I'd like to have a hot-reloading enabled jetty with wro4j that does not kill the whole server for a few seconds just because a character has changed in a css file.
I have set up wro4j to locate css resources that is outside of the classpath.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<groups xmlns="http://www.isdc.ro/wro">
<group name="style">
<css>file:src/main/less/style.css</css>
</group>
</groups>
I have set up jetty to watch only the webapp directory for changes:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.eclipse.jetty</groupId>
<artifactId>jetty-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>9.1.0.M0</version>
<configuration>
<scanTargets>
<scanTarget>${basedir}/src/main/webapp</scanTarget>
</scanTargets>
<scanIntervalSeconds>1</scanIntervalSeconds>
</configuration>
</plugin>
Still, if I change something in the directory /src/main/less, jetty restarts itself:
[INFO] restarting o.e.j.m.p.JettyWebAppContext#6ebc4e13{/,[file:/home/tamas/ux/src/main/webapp/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/jshint/2.1.3/jshint-2.1.3.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/less/1.3.3/less-1.3.3.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/emberjs/1.0.0-rc.5/emberjs-1.0.0-rc.5.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/jquery/1.9.1/jquery-1.9.1.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/handlebars/1.0.0-rc.4/handlebars-1.0.0-rc.4.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/coffee-script/1.6.3/coffee-script-1.6.3.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/jslint/c657984cd7/jslint-c657984cd7.jar!/META-INF/resources/, jar:file:/home/tamas/.m2/repository/org/webjars/json2/20110223/json2-20110223.jar!/META-INF/resources/],AVAILABLE}{file:/home/tamas/ux/src/main/webapp/}
I'd like to avoid this restart as it's very annoying.
I am using wro4j 1.7.1, Maven 3.0.4 and Jetty 9.1.0.M0.
Update: The restart happened because I edited the files with Eclipse. Jetty doesn't restart itself otherwise.
You could try using "resourceWatcherUpdatePeriod" wro4j configuration instead if you want to get the latest change whenever there is a modification. I think jetty by default performs a restart when a change is detected.
Related
I am trying to deploy a basic web service, my wsdl is located as shown in the following beans.xml:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:jaxws="http://cxf.apache.org/jaxws"
xsi:schemaLocation="
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
http://cxf.apache.org/jaxws http://cxf.apache.org/schemas/jaxws.xsd">
<import resource="classpath:META-INF/cxf/cxf.xml" />
<jaxws:endpoint
id="helloWorld"
implementor="com.tsdevelopment.HelloWorldImpl"
wsdlLocation="src/main/resources/wsdl/HelloWorld.wsdl"
address="/HelloWorld" />
</beans>
When i deploy with mvn wildfly:deploy i get the following error:
Caused by: java.io.FileNotFoundException: C:\Users\codereadystudio\jboss-eap-7.3\bin\src\main\resources\wsdl\HelloWorld.wsdl (The system cannot find the path specified)
at java.base/java.io.FileInputStream.open0(Native Method)
at java.base/java.io.FileInputStream.open(FileInputStream.java:211)
at java.base/java.io.FileInputStream.<init>(FileInputStream.java:153)
at java.base/java.io.FileInputStream.<init>(FileInputStream.java:108)
at java.base/sun.net.www.protocol.file.FileURLConnection.connect(FileURLConnection.java:86)
at java.base/sun.net.www.protocol.file.FileURLConnection.getInputStream(FileURLConnection.java:189)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.impl.XMLEntityManager.setupCurrentEntity(XMLEntityManager.java:1009)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.impl.XMLVersionDetector.determineDocVersion(XMLVersionDetector.java:144)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.parsers.XML11Configuration.parse(XML11Configuration.java:832)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.parsers.XML11Configuration.parse(XML11Configuration.java:798)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.parsers.XMLParser.parse(XMLParser.java:108)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.parsers.DOMParser.parse(DOMParser.java:230)
at org.apache.xerces#2.12.0.SP02-redhat-00001//org.apache.xerces.jaxp.DocumentBuilderImpl.parse(DocumentBuilderImpl.java:298)
at deployment.soap-cxf-wsdlfirst-jbosseap73-1.0-SNAPSHOT.war//com.ibm.wsdl.xml.WSDLReaderImpl.getDocument(WSDLReaderImpl.java:2188)
... 56 more
Why is it searching for the WSDL in the jboss installation folder and not in the code?
