i'm new to java and i got some problems. i'm developping a web application using the framework stripes on tomcat 6.0.
I'm working with eclipse EE on windows. i successfully managed to get the stripes example application (called Bugzooky) up and running on my tomcat server. I imported the .war file and stripes libs in Eclipse.
Here is the stripes archive containing the examples and libs
But now i'm trying to change the example source files to learn how does it work. but whatever the modification made to the source files "WebContent/WEB-INF/src/*.java", nothing change! even after restarting the server. i noticed that the classes are compiled into .class files in the "ImportedClasses" folder, and tomcat always use these files, they are never updated, and if i removed one of them, the application just don't start. it look like my source files don't exists!
I also tried to build my webapp from scratch, but when i tried to use the features used in the example files (like SecurityFilter.java):
import javax.servlet.Filter;
import javax.servlet.FilterChain;
import javax.servlet.FilterConfig;
import ...
It ends up with plenty of:
the import javax.servlet.Filter cannot be resolved
I checked the Librairies and it look like i'm using exactly the same as the example.
It's probably something i didn't understood about java but i googled 100 times yesterday, and i can't find the solution (i probably didn't search the right place because i don't really understand my problem).
I hope you'll be able to help me.
I'm not sure about the first problem. With regard to the problem when creating a new project:
the import javax.servlet.Filter cannot be resolved
This means that the web project in Eclipse is not associated with an application server. If this is done correctly, then Eclipse will automatically include the server's libraries (the server is actually a concrete implementation of under each the Servlet API) in the project's buildpath.
Did you integrate Tomcat in Eclipse? You can add servers in the Servers view at the right bottom box. Did you associate the web project with the particular Tomcat instance? You need to select the server in the Targeted Runtimes section of the project's Properties. This is by the way normally to be done during creating the Dynamic Web Project.
You need to recompile all the changed .java files, rebuild the .war file and redeploy it to Tomcat. This is most easily done with an Ant build script. Look for a file called build.xml. If it is there install Ant if you don't already have it installed and you can then just execute the ant command in the directory with the build.xml file and then copy the resulting .war file over the existing one in Tomcat. This is all basic Java App server work flow stuff.
Related
I am trying to do the spring security tutorial at this link.
In the section entitled "Running the Tutorial application without Spring Security", I took the following steps (adjusted for differences between the current version and the version that was in use when the tutorial was written):
1.) I downloaded the latest release of the Spring Security Distribution,
2.) found and unzipped a war file in the dist directory called spring-security-samples-tutorial-3.1.2.RELEASE.war
3.) Renamed the resulting folder spring-security-tutorial
4.) Created a general project in eclipse called spring-security-tutorial
5.) Imported all of the contents of the unzipped spring-security-samples-tutorial-3.1.2.RELEASE.war
6.) Right clicked on the project in eclipse and selected configure...convert to maven project
7.) Then right clicked on the project and clicked run as...
But there was no "run on server" option. (I had chosen a general project instead of a Dynamic Web Project in hopes of preserving the file structure of the application to be imported)
I then started to repeat the process, but creating a Dynamic Web Project instead of a general project, and eclipse wants me to select the "src folders on build path". The file structure of the web application has 8 .class files in subfolders of WEB-INF, and I am not able to locate any .java files.
What steps can I take in order to download this and run it in eclipse on the server? With the ability to edit the classes?
I have read that I can select a .class file in eclipse and it will open the bytecode in the editor, so I imagine I can convert the class files to java files easily enough. But doing that within a general project triggers the error message that the class is not part of the classpath, so we need to get it in a working web project that can be run on the tomcat server from within eclipse first, I think.
A war file is a Web application ARchive (basically a zip). It is meant to contain a web application's compiled class files and resources (properties files, jsps, css, html, js, etc.). It a package that can be used by an application server (or servlet container) like Tomcat. Except through a Decompiler, you will not have access to the source code from the compiled .class files.
