in a Managed Domain
The domain controller must be started before the servers in any of the server groups in the domain. Use this script to first start the domain controller, and then for each associated host controller.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/domain.sh
For Windows Server, use the EAP_HOME\bin\domain.bat
script.
This startup script uses the EAP_HOME/bin/domain.conf
file, or domain.conf.bat
for Windows Server, to set some default preferences, such as JVM options. You can customize the settings in this file.
JBoss EAP uses the host.xml
host configuration file by default, but can be started using a different one. For details on the available managed domain configuration files and how to use them, see the Managed Domain Configuration Files section.
When setting up a managed domain, additional arguments will need to be passed into the startup script. For a complete listing of all available startup script arguments and their purposes, use the --help
argument or see the Server Runtime Arguments section.
2.2.2. Stopping JBoss EAP
The way that you stop JBoss EAP depends on how it was started.
Stop an Interactive Instance of JBoss EAP
Press Ctrl+C
in the terminal where JBoss EAP was started.
Stop a Background Instance of JBoss EAP
Use the management CLI to connect to the running instance and shut down the server.
Launch the management CLI.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh --connect
Issue the
shutdown
command.shutdown
When running in a managed domain, you must specify the host name to shut down by using the --host
argument with the shutdown
command.
2.3. JBoss EAP Management
JBoss EAP uses a simplified configuration, with one configuration file per standalone server or managed domain. Default configuration for a standalone server is stored in the EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
file and default configuration for a managed domain is stored in the EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/domain.xml
file. Additionally, the default configuration for a host controller is stored in the EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/host.xml
file.
JBoss EAP can be configured using the command-line management CLI, web-based management console, Java API, or HTTP API. Changes made using these management interfaces persist automatically, and the XML configuration files are overwritten by the Management API. The management CLI and management console are the preferred methods, and it is not recommended to edit the XML configuration files manually.
2.3.1. Management Users
The default JBoss EAP configuration provides local authentication so that a user can access the management CLI on the local host without requiring authentication.
However, you must add a management user if you want to access the management CLI remotely or use the management console, which is considered remote access even if the traffic originates on the local host. If you attempt to access the management console before adding a management user, you will receive an error message.
If JBoss EAP is installed using the graphical installer, then a management user is created during the installation process.
This guide covers simple user management for JBoss EAP using the add-user
script, which is a utility for adding new users to the properties files for out-of-the-box authentication.
For more advanced authentication and authorization options, such as LDAP or Role-Based Access Control (RBAC), see the Core Management Authentication section of the JBoss EAP Security Architecture.
2.3.1.1. Adding a Management User
Run the
add-user
utility script and follow the prompts.$ EAP_HOME/bin/add-user.sh
NoteFor Windows Server, use the
EAP_HOME\bin\add-user.bat
script.Press
ENTER
to select the default optiona
to add a management user.This user will be added to the ManagementRealm and will be authorized to perform management operations using the management console or management CLI. The other choice,
b
, adds a user to the ApplicationRealm, which is used for applications and provides no particular permissions.Enter the desired username and password. You will be prompted to confirm the password.
NoteUser names can only contain the following characters, in any number and in any order:
- Alphanumeric characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9)
- Dashes (-), periods (.), commas (,), at sign (@)
- Backslash (\)
- Equals (=)
By default, JBoss EAP allows weak passwords but will issue a warning.
See the Setting Add-User Utility Password Restrictions section of the JBoss EAP Configuration Guide for details on changing this default behavior.
-
Enter a comma-separated list of groups to which the user belongs. If you do not want the user to belong to any groups, press
ENTER
to leave it blank. -
Review the information and enter
yes
to confirm. Determine whether this user represents a remote JBoss EAP server instance. For a basic management user, enter
no
.One type of user that may need to be added to the ManagementRealm is a user representing another instance of JBoss EAP, which must be able to authenticate to join as a member of a cluster. If this is the case, then answer
yes
to this prompt and you will be given a hashed secret value representing the user’s password, which will need to be added to a different configuration file.
Users can also be created non-interactively by passing parameters to the add-user
script. This approach is not recommended on shared systems, because the passwords will be visible in log and history files. For more information, see Running the Add-User Utility Non-Interactively.
2.3.1.2. Running the Add-User Utility Non-Interactively
You can run the add-user
script non-interactively by passing in arguments on the command line. At a minimum, the username and password must be provided.
This approach is not recommended on shared systems, because the passwords will be visible in log and history files.
Create a User Belonging to Multiple Groups
The following command adds a management user, mgmtuser1
, with the guest
and mgmtgroup
groups.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/add-user.sh -u 'mgmtuser1' -p 'password1!' -g 'guest,mgmtgroup'
Specify an Alternative Properties File
By default, user and group information created using the add-user
script are stored in properties files located in the server configuration directory.
User information is stored in the following properties files:
-
EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/mgmt-users.properties
-
EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/mgmt-users.properties
Group information is stored in the following properties files:
-
EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/mgmt-groups.properties
-
EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/mgmt-groups.properties
These default directories and properties file names can be overridden. The following command adds a new user, specifying a different name and location for the user properties files.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/add-user.sh -u 'mgmtuser2' -p 'password1!' -sc '/path/to/standaloneconfig/' -dc '/path/to/domainconfig/' -up 'newname.properties'
The new user was added to the user properties files located at /path/to/standaloneconfig/newname.properties
and /path/to/domainconfig/newname.properties
. Note that these files must already exist or you will see an error.
For a complete listing of all available add-user
arguments and their purposes, use the --help
argument or see the Add-User Utility Arguments section.
2.3.2. Management Interfaces
2.3.2.1. Management CLI
The management command-line interface (CLI) is a command-line administration tool for JBoss EAP.
Use the management CLI to start and stop servers, deploy and undeploy applications, configure system settings, and perform other administrative tasks. Operations can be performed in batch mode, allowing multiple tasks to be run as a group.
Many common terminal commands are available, such as ls
, cd
, and pwd
. The management CLI also supports tab completion.
For detailed information on using the management CLI, including commands and operations, syntax, and running in batch mode, see the JBoss EAP Management CLI Guide.
Launch the Management CLI
$ EAP_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh
For Windows Server, use the EAP_HOME\bin\jboss-cli.bat
script.
Connect to a Running Server
connect
Or you can launch the management CLI and connect in one step by using the EAP_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh --connect
command.
Display Help
Use the following command for general help.
help
Use the --help
flag on a command to receive instructions on using that specific command. For instance, to receive information on using deploy
, the following command is executed.
deploy --help
Quit the Management CLI
quit
View System Settings
The following command uses the read-attribute
operation to display whether the example datasource is enabled.
/subsystem=datasources/data-source=ExampleDS:read-attribute(name=enabled) { "outcome" => "success", "result" => true }
When running in a managed domain, you must specify which profile to update by preceding the command with /profile=PROFILE_NAME
.
/profile=default/subsystem=datasources/data-source=ExampleDS:read-attribute(name=enabled)
Update System Settings
The following command uses the write-attribute
operation to disable the example datasource.
/subsystem=datasources/data-source=ExampleDS:write-attribute(name=enabled,value=false)
Start Servers
The management CLI can also be used to start and stop servers when running in a managed domain.
/host=HOST_NAME/server-config=server-one:start
2.3.2.2. Management Console
The management console is a web-based administration tool for JBoss EAP.
Use the management console to start and stop servers, deploy and undeploy applications, tune system settings, and make persistent modifications to the server configuration. The management console also has the ability to perform administrative tasks, with live notifications when any changes performed by the current user require the server instance to be restarted or reloaded.
In a managed domain, server instances and server groups in the same domain can be centrally managed from the management console of the domain controller.
For a JBoss EAP instance running on the local host using the default management port, the management console can be accessed through a web browser at http://localhost:9990/console/App.html. You will need to authenticate with a user that has permissions to access the management console.
The management console provides the following tabs for navigating and managing your JBoss EAP standalone server or managed domain.