It seems the reason that it was unable to find the WSDL was that while in pom.xml the wsdl paths were as following:
<wsdlOptions>
<wsdlOption>
<wsdl>
src/main/resources/wsdl/HelloWorld.wsdl
</wsdl>
<wsdlLocation>wsdl/HelloWorld.wsdl</wsdlLocation>
</wsdlOption>
</wsdlOptions>
The java class that the cxf cxf-codegen-plugin generated did not include the wsdlLocation parameter in the #WebService annotation. Also please note that the parameter path must contain only the folders under your build path. That said, while my pom.xml location was /src/main/resources/wsdl/HelloWorld.wsdl, my parameter was wsdl/HelloWorld.wsdl, because i had already included the /src/main/resources folder on the build path.
I have a SpringBoot app that deploys just fine to AWS Beanstalk, and the default nginx proxy works, allowing me to connect via port 80.
Following the instructions here: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticbeanstalk/latest/dg/https-singleinstance.html, and verifying with another of my projects that works with this exact config, Beanstalk fails to deploy the app with error:
2020/05/29 01:27:56.418780 [ERROR] An error occurred during execution of command [app-deploy] - [CheckProcfileForJavaApplication]. Stop running the command. Error: there is no Procfile and no .jar file at root level of your source bundle
The contents of my war file are as such:
app.war
-.ebextensions
-nginx/conf.d/https.conf
-https-instance-single.config
-https-instance.config
-web-inf/
My config files pass as valid yaml files. (These files are identical to those in the AWS doc, and those that work in other project on mine.)
I am using a single instance, with port 443 set open.
These are the errors reported throughout the various log files:
----------------------------------------
/var/log/eb-engine.log
----------------------------------------
2020/05/29 01:37:53.054366 [ERROR] /usr/bin/id: healthd: no such user
...
2020/05/29 01:37:53.254965 [ERROR] Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/healthd.service to /etc/systemd/system/healthd.service.
...
2020/05/29 01:37:53.732794 [ERROR] Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/cfn-hup.service to /etc/systemd/system/cfn-hup.service.
----------------------------------------
/var/log/cfn-hup.log
----------------------------------------
ReadTimeout: HTTPSConnectionPool(host='sqs.us-east-1.amazonaws.com', port=443): Read timed out. (read timeout=23)
Taking count #Dean Wookey's answer for Java 11, I have successfully deployed Spring Boot application jar along with .ebextensions folder. I just added maven antrun plug to my maven build configurations and for output I am receiving .zip file, which contains .ebextensions folder and spring Boot .jar file at the same level. Just deploying this final zip file to AWS UI Console.
The following is the maven antrun plugin configuration
....
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.8</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>prepare</id>
<phase>package</phase>
<configuration>
<tasks>
<copy todir="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}/" overwrite="false">
<fileset dir="./" includes=".ebextensions/**"/>
<fileset dir="${project.build.directory}" includes="*.jar"/>
</copy>
<zip destfile="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}.zip" basedir="${project.build.directory}/${project.build.finalName}"/>
</tasks>
</configuration>
<goals>
<goal>run</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
....
Issue with Java and Linux version
If you are using Java 8 and Linux 2.10.9 code will work and override ngingx configuration but if you choose Corretto 11 and Linux 2.2.3 get following error.
Error: there is no Procfile and no .jar file at root level of your
source bundle
Create new environment with Java 8 and deploy app again will resolve issue.
Instead of changing to java 8 as described in vaquar khan's answer, an alternative is to package your source jar inside a zip that also contains the .ebextensions folder.