I doubt you can run this on Eclipse's Tomcat instances. Instead go to your Tomcat installation. Mine is at C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.22. Rename the war to something simple like security.war and place it inside the webapps folder, ie. C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.22\webapps\security.war. Go to C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.22\bin and execute the startup.bat Windows batch file. This script sets up the classpath and launches a Java application containing all the applications in webapps. You can see the startup logs in C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.22\logs\catalina.out (as you would normally in Eclipse console).
You can then go to localhost:8080/security to hit the application. Replace 8080 with whatever port you're configured on. security is the same name as the war file. When Tomcat starts (based on a config parameter) it will extract the war into a package directory under webapps with the same name.
You can play around with configuration settings. Some of the important ones are here.
You can shutdown Tomcat by running the C:\apache-tomcat-7.0.22\bin\shutdown.bat Batch file script. You'll have to do this and restart if you change something in the application (ex. the web.xml or a properties file).
I think the tutorial you linked was meant more for trying security settings than actually changing the source code. I'm sure there are other samples online for Spring security, I just don't know them.
I am converting an application from Flex to Javascript. My workflow within Eclipse for Flex was to use Maven to start my Java web app in Tomcat and then have Eclipse configured to compile edited Actionscript files to a SWF and save it to my exploded WAR directory (that Maven/Cargo uses).
It worked very well for a long time allowing me to edit actionscript source code, flip over the browser, refresh the screen and see the changes.
I am new to Javascript however, and am struggling to get the same workflow up and running. The part I don't understand is how to tell Eclipse that I would like my edited Javascript files to be written out to a particular directory (that contains the exploded WAR). In my WAR project (a WTP dynamic web project) there is something that looks like a Javascript build path called "Javascript resources", but there is no output directory.
I would really like to continue to run Tomcat and Jetty via Maven if at all possible. I realize I can do what I want via WTP (M2E-WTP), but would prefer to use Maven/Cargo.
Denis's suggestion to create custom builder is probably best solution if you want to continue using pure Maven/Cargo approach with Eclipse.
If you are deploying to an exploded war directory, then another similar idea would be to use a File Synchronization plugin. These will automatically copy modified files to configured folders. See:
http://andrei.gmxhome.de/filesync/
https://wiki.onehippo.com/display/CMS7/Use+Filesync+Eclipse+plugin+for+faster+turn+around
-------------
FWIW, I don't think Maven:Tomcat/Cargo plugins are ideal for real-time web development, especially on the frontend side of things. They are useful mainly for controlled deployments or bootstrapping a server without initial setup. My thoughts:
Eclipse WTP used to be great for real-time web development, but I stopped using it a few years back as it just got way too hard to make it work correctly in a Maven environment. Fwiw, my preferred approach these days looks like this:
Do not install or use Eclipse WTP.
Use m2eclipse to integrate Maven with Eclipse.
Use Maven to do clean builds and generate exploded WAR directory in target folder.
Setup independent Tomcat server to load webapp from the exploded target folder.
I suspect the tomcat setup/startup could be integrated into Maven. It's not worth the extra complexity to me though.
Then, I configure JRebel (automatically via Maven) to handle java and web resource file changes. With this setup, I almost never have to redeploy or restart Tomcat. All changes (java, html, js, etc.) are seen immediately.
I think the same setup could be used without JRebel (for non-java files only) by configuring the web source folders as source folders in Eclipse with custom target output path being the corresponding directory in the exploded war directories. If that didn't work, then it would definitely work by using the custom builder or file synchronization solutions mentioned above.
Eclipse introduces the concept of "builder" to build a project. It comes with hardcoded builders such as the java compiler or the war builder of WTP.
But eclipse also enable to setup your own Builder using ant files : on your project, right click the project properties, go to section Builders, click on the new button.
You can use arguments to your ant file and use variables defined in by eclipse to build them
Do not forget to fill the refresh tab if you want eclipse to by notified of the produced files.
Do not forget the fill the Build options tab, section "Specify working set of relevant resources" in order to have your builder called each time a source used by the build file is changed inside eclipse.
Also go to the "targets" tab to specify during which type of build phase your ant file is called and which target is called.