- Home
- Learn how to accomplish several common configuration and management tasks. Take a tour to become familiar with the JBoss EAP management console.
- Deployments
- Add, remove, and enable deployments. In a managed domain, assign deployments to server groups.
- Configuration
- Configure available subsystems, which provide capabilities such as web services, messaging, or high availability. In a managed domain, manage the profiles that contain different subsystem configurations.
- Runtime
- View runtime information, such as server status, JVM usage, and server logs. In a managed domain, manage your hosts, server groups, and servers.
- Access Control
- Assign roles to users and groups when using Role-Based Access Control.
- Patching
- Apply patches to your JBoss EAP instances.
To take a tour of the management console, click the Take a Tour! link on the management console home page.
2.3.3. Configuration Files
2.3.3.1. Standalone Server Configuration Files
The standalone configuration files are located in the EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/
directory. A separate file exists for each of the five predefined profiles (default, ha, full, full-ha, load-balancer).
Configuration File | Purpose |
---|---|
| This standalone configuration file is the default configuration that is used when you start your standalone server. It contains all information about the server, including subsystems, networking, deployments, socket bindings, and other configurable details. It does not provide the subsystems necessary for messaging or high availability. |
|
This standalone configuration file includes all of the default subsystems and adds the |
|
This standalone configuration file includes all of the default subsystems and adds the |
| This standalone configuration file includes support for every possible subsystem, including those for messaging and high availability. |
| This standalone configuration file includes the minimum subsystems necessary to use the built-in mod_cluster front-end load balancer to load balance other JBoss EAP instances. |
By default, starting JBoss EAP as a standalone server uses the standalone.xml
file. To start JBoss EAP with a different configuration, use the --server-config
argument. For example,
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh --server-config=standalone-full.xml
2.3.3.2. Managed Domain Configuration Files
The managed domain configuration files are located in the EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/
directory.
Configuration File | Purpose |
---|---|
| This is the main configuration file for a managed domain. Only the domain master reads this file. This file contains the configurations for all of the profiles (default, ha, full, full-ha, load-balancer). |
|
This file includes configuration details specific to a physical host in a managed domain, such as network interfaces, socket bindings, the name of the host, and other host-specific details. The |
| This file includes only the configuration details necessary to run a server as the master domain controller. |
| This file includes only the configuration details necessary to run a server as a managed domain host controller. |
By default, starting JBoss EAP in a managed domain uses the host.xml
file. To start JBoss EAP with a different configuration, use the --host-config
argument. For example,
$ EAP_HOME/bin/domain.sh --host-config=host-master.xml
2.3.3.3. Backing Up Configuration Data
In order to later restore the JBoss EAP server configuration, items in the following locations should be backed up:
EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/
- Back up the entire directory to save user data, server configuration, and logging settings for standalone servers.
EAP_HOME/domain/configuration/
- Back up the entire directory to save user and profile data, domain and host configuration, and logging settings for managed domains.
EAP_HOME/modules/
- Back up any custom modules.
EAP_HOME/welcome-content/
- Back up any custom welcome content.
EAP_HOME/bin/
- Back up any custom scripts or startup configuration files.
2.3.3.4. Configuration File Snapshots
To assist in the maintenance and management of the server, JBoss EAP creates a timestamped version of the original configuration file at the time of startup. Any additional configuration changes made by management operations will result in the original file being automatically backed up, and a working copy of the instance being preserved for reference and rollback. Additionally, configuration snapshots can be taken, which are point-in-time copies of the current server configuration. These snapshots can be saved and loaded by an administrator.
The following examples use the standalone.xml
file, but the same process applies to the domain.xml
and host.xml
files.
Take a Snapshot
Use the management CLI to take a snapshot of the current configurations.
:take-snapshot
{
"outcome" => "success",
"result" => "EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone_xml_history/snapshot/20151022-133109702standalone.xml"
}
List Snapshots
Use the management CLI to list all snapshots that have been taken.
:list-snapshots
{
"outcome" => "success",
"result" => {
"directory" => "EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone_xml_history/snapshot",
"names" => [
"20151022-133109702standalone.xml",
"20151022-132715958standalone.xml"
]
}
}
Delete a Snapshot
Use the management CLI to delete a snapshot.
:delete-snapshot(name=20151022-133109702standalone.xml)
Start the Server with a Snapshot
The server can be started using a snapshot or an automatically-saved version of the configuration.
-
Navigate to the
EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone_xml_history
directory and identify the snapshot or saved configuration file to be loaded. Start the server and point to the selected configuration file. Pass in the file path relative to the configuration directory,
EAP_HOME/standalone/configuration/
.$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh --server-config=standalone_xml_history/snapshot/20151022-133109702standalone.xml
When running in a managed domain, use the --host-config
argument instead to specify the configuration file.
2.3.3.5. Property Replacement
JBoss EAP allows you to use expressions to define replaceable properties in place of literal values in the configuration. Expressions use the format ${PARAMETER:DEFAULT_VALUE}
. If the specified parameter is set, then the parameter’s value will be used. Otherwise, the default value provided will be used.
The supported sources for resolving expressions are system properties, environment variables, and the vault. For deployments only, the source can be properties listed in a META-INF/jboss.properties
file in the deployment archive. For deployment types that support subdeployments, the resolution is scoped to all subdeployments if the properties file is in the outer deployment, for example the EAR. If the properties file is in the subdeployment, then the resolution is scoped just to that subdeployment.
The example below from the standalone.xml
configuration file sets the inet-address
for the public
interface to 127.0.0.1
unless the jboss.bind.address
parameter is set.
<interface name="public"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address:127.0.0.1}"/> </interface>
The jboss.bind.address
parameter can be set when starting EAP as a standalone server with the following command:
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh -Djboss.bind.address=IP_ADDRESS
Nested Expressions
Expressions can be nested, which allows for more advanced use of expressions in place of fixed values. The format of a nested expression is like that of a normal expression, but one expression is embedded in the other, for example:
${SYSTEM_VALUE_1${SYSTEM_VALUE_2}}
Nested expressions are evaluated recursively, so the inner expression is first evaluated, then the outer expression is evaluated. Expressions may also be recursive, where an expression resolves to another expression, which is then resolved. Nested expressions are permitted anywhere that expressions are permitted, with the exception of management CLI commands.
An example of where a nested expression might be used is if the password used in a datasource definition is masked. The configuration for the datasource might have the following line:
<password>${VAULT::ds_ExampleDS::password::1}</password>
The value of ds_ExampleDS
could be replaced with a system property (datasource_name
) using a nested expression. The configuration for the datasource could instead have the following line:
<password>${VAULT::${datasource_name}::password::1}</password>
JBoss EAP would first evaluate the expression ${datasource_name}
, then input this to the larger expression and evaluate the resulting expression. The advantage of this configuration is that the name of the datasource is abstracted from the fixed configuration.
Descriptor-Based Property Replacement
Application configuration, such as datasource connection parameters, typically varies between development, testing, and production environments. This variance is sometimes accommodated by build system scripts, as the Java EE specification does not contain a method to externalize these configurations. With JBoss EAP, you can use descriptor-based property replacement to manage configuration externally.
Descriptor-based property replacement substitutes properties based on descriptors, allowing you to remove assumptions about the environment from the application and the build chain. Environment-specific configurations can be specified in deployment descriptors rather than annotations or build system scripts. You can provide configuration in files or as parameters at the command line.
There are several flags in the ee
subsystem that control whether property replacement is applied.