In other words:
source.zip
-.ebextensions
-nginx/conf.d/https.conf
-https-instance-single.config
-https-instance.config
-web-inf/
-app.war
If you look at the latest documentation https://docs.aws.amazon.com/elasticbeanstalk/latest/dg/platforms-linux-extend.html, you'll see that the nginx config now goes in the .platform folder instead, so your structure would be:
source.zip
-.ebextensions
-https-instance-single.config
-https-instance.config
-.platform
-nginx/conf.d/https.conf
-web-inf/
-app.war
After following vaquar's answer above, also change the 'buildspec.yml' file to have the correct java version. E.g:
runtime-versions:
java: corretto8 # previously this was openjdk8
Should work.
It is still possible to use .ebextensions within your war file.
Add following to your pom.xml in the <build><plugins> section:
<build>
<plugins>
...
<plugin>
<groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
<artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>add-resource-ebextensions</id>
<phase>generate-resources</phase>
<goals>
<goal>add-resource</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<resources>
<resource>
<directory>${basedir}/.ebextensions</directory>
<targetPath>.ebextensions</targetPath>
</resource>
</resources>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
...
</plugins>
</build>
This will copy .ebextensions folder to WEB-INF/classes folder. There AWS picks it up while starting and applies scripts from there.
I am doing integration test using Arquillian in TomEE-Plus 7.0.4 remote and trying to get Code coverage using Jacoco 0.8.2. My code coverage is not covered since I am using arquillian-tomee-remote. Since code is not covered not able to take build. I need sample code with has TomEE-plus arquillian remote and Code coverage using Jacoco. I will appreciate if I get any sample working code or sample project.
I used prepare-agent goal which will generate surefireArgLine ( javaagent) and passed the same in surefire plugin. issue here is, I am using remote Tomee and don't know how to generate correct java agent surefireArgLine set to -javaagent:/home/user/.m2/repository/org/jacoco/org.jacoco.agent/0.8.2/org.jacoco.agent-0.8.2-runtime.jar=destfile=/home/user/project/target/coverage-reports/jacoco-ut.exec,append=true,excludes=/config/*.class:/util/*Constants.class
what is the correct javaagent option for my configuration which will connect to arquillian-remote-tomee ?
Jacoco plugin
<plugin>
<groupId>org.jacoco</groupId>
<artifactId>jacoco-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>${plugin.maven.jacoco.version}</version>
<configuration>
<propertyName>coverageAgent</propertyName>
<append>true</append>
<excludes>
<exclude>**/config/*.class</exclude>
<exclude>**/util/*Constants.class</exclude>
</excludes>
</configuration>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>pre-unit-test</id>
<goals>
<goal>prepare-agent</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<destFile>${sonar.jacoco.reportPath}</destFile>
<propertyName>surefireArgLine</propertyName>
<append>true</append>
</configuration>
</execution>
<execution>
<id>post-unit-test</id>
<phase>test</phase>
<goals>
<goal>report</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<dataFile>${sonar.jacoco.reportPath}</dataFile>
<outputDirectory>${project.reporting.outputDirectory}/jacoco-ut</outputDirectory>
<append>true</append>
</configuration>
</execution>
<execution>
<id>check</id>
<goals>
<goal>check</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<dataFile>${sonar.jacoco.reportPath}</dataFile>
<haltOnFailure>true</haltOnFailure>
<rules>
<rule>
<element>BUNDLE</element>
<limits>
<limit>
<counter>LINE</counter>
<value>COVEREDRATIO</value>
<minimum>0.99</minimum>
</limit>
<limit>
<counter>BRANCH</counter>
<value>COVEREDRATIO</value>
<minimum>0.99</minimum>
</limit>
<limit>
<counter>CLASS</counter>
<value>MISSEDCOUNT</value>
<maximum>0</maximum>
</limit>
</limits>
</rule>
</rules>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
Dependency
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jboss.arquillian.testng</groupId>
<artifactId>arquillian-testng-container</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jboss.arquillian.config</groupId>
<artifactId>arquillian-config-api</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jboss.arquillian.extension</groupId>
<artifactId>arquillian-jacoco</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0.Alpha10</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jacoco</groupId>
<artifactId>org.jacoco.agent</artifactId>
<classifier>runtime</classifier>
<scope>test</scope>
<version>${plugin.maven.jacoco.version}</version>
</dependency>
<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/org.jacoco/org.jacoco.core -->
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jacoco</groupId>
<artifactId>org.jacoco.core</artifactId>
<version>${plugin.maven.jacoco.version}</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.tomee</groupId>
<artifactId>arquillian-tomee-remote</artifactId>
<version>${tomee.version}</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
Arquillian.xml
<extension qualifier="jacoco">
<property name="includes">com.demo.*</property>
</extension>
You can set catalina_opts in arquillian.xml for tomee container. Filter it with maven to pass jacoco javaagent and you are done :).