I knwo this solution may not be the best for you since your build process will be described more than once but it may help you achieve your goal.
I feel like a 4-year old who has a slice of bread with pb and a slice with jelly and is asking how to make a sandwich..
I've been given the responsibility of maintaining a javaEE website that was done by our parent company that no loner supports us. I'm relatively new to JavaEE and I'm trying to figure out how to recompile the files that need to be modified from within the root folder of the site.
I downloaded NetBeans to help me with this, but still can't figure it out. My problem is that the java files can't find any of the packages and resources they are dependent on. As far as I know, the resources are there.. although, I do see some packages starting with "com." and "javax.", and I don't see a 'com' or 'javax' folder anywhere.. I believe my problem has something to do with setting the class path in the project properties in NetBeans.. I tried that but either I'm not doing it right, or its not working. This whole Java compilation is so foreign to me, it'd be really great if someone could lead me in the right direction of getting this website compiled.
I posted a pick of the folder hierarchy of the website to help:
I'm trying to compile the RecordAdd.java file here specifically at the moment. Some of the packages it is trying to import come from its parent folder, asp, of the folder it is in, easp. The file is also trying to import com.icesoft.faces.component.*; where '*' consists of several different imports of the parent packages. I don't see a com folder like I mentioned, but I do see icefaces.jar files in the lib folder in WEB-INF folder. I've tried putting these folders in NetBeans Library-Compile category classpath, but that didn't do anything.
I'm not doing something right, that is probably a basic knowledge of compiling java projects, but I'm just not getting it. I really appreciate any help, just please don't be too harsh. Thanks!
Try to find out which IDE the original devs used. I see a nbproject folder which indicated Netbeans (unless that was created by you) so try opening the project in Netbeans as a Java EE project. I'd also try to open it in Eclipse, it has good importing capabilities and can sometimes figure out the classpath on it's own. Download the Java EE version of Eclipse and install the Web Tools Project. You can also try to see if there is a build file that will compile and generate a war file for you (something like build.xml).
It should be simple if the project was created in netbeans. Just go to File -> Open Project. Navigate to where the project is located. You will know if the folder is a project, because netbeans recognizes it and a different icon is displayed instead of a regular folder icon. Once you open your project, you can right click compile the project.
You don't use java compiler yourself to compile java files in a project. Compiling and building are done by tools like ant, maven... It's automated.
Importing existing projects into netbeans is a great way to loose a half a day.
I'm assuming that since there's a nbproject directory, this was built through netbeans, which should give you a leg up.
In the "Open Project" wizard, the top level of your application (not necessarily the sources) should have a friendly globe icon for a web application (.war) or a triangle for EE application (.ear). Open the triangle if there is one. Web applications can be packaged with EE applications through netbeans, so if the Web App you're trying to compile belongs to one, some of the build properties may be associated with it.
Looking at the file nbproject/build-impl.xml should give you hints about where your libraries folder was located. Make sure this path matches in your project properties under the Libraries header. These libraries can be shared among projects and therefore likely out of this projects directory structure and referenced or native to this project alone in which case jars are copied in to your lib folder.
There may be additional reference or server issues that netbeans detects (and gives a paltry error message for) which can be found in the project context menu under "Resolve Reference Issues" or "Resolve Missing Server". In netbeans projects are built against the servers they're run on right in the IDE. Check that you have the servers you want configured under Tools-> Servers, then ensure that server is linked in your project properties under Run.
This may not solve all your problems, but is a good start. Good Luck!
Sorry for this simple questions but i am too much confused with how to run java application. Whenever i ask some each one tells his own tools to proceed and i have learn that thing.
So provided i have simple basic eclipse with no plugin and i have downloaded the sample web application which uses spring , hibernate , mysql ,
The folder structure of app is
.setting
src--main,test
target
.classpath
.project
Now i want to run this using localhost in browser
what thing i need to do. i will tell from my knowledge and u guys can correct it
i don't want to use STS or install any plugin in eclipse.