JBoss-specific descriptor replacement is controlled by the jboss-descriptor-property-replacement
flag and is enabled by default. When enabled, properties can be replaced in the following deployment descriptors:
-
jboss-ejb3.xml
-
jboss-app.xml
-
jboss-web.xml
-
*-jms.xml
-
*-ds.xml
The following management CLI command can be used to enable or disable property replacement in JBoss-specific descriptors:
/subsystem=ee:write-attribute(name="jboss-descriptor-property-replacement",value=VALUE)
Java EE descriptor replacement controlled by the spec-descriptor-property-replacement
flag and is disabled by default. When enabled, properties can be replaced in the following deployment descriptors:
-
ejb-jar.xml
-
persistence.xml
-
application.xml
-
web.xml
The following management CLI command can be used to enable or disable property replacement in Java EE descriptors:
/subsystem=ee:write-attribute(name="spec-descriptor-property-replacement",value=VALUE)
2.4. Network and Port Configuration
2.4.1. Interfaces
JBoss EAP references named interfaces throughout the configuration. This allows the configuration to reference individual interface declarations with logical names, rather than requiring the full details of the interface at each use.
This also allows for easier configuration in a managed domain, where network interface details can vary across multiple machines. Each server instance can correspond to a logical name group.
The standalone.xml
, domain.xml
, and host.xml
files all include interface declarations. There are several preconfigured interface names, depending on which default configuration is used. The management
interface can be used for all components and services that require the management layer, including the HTTP management endpoint. The public
interface can be used for all application-related network communications. The unsecure
interface is used for IIOP sockets in the standard configuration. The private
interface is used for JGroups sockets in the standard configuration.
2.4.1.1. Default Interface Configurations
<interfaces> <interface name="management"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address.management:127.0.0.1}"/> </interface> <interface name="public"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address:127.0.0.1}"/> </interface> <interface name="private"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address.private:127.0.0.1}"/> </interface> <interface name="unsecure"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address.unsecure:127.0.0.1}"/> </interface> </interfaces>
By default, JBoss EAP binds these interfaces to 127.0.0.1
, but these values can be overridden at runtime by setting the appropriate property. For example, the inet-address
of the public
interface can be set when starting JBoss EAP as a standalone server with the following command.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh -Djboss.bind.address=IP_ADDRESS
Alternatively, you can use the -b
switch on the server start command line. For more information about server start options, see Server Runtime Arguments.
If you modify the default network interfaces or ports that JBoss EAP uses, you must also remember to change any scripts that use the modified interfaces or ports. These include JBoss EAP service scripts, as well as remembering to specify the correct interface and port when accessing the management console or management CLI.
2.4.1.2. Configuring Interfaces
Network interfaces are declared by specifying a logical name and selection criteria for the physical interface. The selection criteria can reference a wildcard address or specify a set of one or more characteristics that an interface or address must have in order to be a valid match. For a listing of all available interface selection criteria, see the Interface Attributes section.
Interfaces can be configured using the management console or the management CLI. Below are several examples of adding and updating interfaces. The management CLI command is shown first, followed by the corresponding configuration XML.
Add an Interface with a NIC Value
Add a new interface with a NIC value of eth0
.
/interface=external:add(nic=eth0)
<interface name="external"> <nic name="eth0"/> </interface>
Add an Interface with Several Conditional Values
Add a new interface that matches any interface/address on the correct subnet if it is up, supports multicast, and is not point-to-point.
/interface=default:add(subnet-match=192.168.0.0/16,up=true,multicast=true,not={point-to-point=true})
<interface name="default"> <subnet-match value="192.168.0.0/16"/> <up/> <multicast/> <not> <point-to-point/> </not> </interface>
Update an Interface Attribute
Update the public
interface’s default inet-address
value, keeping the jboss.bind.address
property to allow for this value to be set at runtime.
/interface=public:write-attribute(name=inet-address,value="${jboss.bind.address:192.168.0.0}")
<interface name="public"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address:192.168.0.0}"/> </interface>
Add an Interface to a Server in a Managed Domain
/host=HOST_NAME/server-config=SERVER_NAME/interface=INTERFACE_NAME:add(inet-address=127.0.0.1)
<servers> <server name="SERVER_NAME" group="main-server-group"> <interfaces> <interface name="INTERFACE_NAME"> <inet-address value="127.0.0.1"/> </interface> </interfaces> </server> </servers>
2.4.2. Socket Bindings
Socket bindings and socket binding groups allow you to define network ports and their relationship to the networking interfaces required for your JBoss EAP configuration. A socket binding is a named configuration for a socket. A socket binding group is a collection of socket binding declarations that are grouped under a logical name.
This allows other sections of the configuration to reference socket bindings by their logical name, rather than requiring the full details of the socket configuration at each use.
The declarations for these named configurations can be found in the standalone.xml
and domain.xml
configuration files. A standalone server contains only one socket binding group, while a managed domain can contain multiple groups. You can create a socket binding group for each server group in the managed domain, or share a socket binding group between multiple server groups.
The ports JBoss EAP uses by default depend on which socket binding groups are used and the requirements of your individual deployments.
There are three types of socket bindings that can be defined in a socket binding group in the JBoss EAP configuration:
- Inbound Socket Bindings
The
socket-binding
element is used to configure inbound socket bindings for the JBoss EAP server. The default JBoss EAP configurations provide several preconfiguredsocket-binding
elements, for example, for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. Another example can be found in the Broadcast Groups section of Configuring Messaging for JBoss EAP.Attributes for this element can be found in the Inbound Socket Binding Attributes table.
- Remote Outbound Socket Bindings
The
remote-destination-outbound-socket-binding
element is used to configure outbound socket bindings for destinations that are remote to the JBoss EAP server. The default JBoss EAP configurations provide an example remote destination socket binding that can be used for a mail server. Another example can be found in the Using the Integrated Artemis Resource Adapter for Remote Connections section of Configuring Messaging for JBoss EAP.Attributes for this element can be found in the Remote Outbound Socket Binding Attributes table.
- Local Outbound Socket Bindings
The
local-destination-outbound-socket-binding
element is used to configure outbound socket bindings for destinations that are local to the JBoss EAP server. This type of socket binding is not expected to be commonly used.Attributes for this element can be found in the Local Outbound Socket Binding Attributes table.
2.4.2.1. Management Ports
Management ports were consolidated in JBoss EAP 7. By default, JBoss EAP 7 uses port 9990
for both native management, used by the management CLI, and HTTP management, used by the web-based management console. Port 9999
, which was used as the native management port in JBoss EAP 6, is no longer used but can still be enabled if desired.
If HTTPS is enabled for the management console, then port 9993
is used by default.
2.4.2.2. Default Socket Bindings
JBoss EAP ships with a socket binding group for each of the five predefined profiles (default, ha, full, full-ha, load-balancer).
For detailed information about the default socket bindings, such as default ports and descriptions, see the Default Socket Bindings section.
If you modify the default network interfaces or ports that JBoss EAP uses, you must also remember to change any scripts that use the modified interfaces or ports. These include JBoss EAP service scripts, as well as remembering to specify the correct interface and port when accessing the management console or management CLI.
Standalone Server
When running as a standalone server, only one socket binding group is defined per configuration file. Each standalone configuration file (standalone.xml
, standalone-ha.xml
, standalone-full.xml
, standalone-full-ha.xml
, standalone-load-balancer.xml
) defines socket bindings for the technologies used by its corresponding profile.
For example, the default standalone configuration file (standalone.xml
) specifies the below socket bindings.
<socket-binding-group name="standard-sockets" default-interface="public" port-offset="${jboss.socket.binding.port-offset:0}"> <socket-binding name="management-http" interface="management" port="${jboss.management.http.port:9990}"/> <socket-binding name="management-https" interface="management" port="${jboss.management.https.port:9993}"/> <socket-binding name="ajp" port="${jboss.ajp.port:8009}"/> <socket-binding name="http" port="${jboss.http.port:8080}"/> <socket-binding name="https" port="${jboss.https.port:8443}"/> <socket-binding name="txn-recovery-environment" port="4712"/> <socket-binding name="txn-status-manager" port="4713"/> <outbound-socket-binding name="mail-smtp"> <remote-destination host="localhost" port="25"/> </outbound-socket-binding> </socket-binding-group>
Managed Domain
When running in a managed domain, all socket binding groups are defined in the domain.xml
file. There are five predefined socket binding groups:
-
standard-sockets
-
ha-sockets
-
full-sockets
-
full-ha-sockets
-
load-balancer-sockets
Each socket binding group specifies socket bindings for the technologies used by its corresponding profile. For example, the full-ha-sockets
socket binding group defines several jgroups
socket bindings, which are used by the full-ha profile for high availability.