I have added the proper java agent ( surefireArgLine) to TomEE remote server via catalina opts in surefire pluggin. it works.
surefireArgLine - Will be populate by Surefire prepare-agent at runtime.
<tomee.catalina_opts> ${surefireArgLine}</tomee.catalina_opts>
Disclaimer: I'm not an expert in neither Arquillian nor TomEE, so you might adjust the answer for your purposes.
Anyway, in a nutshell, JaCoCo instruments bytecode in order to provide a coverage report.
Since when Arquillian is used, the actual test execution happens in a TomEE JVM and not in a JVM that actually runs the test suite (probably a CI server or just a build script that runs the test), so configuring JaCoCo on this test machine won't do much, you'll have to configure the server itself.
JaCoCo has a -javaagent option for doing this, and this Java Agent will "intercept" the loading of classes by the server and instrument them.
Now, when JaCoCo works, it produces a jacoco.exec file that actually contains a coverage report that can be shown later in various ways (jenkins plugin to show coverage, sonar integration whatever).
And this is by far the most used option AFAIK, so if you go with this approach, given the instrumentation really works, after the tests are done, you'll have to find the server on the test machine and download it to the build machine and integrate with CI/Sonar whatever.
However, there are alternative solutions:
JaCoCo Documentation states that there are three modes of running an instrumenting Java Agent:
File System: At JVM termination execution data is written to a local file.
TCP Socket Server: External tools can connect to the JVM and retrieve execution data over the socket connection. Optional execution data reset and execution data dump on VM exit is possible.
TCP Socket Client: At startup, the JaCoCo agent connects to a given TCP endpoint. Execution data is written to the socket connection on request. Optional execution data reset and execution data dump on VM exit is possible.
Technically you can just give different parameters to that javaagent so that it will run JaCoCo in one of these modes.
Anyway, we've discussed the first option, but you can also work with TCP configurations if it's required. Of course, here you'll have to handle security concerns (like permission to expose/access the port, etc).
If you work with TCP mode, there is a Maven Plugin that can come in handy. I haven't used it by myself, just googled so I can't comment whether its any good, it has only 2 stars on Github, so probably it's not production ready but maybe you could get some ideas from its source code.
I developed a spring boot application and I've put the following entries in src/main/resources/application.properties:
spring.mvc.view.prefix: /
spring.mvc.view.suffix: .jsp
server.port=5000
Now when I start it (mvn clean spring-boot:run) locally, I'm getting the output Tomcat started on port(s): 5000 (http) and the app is accessible in the browser under http://localhost:5000/welcome .
I created a Java instance in Amazon Elastic Bean Stalk, I've uploaded war, I even opened the port 5000 in the corresponding Security Group on EC2 instance:
but when I now go to http://my-aws-ebs-instance.com/welcome:5000, I'm getting the following message:
Whitelabel Error Page This application has no explicit mapping for
/error, so you are seeing this as a fallback.
Thu Dec 20 16:30:33 UTC 2018 There was an unexpected error (type=Not
Found, status=404). /welcome.jsp
Why oh why does it happen like this? What did I forget to configure?
