Visual-JSF
From Resin 3.0
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===Step By Step: Deploying Visual JSF Application === | ===Step By Step: Deploying Visual JSF Application === | ||
+ | ''[Tested with Resin 3.1.6]'' | ||
Tested with the following, supplied with with NetBeans IDE 6.0.1, samples: | Tested with the following, supplied with with NetBeans IDE 6.0.1, samples: | ||
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− | Deploying Corporate Travel Center Application | + | ==Deploying Corporate Travel Center Application== |
<ol> | <ol> | ||
<li>Download Resin from http://caucho.com/download | <li>Download Resin from http://caucho.com/download | ||
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<li>Browse to http://localhost:8080/TravelCenter/faces/Page1.jsp | <li>Browse to http://localhost:8080/TravelCenter/faces/Page1.jsp | ||
</ol> | </ol> | ||
+ | ==Known Issues== |
Revision as of 03:34, 26 April 2008
Contents |
Step by Step (Deploying Visual JSF Demo Application)
[Tested with Resin 3.1.6 and ... ]
Travel Center Vehicle Incident Report Application
Step By Step: Deploying Visual JSF Application
[Tested with Resin 3.1.6]
Tested with the following, supplied with with NetBeans IDE 6.0.1, samples:
- Corporate Travel Center
- Movie Administration
- Vehicle Incident Report Application
Deploying Corporate Travel Center Application
- Download Resin from http://caucho.com/download
- Unzip Resin into /usr/local/share/resin
- Change into /usr/local/share/resin/webapps directory and create directory TravelCenter
- If you already have a deployable Corporate Travel Center Application you can skip to deploying the app
- Start Netbeans IDE6.0.1 and go to the File menu and choose New Project
- In the New Project dialog open Samples -> Web -> Visual JSF and choose Corporate Travel Center, click Next
- Optionally, change project's name. It will be referred to as TravelCenter in the steps below
- Select the project in NetBeans Projects Navigator pane (left pane of the IDE) and choose "Clean and Build" from contextual drop down menu (mouse - right button on windows)
- Deploy the exploded application via copying contents of web folder that was created by the Build process. The folder is located in build folder of the TravelCenter home directory
- A successfully deployed application will have the following structure under the webapps folder of Resin
webapps -> TravelCenter ->META-INF ->resources ->WEB-INF ->Details.jsp ->.. ->readme.html
- change into WEB-INF directory and create resin-web.xml file with the following content
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <web-app> <jsp validate-taglib-schema="false" fast-jsf="false"/> </web-app>
- the application uses database, so in the next two steps we will start Derby database provided with NetBeans IDE and configure resin connection pool
- In NetBeans IDE open Tools menu and start the database via following path Java DB Database -> Start Server
- Locate derbyclient.jar and copy it into /usr/local/share/resin/lib directory. The derbyclient.jar can be downloaded as part of Derby Database package version 10.2.2.0 at http://db.apache.org/derby/releases/release-10.2.2.0.html
- insert the following snippet into resin.conf, which is located at /usr/local/share/resin/conf
<database> <jndi-name>jdbc/TRAVEL_ApacheDerby</jndi-name> <driver type="org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDriver"> <url>jdbc:derby://localhost:1527/travel</url> <user>travel</user> <password>travel</password> </driver> <prepared-statement-cache-size>8</prepared-statement-cache-size> <max-connections>20</max-connections> <max-idle-time>30s</max-idle-time> </database>
- cd into /usr/local/share/resin/bin directory and start Resin with ./httpd.sh
- Browse to http://localhost:8080/TravelCenter/faces/Page1.jsp