<socket-binding-groups> <socket-binding-group name="standard-sockets" default-interface="public"> <!-- Needed for server groups using the 'default' profile --> <socket-binding name="ajp" port="${jboss.ajp.port:8009}"/> <socket-binding name="http" port="${jboss.http.port:8080}"/> <socket-binding name="https" port="${jboss.https.port:8443}"/> <socket-binding name="txn-recovery-environment" port="4712"/> <socket-binding name="txn-status-manager" port="4713"/> <outbound-socket-binding name="mail-smtp"> <remote-destination host="localhost" port="25"/> </outbound-socket-binding> </socket-binding-group> <socket-binding-group name="ha-sockets" default-interface="public"> <!-- Needed for server groups using the 'ha' profile --> ... </socket-binding-group> <socket-binding-group name="full-sockets" default-interface="public"> <!-- Needed for server groups using the 'full' profile --> ... </socket-binding-group> <socket-binding-group name="full-ha-sockets" default-interface="public"> <!-- Needed for server groups using the 'full-ha' profile --> <socket-binding name="ajp" port="${jboss.ajp.port:8009}"/> <socket-binding name="http" port="${jboss.http.port:8080}"/> <socket-binding name="https" port="${jboss.https.port:8443}"/> <socket-binding name="iiop" interface="unsecure" port="3528"/> <socket-binding name="iiop-ssl" interface="unsecure" port="3529"/> <socket-binding name="jgroups-mping" interface="private" port="0" multicast-address="${jboss.default.multicast.address:230.0.0.4}" multicast-port="45700"/> <socket-binding name="jgroups-tcp" interface="private" port="7600"/> <socket-binding name="jgroups-udp" interface="private" port="55200" multicast-address="${jboss.default.multicast.address:230.0.0.4}" multicast-port="45688"/> <socket-binding name="modcluster" port="0" multicast-address="224.0.1.105" multicast-port="23364"/> <socket-binding name="txn-recovery-environment" port="4712"/> <socket-binding name="txn-status-manager" port="4713"/> <outbound-socket-binding name="mail-smtp"> <remote-destination host="localhost" port="25"/> </outbound-socket-binding> </socket-binding-group> <socket-binding-group name="load-balancer-sockets" default-interface="public"> <!-- Needed for server groups using the 'load-balancer' profile --> ... </socket-binding-group> </socket-binding-groups>
The socket configuration for the management interfaces is defined in the domain controller’s host.xml
file.
2.4.2.3. Configuring Socket Bindings
When defining a socket binding, you can configure the port
and interface
attributes, as well as multicast settings such as multicast-address
and multicast-port
. For details on all available socket bindings attributes, see the Socket Binding Attributes section.
Socket bindings can be configured using the management console or the management CLI. The following steps go through adding a socket binding group, adding a socket binding, and configuring socket binding settings using the management CLI.
Add a new socket binding group. Note that this step cannot be performed when running as a standalone server.
/socket-binding-group=new-sockets:add(default-interface=public)
Add a socket binding.
/socket-binding-group=new-sockets/socket-binding=new-socket-binding:add(port=1234)
Change the socket binding to use an interface other than the default, which is set by the socket binding group.
/socket-binding-group=new-sockets/socket-binding=new-socket-binding:write-attribute(name=interface,value=unsecure)
The following example shows how the XML configuration may look after the above steps have been completed.
<socket-binding-groups> ... <socket-binding-group name="new-sockets" default-interface="public"> <socket-binding name="new-socket-binding" interface="unsecure" port="1234"/> </socket-binding-group> </socket-binding-groups>
2.4.2.4. Port Offsets
A port offset is a numeric offset value added to all port values specified in the socket binding group for that server. This allows the server to inherit the port values defined in its socket binding group, with an offset to ensure that it does not conflict with any other servers on the same host. For instance, if the HTTP port of the socket binding group is 8080
, and a server uses a port offset of 100
, then its HTTP port is 8180
.
Below is an example of setting a port offset of 250
for a server in a managed domain using the management CLI.
/host=master/server-config=server-two/:write-attribute(name=socket-binding-port-offset,value=250)
Port offsets can be used for servers in a managed domain and for running multiple standalone servers on the same host.
You can pass in a port offset when starting a standalone server using the jboss.socket.binding.port-offset
property.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh -Djboss.socket.binding.port-offset=100
2.4.3. IPv6 Addresses
By default, JBoss EAP is configured to run using IPv4 addresses. The steps below show how to configure JBoss EAP to run using IPv6 addresses.
Configure the JVM Stack for IPv6 Addresses
Update the startup configuration to prefer IPv6 addresses.
Open the startup configuration file.
-
When running as a standalone server, edit the
EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.conf
file (orstandalone.conf.bat
for Windows Server). -
When running in a managed domain, edit the
EAP_HOME/bin/domain.conf
file (ordomain.conf.bat
for Windows Server).
-
When running as a standalone server, edit the
Set the
java.net.preferIPv4Stack
property tofalse
.-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=false
Append the
java.net.preferIPv6Addresses
property and set it totrue
.-Djava.net.preferIPv6Addresses=true
The following example shows how the JVM options in the startup configuration file may look after making the above changes.
# Specify options to pass to the Java VM. # if [ "x$JAVA_OPTS" = "x" ]; then JAVA_OPTS="-Xms1303m -Xmx1303m -Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=false" JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Djboss.modules.system.pkgs=$JBOSS_MODULES_SYSTEM_PKGS -Djava.awt.headless=true" JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -Djava.net.preferIPv6Addresses=true" else
Update Interface Declarations for IPv6 Addresses
The default interface values in the configuration can be changed to IPv6 addresses. For example, the below management CLI command sets the management
interface to the IPv6 loopback address (::1
).
/interface=management:write-attribute(name=inet-address,value="${jboss.bind.address.management:[::1]}")
The following example shows how the XML configuration may look after running the above command.
<interfaces> <interface name="management"> <inet-address value="${jboss.bind.address.management:[::1]}"/> </interface> .... </interfaces>
2.5. Optimizing the JBoss EAP Server Configuration
Once you have installed the JBoss EAP server, and you have created a management user, Red Hat recommends that you optimize your server configuration.
Make sure you review information in the Performance Tuning Guide for information about how to optimize the server configuration to avoid common problems when deploying applications in a production environment. Common optimizations include setting ulimits, enabling garbage collection, creating Java heap dumps, and adjusting the thread pool size.
It is also a good idea to apply any existing patches for your release of the product. Each patch for EAP contains numerous bug fixes. For more information, see Patching JBoss EAP in the Patching and Upgrading Guide for JBoss EAP.
Chapter 3. Developing Applications Using JBoss EAP
3.1. Overview
This guide provides information on getting started developing applications by using Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio and the JBoss EAP 7 quickstart examples.
Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio is an Eclipse-based integrated development environment (IDE) that integrates JBoss application development plug-ins. JBoss Developer Studio can assist with your application development with the availability of JBoss-specific wizards and the ability to deploy applications to JBoss EAP servers. Many quickstart code examples are provided with JBoss EAP 7 to help users get started writing applications using different Java EE 7 technologies.
3.2. Setting up the Development Environment
It is recommended to use JBoss Developer Studio 11.0 or later with JBoss EAP 7.1.
Download and install JBoss Developer Studio.
For instructions, see Installing JBoss Developer Studio Stand-alone Using the Installer in the JBoss Developer Studio Installation Guide.
Set up the JBoss EAP server in JBoss Developer Studio.
For instructions, see Using Runtime Detection to Set Up JBoss EAP from within the IDE in the Getting Started with JBoss Developer Studio Tools guide.