I imported the project from eclipse
menu and i appeared on left window
As it uses spring do i have to add
the spring jar files in build path
of spring. or anything else
Same for hibernate jar files
Fior simple java app i used to
compile the class which contain the
void main function but i have no
idea which file to compile to run
this app
I added the mysql connector in build
path to connect with mysql in simple
java app. will same thing work here?
I knoow we need web server for that.
so if i want to install glass fish
server then how will i connect it to eclispe or that app. will tomcat be
ok than glass fish??? i know tthere
is eclispe ide with embedded glass
fish but i want integrate evrything
myself
IN browser i which url i need to use
to see that app
I don't know how did maven , appfuse fit in here. Can i run app without maven if yes then what does maven really do , i mean does it compile the java files or what. If i require maven then
Do i need to install it separately i
mean exe file or jar file
how to link with eclipse
I have read about building with
maven , what will ahppen after
building i mean what is the result
of building , will i see browser
after building or after building
there are some steps further. do
maven needs to link with web server
installed
sorry for basics questions but i am confused with all new trminology
Building a webapp is complicated. I will try and address your specific questions.
Utimately you don't need Maven or Appfuse, both can be very helpful.
Maven is a build tool. Maven and Eclipse do some similar tasks. Both can compile your code and manage a classpath. Maven handles a lot of things out of the box that Eclipse can't do by default. Maven can manage dependencies (i.e. download the spring jars for you) and create complex build processes.
If you are unfamiliar with Maven and creating a build file from scratch then it probably won't be much help. If you have a pom.xml (Maven build file) from somewhere else then Maven can be a big help. The result of Maven depends on how your build file is structured. The result is most often either a .war file (described below as step 5) or that your application is deployed directly to your web server (described below as step 6).
Appfuse is also not mandatory but can be useful. Appfuse will create a skeleton project for you. When it does this it will create a pom.xml (Maven build file) to automatically build your project. Appfuse by itself doesn't do anything other than help get projects started. Most people don't start building web apps from scratch anymore since getting the directory structure right and creating the build file can be a lot of work and it's easy to make mistakes. A tool similar to Appfuse is Spring Roo.
Tomcat, Glassfish, Jetty, and JBoss are web servers. They are also often called Servlet Containers which is just another name for a web server that hosts servlets in a certain fashion. Any of them will work for your project, they all have different learning curves. Integrating them into Eclipse may work for you, when I got started I found it was easier (although a little slower) to keep them separate.
In the JDK there is an interface named javax.servlet.Servlet. This is the interface that the entry class of your web application must implement. In particular the method service(ServletRequest req, ServletResponse res) is called every time there is a request for a URL. If you want your web application to respond to HTTP it may be simpler to extend the abstract class HttpServlet (which implements Servlet) instead. Most libraries (i.e. Spring web framework) have their own implementations of Servlet that are the entry point to the library.
I will now describe the basic process for building a web application. This is a complicated process and most people eventually automate it with Maven. I do not suggest trying to manually walk through the process yourself it can be very complicated but you can if you want. I am going to assume that you are placing all of your built files in a folder named $BUILD
Compile your source code. The compiled classes need to end up in a folder called $BUILD/WEB-INF/classes
Place all your jar files (external libraries) in a folder named $BUILD/WEB-INF/lib
Create a deployment descriptor, this is a file that tells your web server how to deploy your code. The most important thing in this file is a mapping from URLs to Java classes that implement Servlet. It should be named web.xml and put in $BUILD/WEB-INF
jar up the all this code with the root of the jar being at $BUILD. You could call this code application.jar
Rename the jar file extension to war. A war file is simply a jar file that has the required WEB-INF directory inside of it.
Deploy this war file to your web server (Tomcat/JBoss/Jetty/Glassfish/etc.), the process for doing this is different for each web server
That is the basics of web application deployment. Your web server will extract the war file and load all of the jars in the lib folder into the classpath. It will then take any URL requests it receives and send them to the appropriate Servlet implementations declared in your deployment descriptor.