----EDIT
as requested, here's the root java class:
package com.hellokoding.auth;
import org.springframework.boot.SpringApplication;
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication;
import org.springframework.boot.builder.SpringApplicationBuilder;
import org.springframework.boot.context.web.SpringBootServletInitializer;
#SpringBootApplication
public class WebApplication extends SpringBootServletInitializer {
#Override
protected SpringApplicationBuilder configure(SpringApplicationBuilder application) {
return application.sources(WebApplication.class);
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
SpringApplication.run(WebApplication.class, args);
}
}
Here is also the structure of my project with highlighted welcome.jsp page:
When I unzip the generated war file, this is the file structure on my hard drive:
My pom.xml file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd">
<modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
<artifactId>auth</artifactId>
<name>auth</name>
<description>my descr</description>
<packaging>war</packaging>
<parent>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-parent</artifactId>
<version>1.3.5.RELEASE</version>
</parent>
<properties>
<project.build.sourceEncoding>UTF-8</project.build.sourceEncoding>
<java.version>1.7</java.version>
</properties>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-web</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-data-jpa</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.hsqldb</groupId>
<artifactId>hsqldb</artifactId>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-tomcat</artifactId>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.tomcat.embed</groupId>
<artifactId>tomcat-embed-jasper</artifactId>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>log4j</groupId>
<artifactId>log4j</artifactId>
<version>1.2.17</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>javax.servlet</groupId>
<artifactId>jstl</artifactId>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-maven-plugin</artifactId>
</plugin>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<source>8</source>
<target>8</target>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
</project>
and the UserController class contains:
...
#Controller
#Scope("session")
public class UserController {
#RequestMapping(value = {"/", "/welcome"}, method = RequestMethod.GET)
public String welcome(Model model) {
return "welcome";
}
...
I added some logs inside the welcome method and I see it is running correctly. Also, in log files I can see the following entry:
Mapped "{[/ || /welcome],methods=[GET]}" onto public java.lang.String com.hellokoding.auth.web.UserController.welcome(org.springframework.ui.Model)
so I have no idea why this thing does not work. After trying for 11 hours straight to make it work I'm questioning my life choices, and also I'm wondering why anyone would ever use such a stupid framework since it doesn't work ootb.
--- edit:
I've uploaded a simplified code to github https://github.com/nalogowiec/springbootProblem
Solution 1:
If you want Spring Boot With JSPs in Executable Jars
Keep in mind that we will ultimately place the JSP templates under src/main/resources/META-INF/resources/WEB-INF/jsp/
Note :
define the template prefix and suffix for our JSP files in application.properties
spring.mvc.view.prefix=/WEB-INF/jsp/
spring.mvc.view.suffix=.jsp
Then your can run jar file using below command :
java -jar <your jar name>
for your project you can below command
java -jar auth-1.3.5.RELEASE.jar
For More reference : https://dzone.com/articles/spring-boot-with-jsps-in-executable-jars-1
Solution 2:
JSP Limitations
When running a Spring Boot application that uses an embedded servlet container (and is packaged as an executable archive), there are some limitations in the JSP support.
With Jetty and Tomcat, it should work if you use war packaging. An executable war will work when launched with java -jar, and will also be deployable to any standard container. JSPs are not supported when using an executable jar.
Undertow does not support JSPs.
Creating a custom error.jsp page does not override the default view for error handling. Custom error pages should be used instead.
I have clone your GitHub project able to run project(if you follow below steps your problem will get solve definitely)
Step To run your project :
Step 1 : Create war package of your project
Step 2 : Run your war package using below command
java -jar <your war file name>
i.e for your project command should be like :
java -jar auth-1.3.5.RELEASE.war
Step 3 : Hit the URL http://localhost:5000/
You can see the result in browser.
More reference : https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/html/boot-features-developing-web-applications.html#boot-features-jsp-limitations
Nice explanation #dipak-thoke.
Just to add if anyone automating the deployment process (In my case, it was through CodeBuild And CodeDeploy), you can create Procfile and deploy the war. I have added Procfile into the root directory of the project and added it as an artifact.