3.3. Using the Quickstart Examples
The quickstart examples provided with JBoss EAP are Maven projects.
3.3.1. About Maven
Apache Maven is a distributed build automation tool used in Java application development to create, manage, and build software projects. Maven uses standard configuration files called Project Object Model (POM) files to define projects and manage the build process. POMs describe the module and component dependencies, build order, and targets for the resulting project packaging and output using an XML file. This ensures that the project is built in a correct and uniform manner.
Maven achieves this by using a repository. A Maven repository stores Java libraries, plug-ins, and other build artifacts. The default public repository is the Maven 2 Central Repository, but repositories can be private and internal within a company with a goal to share common artifacts among development teams. Repositories are also available from third-parties. For more information, see the Apache Maven project and the Introduction to Repositories guide.
JBoss EAP includes a Maven repository that contains many of the requirements that Java EE developers typically use to build applications on JBoss EAP.
For more information about how to use Maven with JBoss EAP, see Using Maven with JBoss EAP in the JBoss EAP Development Guide.
3.3.2. Using Maven with the Quickstarts
The artifacts and dependencies needed to build and deploy applications to JBoss EAP 7 are hosted on a public repository. Starting with the JBoss EAP 7 quickstarts, it is no longer necessary to configure your Maven settings.xml
file to use these repositories when building the quickstarts. The Maven repositories are now configured in the quickstart project POM files. This method of configuration is provided to make it easier to get started with the quickstarts, however, is generally not recommended for production projects because it can slow down your build.
Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio includes Maven, so there is no need to download and install it separately. It is recommended to use JBoss Developer Studio version 11.0 or later.
If you plan to use the Maven command line to build and deploy your applications, then you must first download Maven from the Apache Maven project and install it using the instructions provided in the Maven documentation.
3.3.3. Download and Run the Quickstarts
3.3.3.1. Download the Quickstarts
JBoss EAP comes with a comprehensive set of quickstart code examples designed to help users begin writing applications using various Java EE 7 technologies. The quickstarts can be downloaded from the Red Hat Customer Portal.
- Log in to the Red Hat Customer Portal.
- Click Downloads.
- In the Product Downloads list, click Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform.
- Select 7.1 in the Version drop-down menu.
- Find the Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1.0 Quickstarts entry in the table and click Download.
- Save the ZIP file to the desired directory.
- Extract the ZIP file.
3.3.3.2. Run the Quickstarts in JBoss Developer Studio
Once the quickstarts have been downloaded, they can be imported into JBoss Developer Studio and deployed to JBoss EAP.
Import a Quickstart into JBoss Developer Studio
Each quickstart ships with a POM file that contains its project and configuration information. Use this POM file to easily import the quickstart into JBoss Developer Studio.
If your quickstart project folder is located within the IDE workspace when you import it into JBoss Developer Studio, the IDE generates an invalid project name and WAR archive name. Be sure your quickstart project folder is located outside the IDE workspace before you begin.
- Start JBoss Developer Studio.
- Select File → Import.
Choose Maven → Existing Maven Projects, then click Next.
Figure 3.1. Import Existing Maven Projects
Browse to the desired quickstart’s directory (for example the
helloworld
quickstart), and click OK. The Projects list box is populated with thepom.xml
file of the selected quickstart project.Figure 3.2. Select Maven Projects
- Click Finish.
Run the helloworld Quickstart
Running the helloworld
quickstart is a simple way to verify that the JBoss EAP server is configured and running correctly.
- If you have not yet defined a server, add the JBoss EAP server to JBoss Developer Studio. See Using Runtime Detection to Set Up JBoss EAP from within the IDE in the Getting Started with JBoss Developer Studio Tools guide.
Right-click the helloworld project in the Project Explorer tab and select Run As → Run on Server.
Figure 3.3. Run As - Run on Server
Select the JBoss EAP 7.1 server from the server list and click Next.
Figure 3.4. Run on Server
The helloworld quickstart is already listed to be configured on the server. Click Finish to deploy the quickstart.
Figure 3.5. Modify Resources Configured on the Server
Verify the results.
-
In the Server tab, the JBoss EAP 7.1 server status changes to
Started
. The Console tab shows messages detailing the JBoss EAP server start and the
helloworld
quickstart deployment.WFLYUT0021: Registered web context: /helloworld WFLYSRV0010: Deployed "helloworld.war" (runtime-name : "helloworld.war")
-
The
helloworld
application is available at http://localhost:8080/helloworld and displays the textHello World!
.
-
In the Server tab, the JBoss EAP 7.1 server status changes to
For further details on the helloworld
quickstart, see Explore the helloworld Quickstart.
Run the bean-validation Quickstart
Some quickstarts, such as the bean-validation
quickstart, do not provide a user interface layer and instead provide Arquillian tests to demonstrate functionality.
-
Import the
bean-validation
quickstart into JBoss Developer Studio. - In the Servers tab, right-click on the server and choose Start to start the JBoss EAP server. If you do not see a Servers tab or have not yet defined a server, add the JBoss EAP server to JBoss Developer Studio. See Using Runtime Detection to Set Up JBoss EAP from within the IDE in the Getting Started with JBoss Developer Studio Tools guide.
-
Right-click on the
bean-validation
project in the Project Explorer tab and select Run As → Maven Build. Enter the following in the Goals input field and then click Run.
clean verify -Parq-remote
Figure 3.6. Edit Configuration
Verify the results.
The Console tab shows the results of the
bean-validation
Arquillian tests:------------------------------------------------------- T E S T S ------------------------------------------------------- Running org.jboss.as.quickstarts.bean_validation.test.MemberValidationTest Tests run: 5, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 2.189 sec Results : Tests run: 5, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0 [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [INFO] BUILD SUCCESS [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
3.3.3.3. Run the Quickstarts from the Command Line
You can easily build and deploy the quickstarts from the command line using Maven. If you do not yet have Maven installed, see the Apache Maven project to download and install it.
A README.md
file is provided at the root directory of the quickstarts that contains general information about system requirements, configuring Maven, adding users, and running the quickstarts.
Each quickstart also contains its own README.md
file that provides the specific instructions and Maven commands to run that quickstart.
Run the helloworld Quickstart from the Command Line
-
Review the
README.md
file in the root directory of the helloworld quickstart. Start the JBoss EAP server.
$ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh
- Navigate to the helloworld quickstart directory.
Build and deploy the quickstart using the Maven command provided in the quickstart’s
README.md
file.$ mvn clean install wildfly:deploy
-
The helloworld application is now available at http://localhost:8080/helloworld and displays the text
Hello World!
.
3.4. Review the Quickstart Examples
3.4.1. Explore the helloworld Quickstart
The helloworld
quickstart shows you how to deploy a simple servlet to JBoss EAP. The business logic is encapsulated in a service, which is provided as a Contexts and Dependency Injection (CDI) bean and injected into the Servlet. This quickstart is a starting point to be sure you have configured and started your server properly.
Detailed instructions to build and deploy this quickstart using the command line can be found in the README.html
file at the root of the helloworld
quickstart directory. This topic shows you how to use Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio to run the quickstart and assumes you have installed Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio, configured Maven, and imported and successfully run the helloworld
quickstart.
Prerequisites
- Install JBoss Developer Studio. For instructions, see Installing JBoss Developer Studio Stand-alone Using the Installer in the JBoss Developer Studio Installation Guide.
-
Run the
helloworld
quickstart. For instructions, see Run the Quickstarts in JBoss Developer Studio. -
Verify that the
helloworld
quickstart was successfully deployed to JBoss EAP by opening a web browser and accessing the application at http://localhost:8080/helloworld.
Examine the Directory Structure
The code for the helloworld
quickstart can be found in the QUICKSTART_HOME/helloworld/
directory. The helloworld
quickstart is comprised of a Servlet and a CDI bean. It also contains a beans.xml
file in the application’s WEB-INF/
directory that has a version number of 1.1 and a bean-discovery-mode
of all
. This marker file identifies the WAR as a bean archive and tells JBoss EAP to look for beans in this application and to activate the CDI.
The src/main/webapp/
directory contains the files for the quickstart. All the configuration files for this example are located in the WEB-INF/
directory within src/main/webapp/
, including the beans.xml
file. The src/main/webapp/
directory also includes an index.html
file, which uses a simple meta refresh to redirect the user’s browser to the Servlet, which is located at http://localhost:8080/helloworld/HelloWorld. The quickstart does not require a web.xml
file.
Examine the Code
The package declaration and imports have been excluded from these listings. The complete listing is available in the quickstart source code.
Review the
HelloWorldServlet
code.The
HelloWorldServlet.java
file is located in thesrc/main/java/org/jboss/as/quickstarts/helloworld/
directory. This servlet sends the information to the browser.Example: HelloWorldServlet Class Code
42 @SuppressWarnings("serial") 43 @WebServlet("/HelloWorld") 44 public class HelloWorldServlet extends HttpServlet { 45 46 static String PAGE_HEADER = "<html><head><title>helloworld</title></head><body>"; 47 48 static String PAGE_FOOTER = "</body></html>"; 49 50 @Inject 51 HelloService helloService; 52 53 @Override 54 protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws ServletException, IOException { 55 resp.setContentType("text/html"); 56 PrintWriter writer = resp.getWriter(); 57 writer.println(PAGE_HEADER); 58 writer.println("<h1>" + helloService.createHelloMessage("World") + "</h1>"); 59 writer.println(PAGE_FOOTER); 60 writer.close(); 61 } 62 63 }
Table 3.1. HelloWorldServlet Details Line Note 43
All you need to do is add the
@WebServlet
annotation and provide a mapping to a URL used to access the servlet.46-48
Every web page needs correctly formed HTML. This quickstart uses static Strings to write the minimum header and footer output.
50-51
These lines inject the HelloService CDI bean which generates the actual message. As long as we don’t alter the API of HelloService, this approach allows us to alter the implementation of HelloService at a later date without changing the view layer.
58
This line calls into the service to generate the message "Hello World", and write it out to the HTTP request.
Review the
HelloService
code.The
HelloService.java
file is located in thesrc/main/java/org/jboss/as/quickstarts/helloworld/
directory. This service simply returns a message. No XML or annotation registration is required.Example: HelloService Class Code
public class HelloService { String createHelloMessage(String name) { return "Hello " + name + "!"; } }
3.4.2. Explore the numberguess Quickstart
The numberguess
quickstart shows you how to create and deploy a simple non-persistant application to JBoss EAP. Information is displayed using a JSF view and business logic is encapsulated in two CDI beans. In the numberguess
quickstart, you have ten attempts to guess a number between 1 and 100. After each attempt, you’re told whether your guess was too high or too low.
The code for the numberguess
quickstart can be found in the QUICKSTART_HOME/numberguess/
directory where QUICKSTART_HOME
is the directory where you downloaded and unzipped the JBoss EAP quickstarts. The numberguess
quickstart is comprised of a number of beans, configuration files, and Facelets (JSF) views, and is packaged as a WAR module.
Detailed instructions to build and deploy this quickstart using the command line can be found in the README.html
file at the root of the numberguess
quickstart directory. The following examples use Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio to run the quickstart.
Prerequisites
- Install JBoss Developer Studio. For instructions, see Installing JBoss Developer Studio Stand-alone Using the Installer in the JBoss Developer Studio Installation Guide.
-
Run the
numberguess
quickstart. For instructions, see Run the Quickstarts in JBoss Developer Studio and replacehelloworld
withnumberguess
in the instructions. -
Verify the
numberguess
quickstart was deployed successfully to JBoss EAP by opening a web browser and accessing the application at this URL: http://localhost:8080/numberguess.
Examine the Configuration Files
All the configuration files for this example are located in the QUICKSTART_HOME/numberguess/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/
directory of the quickstart.
Examine the
faces-config.xml
file.This quickstart uses the JSF 2.2 version of
faces-config.xml
filename. A standardized version of Facelets is the default view handler in JSF 2.2 so it requires no configuration. This file consists of only the root element and is simply a marker file to indicate JSF should be enabled in the application.<faces-config version="2.2" xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee/web-facesconfig_2_2.xsd"> </faces-config>
Examine the
beans.xml
file.The
beans.xml
file contains a version number of 1.1 and abean-discovery-mode
ofall
. This file is a marker file that identifies the WAR as a bean archive and tells JBoss EAP to look for beans in this application and to activate the CDI.<beans xmlns="http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation=" http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee http://xmlns.jcp.org/xml/ns/javaee/beans_1_1.xsd" bean-discovery-mode="all"> </beans>
This quickstart does not need a web.xml
file.
3.4.2.1. Examine the JSF Code
JSF uses the .xhtml
file extension for source files, but delivers the rendered views with the .jsf
extension. The home.xhtml
file is located in the src/main/webapp/
directory.
Example: JSF Source Code
19<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" 20 xmlns:ui="http://java.sun.com/jsf/facelets" 21 xmlns:h="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html" 22 xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core"> 23 24 <head> 25 <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" /> 26 <title>Numberguess</title> 27 </head> 28 29 <body> 30 <div id="content"> 31 <h1>Guess a number...</h1> 32 <h:form id="numberGuess"> 33 34 <!-- Feedback for the user on their guess --> 35 <div style="color: red"> 36 <h:messages id="messages" globalOnly="false" /> 37 <h:outputText id="Higher" value="Higher!" 38 rendered="#{game.number gt game.guess and game.guess ne 0}" /> 39 <h:outputText id="Lower" value="Lower!" 40 rendered="#{game.number lt game.guess and game.guess ne 0}" /> 41 </div> 42 43 <!-- Instructions for the user --> 44 <div> 45 I'm thinking of a number between <span 46 id="numberGuess:smallest">#{game.smallest}</span> and <span 47 id="numberGuess:biggest">#{game.biggest}</span>. You have 48 #{game.remainingGuesses} guesses remaining. 49 </div> 50 51 <!-- Input box for the users guess, plus a button to submit, and reset --> 52 <!-- These are bound using EL to our CDI beans --> 53 <div> 54 Your guess: 55 <h:inputText id="inputGuess" value="#{game.guess}" 56 required="true" size="3" 57 disabled="#{game.number eq game.guess}" 58 validator="#{game.validateNumberRange}" /> 59 <h:commandButton id="guessButton" value="Guess" 60 action="#{game.check}" 61 disabled="#{game.number eq game.guess}" /> 62 </div> 63 <div> 64 <h:commandButton id="restartButton" value="Reset" 65 action="#{game.reset}" immediate="true" /> 66 </div> 67 </h:form> 68 69 </div> 70 71 <br style="clear: both" /> 72 73 </body> 74</html>
The following line numbers correspond to those seen when viewing the file in JBoss Developer Studio.
Line | Note |
---|---|
36-40 | These are the messages which can be sent to the user: "Higher!" and "Lower!" |
45-48 | As the user guesses, the range of numbers they can guess gets smaller. This sentence changes to make sure they know the number range of a valid guess. |
55-58 | This input field is bound to a bean property using a value expression. |
58 | A validator binding is used to make sure the user does not accidentally input a number outside of the range in which they can guess. If the validator was not here, the user might use up a guess on an out of bounds number. |
59-61 | There must be a way for the user to send their guess to the server. Here we bind to an action method on the bean. |
3.4.2.2. Examine the Class Files
All of the numberguess
quickstart source files can be found in the QUICKSTART_HOME/numberguess/src/main/java/org/jboss/as/quickstarts/numberguess/
directory. The package declaration and imports have been excluded from these listings. The complete listing is available in the quickstart source code.