Hope this helps someone looking for same usage case :)
ProcFile:
web: java -jar <your_war_file>.war
This is how my CodeBuild Buildspec looks like:
version: 0.2
phases:
build:
commands:
# - command
- ./gradlew bootWar
post_build:
commands:
# - command
- echo Build must be completed
- mv build/libs/*.war <WarFileName>.war
artifacts:
files:
# - location
- <WarFileName>.war
- Procfile
#name: $(date +%Y-%m-%d)
#discard-paths: yes
#base-directory: location
#cache:
#paths:
# - paths
If you check the Spring Boot docs, its clear that you are using the wrong directory structure.
https://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/htmlsingle/#boot-features-spring-mvc
By default, Spring Boot serves static content from a directory called /static (or /public or /resources or /META-INF/resources) in the classpath or from the root of the ServletContext ... Do not use the src/main/webapp directory if your application is packaged as a jar. Although this directory is a common standard, it works only with war packaging, and it is silently ignored by most build tools if you generate a jar.
Since you have your app on port 5000 it is accessible on that port, not default http port 80.
Either access it with
http://my-aws-ebs-instance.com:5000/welcome
or create port forwarding rune in AWS so traffing going to port 80 will be pushed you application server's port 5000.
Is it possible to use only the command line to Run jetty with only a specified war file and Context Path.
Something like :
java -jar $jettyHome/start.jar -Dwar.location=myApp.war -DcontextPath=/myApp OPTIONS=default,plus,jsp
Use the jetty runner.
java -jar jetty-runner.jar my.war
With Maven, you can install by adding to your pom.xml:
<build>
...
<plugins>
...
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-dependency-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.3</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<phase>package</phase>
<goals><goal>copy</goal></goals>
<configuration>
<artifactItems>
<artifactItem>
<groupId>org.mortbay.jetty</groupId>
<artifactId>jetty-runner</artifactId>
<version>7.5.4.v20111024</version>
<destFileName>jetty-runner.jar</destFileName>
</artifactItem>
</artifactItems>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
Run:
mvn package
And use as:
java -jar target/dependency/jetty-runner.jar target/*.war
http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/current/runner.html
http://central.maven.org/maven2/org/eclipse/jetty/jetty-runner/
I've written a tiny command line app / Maven archetype which works like how I thought this all should have in the first place. The bootstrap app lets you launch your servlet container of choice (Jetty, Tomcat, GlassFish) by just passing it the path to the WAR and your port.
Using Maven, you can create and package your own instance of this simple app:
mvn archetype:generate \
-DarchetypeGroupId=org.duelengine \
-DarchetypeArtifactId=war-bootstrap-archetype \
-DarchetypeVersion=0.2.1
Then you launch it like this:
java -jar bootstrap.jar -war myapp.war -p 8080 -c /myapp --jetty
Here's the source for the utility and the archetype: https://bitbucket.org/mckamey/war-bootstrap
install maven from command line:
sudo apt install maven
run war from command line on folder, where pom.xml:
mvn jetty:run-war
Using jetty-runner-minimal:
$ git clone https://github.com/kissaten/jetty-runner-minimal
$ cd jetty-runner-minimal
$ mvn package
$ wget https://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/appdev/sample/sample.war
$ java -jar target/dependency/jetty-runner.jar sample.war
It's possible, if you have the appropriate start config (jetty.xml) set up.
Out of the box, jetty doesn't ship with a jetty.xml that does that, but you could write one easily enough.
That would mean you'd either
Have a command line that was more like
java -jar $jettyHome/start.jar -Dwar.location=myApp.war -DcontextPath=/myApp jetty-myapp.xml
or
java -jar $jettyHome/start.jar -Dwar.location=myApp.war -DcontextPath=/myApp etc/jetty.xml etc/jetty-plus.xml jetty-deploy-app.xml
Override the etc/jetty.xml yourself and put the info you want in there.
Jetty startup is pretty straight forward, so it's really just about producing an XML file that does what you want.
That XML file can read values from system properties, so you can use your various "-D" options.