Review the
Random.java
Qualifier CodeA qualifier is used to remove ambiguity between two beans, both of which are eligible for injection based on their type. For more information on qualifiers, see Use a Qualifier to Resolve an Ambiguous Injection in the JBoss EAP Development Guide. The
@Random
qualifier is used for injecting a random number.@Target({ TYPE, METHOD, PARAMETER, FIELD }) @Retention(RUNTIME) @Documented @Qualifier public @interface Random { }
Review the
MaxNumber.java
Qualifier CodeThe
@MaxNumber
qualifier
is used for injecting the maximum number allowed.@Target({ TYPE, METHOD, PARAMETER, FIELD }) @Retention(RUNTIME) @Documented @Qualifier public @interface MaxNumber { }
Review the
Generator.java
CodeThe
Generator
class creates the random number via a producer method, exposing the maximum possible number via the same. This class is application-scoped, so you don’t get a different random each time.@SuppressWarnings("serial") @ApplicationScoped public class Generator implements Serializable { private java.util.Random random = new java.util.Random(System.currentTimeMillis()); private int maxNumber = 100; java.util.Random getRandom() { return random; } @Produces @Random int next() { // a number between 1 and 100 return getRandom().nextInt(maxNumber - 1) + 1; } @Produces @MaxNumber int getMaxNumber() { return maxNumber; } }
Review the
Game.java
CodeThe session-scoped
Game
class is the primary entry point of the application. It is responsible for setting up or resetting the game, capturing and validating the user’s guess, and providing feedback to the user with aFacesMessage
. It uses the post-construct lifecycle method to initialize the game by retrieving a random number from the@Random Instance<Integer>
bean.Notice the
@Named
annotation in the class. This annotation is only required when you want to make the bean accessible to a JSF view by using Expression Language (EL), in this case#{game}
.@SuppressWarnings("serial") @Named @SessionScoped public class Game implements Serializable { /** * The number that the user needs to guess */ private int number; /** * The users latest guess */ private int guess; /** * The smallest number guessed so far (so we can track the valid guess range). */ private int smallest; /** * The largest number guessed so far */ private int biggest; /** * The number of guesses remaining */ private int remainingGuesses; /** * The maximum number we should ask them to guess */ @Inject @MaxNumber private int maxNumber; /** * The random number to guess */ @Inject @Random Instance<Integer> randomNumber; public Game() { } public int getNumber() { return number; } public int getGuess() { return guess; } public void setGuess(int guess) { this.guess = guess; } public int getSmallest() { return smallest; } public int getBiggest() { return biggest; } public int getRemainingGuesses() { return remainingGuesses; } /** * Check whether the current guess is correct, and update the biggest/smallest guesses as needed. Give feedback to the user * if they are correct. */ public void check() { if (guess > number) { biggest = guess - 1; } else if (guess < number) { smallest = guess + 1; } else if (guess == number) { FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().addMessage(null, new FacesMessage("Correct!")); } remainingGuesses--; } /** * Reset the game, by putting all values back to their defaults, and getting a new random number. We also call this method * when the user starts playing for the first time using {@linkplain PostConstruct @PostConstruct} to set the initial * values. */ @PostConstruct public void reset() { this.smallest = 0; this.guess = 0; this.remainingGuesses = 10; this.biggest = maxNumber; this.number = randomNumber.get(); } /** * A JSF validation method which checks whether the guess is valid. It might not be valid because there are no guesses left, * or because the guess is not in range. * */ public void validateNumberRange(FacesContext context, UIComponent toValidate, Object value) { if (remainingGuesses <= 0) { FacesMessage message = new FacesMessage("No guesses left!"); context.addMessage(toValidate.getClientId(context), message); ((UIInput) toValidate).setValid(false); return; } int input = (Integer) value; if (input < smallest || input > biggest) { ((UIInput) toValidate).setValid(false); FacesMessage message = new FacesMessage("Invalid guess"); context.addMessage(toValidate.getClientId(context), message); } } }
Appendix A. Reference Material
A.1. Server Runtime Arguments
The application server startup script accepts arguments and switches at runtime. This allows the server to start under alternative configurations to those defined in the standalone.xml
, domain.xml
, and host.xml
configuration files.
Alternative configurations might include starting the server with an alternative socket bindings set or a secondary configuration.
The available parameters list can be accessed by passing the help switch -h
or --help
at startup.
Argument or Switch | Operating Mode | Description |
---|---|---|
--admin-only | Standalone |
Set the server’s running type to |
--admin-only | Domain |
Set the host controller’s running type to |
-b=<value>, -b <value> | Standalone, Domain |
Set system property |
-b<interface>=<value> | Standalone, Domain |
Set system property |
--backup | Domain | Keep a copy of the persistent domain configuration even if this host is not the domain controller. |
-c=<config>, -c <config> | Standalone |
Name of the server configuration file to use. The default is |
-c=<config>, -c <config> | Domain |
Name of the server configuration file to use. The default is |
--cached-dc | Domain | If the host is not the domain controller and cannot contact the domain controller at boot, boot using a locally cached copy of the domain configuration. |
--debug [<port>] | Standalone | Activate debug mode with an optional argument to specify the port. Only works if the launch script supports it. |
-D<name>[=<value>] | Standalone, Domain | Set a system property. |
--domain-config=<config> | Domain |
Name of the server configuration file to use. The default is |
-h, --help | Standalone, Domain | Display the help message and exit. |
--host-config=<config> | Domain |
Name of the host configuration file to use. The default is |
--interprocess-hc-address=<address> | Domain | Address on which the host controller should listen for communication from the process controller. |
--interprocess-hc-port=<port> | Domain | Port on which the host controller should listen for communication from the process controller. |
--master-address=<address> | Domain |
Set system property |
--master-port=<port> | Domain |
Set system property |
--read-only-server-config=<config> | Standalone |
Name of the server configuration file to use. This differs from |
--read-only-domain-config=<config> | Domain |
Name of the domain configuration file to use. This differs from |
--read-only-host-config=<config> | Domain |
Name of the host configuration file to use. This differs from |
-P=<url>, -P <url>, --properties=<url> | Standalone, Domain | Load system properties from the given URL. |
--pc-address=<address> | Domain | Address on which the process controller listens for communication from processes it controls. |
--pc-port=<port> | Domain | Port on which the process controller listens for communication from processes it controls. |
-S<name>[=<value>] | Standalone | Set a security property. |
-secmgr | Standalone, Domain | Runs the server with a security manager installed. |
--server-config=<config> | Standalone |
Name of the server configuration file to use. The default is |
--start-mode=<mode> | Standalone |
Set the start mode of the server. This option cannot be used in conjunction with
|
-u=<value>, -u <value> | Standalone, Domain |
Set system property |
-v, -V, --version | Standalone, Domain | Display the application server version and exit. |
The configuration files that ship with JBoss EAP are set up to handle the behavior of the switches, for example, -b
and -u
. If you change your configuration files to no longer use the system property controlled by the switch, then adding it to the launch command will have no effect.
A.2. Add-User Utility Arguments
The following table describes the arguments available for the add-user.sh
or add-user.bat
script, which is a utility for adding new users to the properties file for out-of-the-box authentication.
Command Line Argument | Description |
---|---|
-a | Create a user in the application realm. If omitted, the default is to create a user in the management realm. |
-dc <value> |
The domain configuration directory that will contain the properties files. If it is omitted, the default directory is |
-sc <value> |
An alternative standalone server configuration directory that will contain the properties files. If omitted, the default directory is |
-up, --user-properties <value> |
The name of the alternative user properties file. It can be an absolute path or it can be a file name used in conjunction with the |
-g, --group <value> | A comma-separated list of groups to assign to this user. |
-gp, --group-properties <value> |
The name of the alternative group properties file. It can be an absolute path or it can be a file name used in conjunction with the |
-p, --password <value> | The password of the user. |
-u, --user <value> | The name of the user. User names can only contain the following characters, in any number and in any order:
|
-r, --realm <value> |
The name of the realm used to secure the management interfaces. If omitted, the default is |
-s, --silent |
Run the |
-e, --enable | Enable the user. |
-d, --disable | Disable the user. |
-cw, --confirm-warning | Automatically confirm warning in interactive mode. |
-h, --help |
Display usage information for the |
-ds, --display-secret | Print the secret value in non-interactive mode. |
A.3. Interface Attributes
Attribute names in this table are listed as they appear in the management model, for example, when using the management CLI. See the schema definition file located at EAP_HOME/docs/schema/wildfly-config_5_0.xsd
to view the elements as they appear in the XML, as there may be differences from the management model.
Interface Element | Description |
---|---|
any | Element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be that it meets at least one, but not necessarily all, of the nested set of criteria. |
any-address |
Empty element indicating that sockets using this interface should be bound to a wildcard address. The IPv6 wildcard address ( |
inet-address | Either an IP address in IPv6 or IPv4 dotted decimal notation, or a host name that can be resolved to an IP address. |
link-local-address | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not an address associated with it is link-local. |
loopback | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it is a loopback interface. |
loopback-address | A loopback address that may not actually be configured on the machine’s loopback interface. Differs from inet-address type in that the given value will be used even if no NIC can be found that has the IP address associated with it. |
multicast | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it supports multicast. |
name | The name of the interface. |
nic | The name of a network interface (e.g. eth0, eth1, lo). |
nic-match | A regular expression against which the names of the network interfaces available on the machine can be matched to find an acceptable interface. |
not | Element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be that it does not meet any of the nested set of criteria. |
point-to-point | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it is a point-to-point interface. |
public-address | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it has a publicly routable address. |
site-local-address | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not an address associated with it is site-local. |
subnet-match |
A network IP address and the number of bits in the address' network prefix, written in slash notation, for example, |
up | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it is currently up. |
virtual | Empty element indicating that part of the selection criteria for an interface should be whether or not it is a virtual interface. |
A.4. Socket Binding Attributes
Attribute names in these tables are listed as they appear in the management model, for example, when using the management CLI. See the schema definition file located at EAP_HOME/docs/schema/wildfly-config_5_0.xsd
to view the elements as they appear in the XML, as there may be differences from the management model.
The following tables show the attributes that can be configured for each of the three types of socket bindings.
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
client-mappings | Specifies the client mappings for this socket binding. A client connecting to this socket should use the destination address specified in the mapping that matches its desired outbound interface. This allows for advanced network topologies that use either network address translation, or have bindings on multiple network interfaces to function. Each mapping should be evaluated in declared order, with the first successful match used to determine the destination. |
fixed-port | Whether the port value should remain fixed even if numeric offsets are applied to the other sockets in the socket group. |
interface |
Name of the interface to which the socket should be bound, or, for multicast sockets, the interface on which it should listen. This should be one of the declared interfaces. If not defined, the value of the |
multicast-address | Multicast address on which the socket should receive multicast traffic. If unspecified, the socket will not be configured to receive multicast. |
multicast-port |
Port on which the socket should receive multicast traffic. Must be configured if |
name | The name of the socket. Services needing to access the socket configuration information will find it using this name. This attribute is required. |
port | Number of the port to which the socket should be bound. Note that this value can be overridden if servers apply a port-offset to increment or decrement all port values. |
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
fixed-source-port | Whether the port value should remain fixed even if numeric offsets are applied to the other outbound sockets in the socket group. |
host | The host name or IP address of the remote destination to which this outbound socket will connect. |
port | The port number of the remote destination to which the outbound socket should connect. |
source-interface | The name of the interface that will be used for the source address of the outbound socket. |
source-port | The port number that will be used as the source port of the outbound socket. |
Attribute | Description |
---|---|
fixed-source-port | Whether the port value should remain fixed even if numeric offsets are applied to the other outbound sockets in the socket group. |
socket-binding-ref | The name of the local socket binding that will be used to determine the port to which this outbound socket connects. |
source-interface | The name of the interface that will be used for the source address of the outbound socket. |
source-port | The port number that will be used as the source port of the outbound socket. |
A.5. Default Socket Bindings
The following tables show the default socket bindings for each socket binding group.
Socket Binding | Port | Description |
---|---|---|
ajp | 8009 | Apache JServ Protocol. Used for HTTP clustering and load balancing. |
http | 8080 | The default port for deployed web applications. |
https | 8443 | SSL-encrypted connection between deployed web applications and clients. |
management-http | 9990 | Used for HTTP communication with the management layer. |
management-https | 9993 | Used for HTTPS communication with the management layer. |
txn-recovery-environment | 4712 | The JTA transaction recovery manager. |
txn-status-manager | 4713 | The JTA / JTS transaction manager. |
Socket Binding | Port | Multicast Port | Description |
---|---|---|---|
ajp | 8009 | Apache JServ Protocol. Used for HTTP clustering and load balancing. | |
http | 8080 | The default port for deployed web applications. | |
https | 8443 | SSL-encrypted connection between deployed web applications and clients. | |
jgroups-mping | 45700 | Multicast. Used to discover initial membership in a HA cluster. | |
jgroups-tcp | 7600 | Unicast peer discovery in HA clusters using TCP. | |
jgroups-udp | 55200 | 45688 | Multicast peer discovery in HA clusters using UDP. |
management-http | 9990 | Used for HTTP communication with the management layer. | |
management-https | 9993 | Used for HTTPS communication with the management layer. | |
modcluster | 23364 | Multicast port for communication between JBoss EAP and the HTTP load balancer. | |
txn-recovery-environment | 4712 | The JTA transaction recovery manager. | |
txn-status-manager | 4713 | The JTA / JTS transaction manager. |
Socket Binding | Port | Description |
---|---|---|
ajp | 8009 | Apache JServ Protocol. Used for HTTP clustering and load balancing. |
http | 8080 | The default port for deployed web applications. |
https | 8443 | SSL-encrypted connection between deployed web applications and clients. |
iiop | 3528 | CORBA services for JTS transactions and other ORB-dependent services. |
iiop-ssl | 3529 | SSL-encrypted CORBA services. |
management-http | 9990 | Used for HTTP communication with the management layer. |
management-https | 9993 | Used for HTTPS communication with the management layer. |
txn-recovery-environment | 4712 | The JTA transaction recovery manager. |
txn-status-manager | 4713 | The JTA / JTS transaction manager. |
Name | Port | Multicast Port | Description |
---|---|---|---|
ajp | 8009 | Apache JServ Protocol. Used for HTTP clustering and load balancing. | |
http | 8080 | The default port for deployed web applications. | |
https | 8443 | SSL-encrypted connection between deployed web applications and clients. | |
iiop | 3528 | CORBA services for JTS transactions and other ORB-dependent services. | |
iiop-ssl | 3529 | SSL-encrypted CORBA services. | |
jgroups-mping | 45700 | Multicast. Used to discover initial membership in a HA cluster. | |
jgroups-tcp | 7600 | Unicast peer discovery in HA clusters using TCP. | |
jgroups-udp | 55200 | 45688 | Multicast peer discovery in HA clusters using UDP. |
management-http | 9990 | Used for HTTP communication with the management layer. | |
management-https | 9993 | Used for HTTPS communication with the management layer. | |
modcluster | 23364 | Multicast port for communication between JBoss EAP and the HTTP load balancer. | |
txn-recovery-environment | 4712 | The JTA transaction recovery manager. | |
txn-status-manager | 4713 | The JTA / JTS transaction manager. |
Name | Port | Multicast Port | Description |
---|---|---|---|
http | 8080 | The default port for deployed web applications. | |
https | 8443 | SSL-encrypted connection between deployed web applications and clients. | |
management-http | 9990 | Used for HTTP communication with the management layer. | |
management-https | 9993 | Used for HTTPS communication with the management layer. | |
mcmp-management | 8090 | The port for the Mod-Cluster Management Protocol (MCMP) connection to transmit lifecycle events. | |
modcluster | 23364 | Multicast port for communication between JBoss EAP and the HTTP load balancer. |
Revised on 2018-10-11 12:31:45 UTC