As you can see this is not a simple process. This is the reason tools like Appfuse and Roo exist. They try and give you a starting point which does all of this basic stuff for you. If you are having trouble I would suggest trying again from scratch with Appfuse/Roo. As you start to get the hang of things I would also suggest learning more about Maven (or Ivy+Ant) to handle dependencies for you.
You should download the Java EE edition of Eclipse - it contains the code needed to work with enterprise applications.
You will also need an enterprise server (like JBoss or Glassfish) and the corresponding server adapter, which is a bit much for a beginner.
The easiest way to get started is to download Netbeans with Glassfish and use that instead - at least for now - as everything is configured correctly and it is very fast to get started! When you are more familiar with the way things work, you can switch back to Eclipse if you want to.
I am relatively new Java developer that's been thrown in the deep end, my usual skillset lies in Microsoft products and C#.
However I have managed to write a nice web service using Restlet and incorporating Toplink and doing some database CRUD stuff, etc etc.
I developed this in Eclipse against Tomcat 5.5. I followed tutorials and examples and managed to throw something together that works.
I had all my jar files in WebContent/WEB-INF/lib directory of my project - I soon realised that when I export this as a WAR file and deploy in Tomcat, it takes these jar files with it and stores them local to the application.
Fine, but then when you try to undeploy the app, it only does it partially as Tomcat "holds on" to some of the jars it was using i.e. the Oracle JDBC, and Toplink ones. This makes sense as the web service was using these jars as there was a live Oracle connnection going on.
So then I thought I should have all these jars in a common place where all deployed apps can access them, that folder I believe is:
C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation\Tomcat 5.5\common\lib
(in my case). This made total sense, it's logical as you don't want loads of apps on Tomcat all referencing the same jars. So I removed all the jars out of my projects lib folder and put them in the common\lib directory.
Now my app will not work properly - it can't find my source code in src, the custom bespoke code that I have programmed against these jars. It will only work if I jar up my source code and put in the directory stated above. Odd.
I am obviously very confused with class paths and build paths and all of that stuff, and must have got this sort of stuff all wrong as I am no Java expert, as I readily admit I have pretty much hacked this together - so can anyone explain to me in laymans terms how I should structure my project to get it working with jars held in a common folder in Tomcat. Or are there any good resoureces on the web to help explain to me what I should do.
Hope this all makes sense...
Here is a pic of my current project:
Sounds like you are not using WTP web project.
If you've installed 'Eclipse IDE for Java EE Developers' flavor of Eclipse, the WTP is already bundled in there. Otherwise here its update site -> http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/updates
Once you've installed WTP you should create 'Dynamic Web Project'.
In general I would recomment to put only your presentation layer here ( JSPs, CSS, HTML ) and put all pure java projects into standard 'Java' project that you later add as a dependency to 'Dynamic Web Project'.
WTP can run your web application under a number of containers, fortunately Tomcat is supported.
You will need to configure it through Window->Preferences->Server->Runtime Environments.
Once runtime envirnonment is configured, you can create your server runtime:
Right click in 'Servers' view.
Choose New->Server
Select server type: 'Tomcat v.5.5 Server'
(Optional) Change server name to whatever makes sense for you
Select server runtime environment: This is the Runtime Environemtn that you have configured previously
Hit 'Next' button
Add your 'Dynamic Web Project' project to 'Configured projects:' panel
Hit 'Finish' button
After the server is configured you can just run it, or you can put it in Debug mode. All source code referenced by dependent projects will be available for debugging.
NOTE:
From personal experience, I would not recommend using common/lib. Put all the jars that your web application relies upon into its WAR file. If you are worried about dependency tracking then start looking into Maven and m2eclipse.
Usually I put my jars in $CATALINA_BASE/shared/lib/
Please read this documentation for more clarification and specially Class Loader Definitions section.
Also restart the server after you copied the jars.
Go to Window > Show View > Other > Server > Servers, a servers tab will appear below with console tab. Click on your server and then F3, this will open server configuration.
Check Server Locations, and make sure you checked Use tomcat installation(takes control of tomcat installation) then click Modules tab below and it will show your installed modules, make sure the module is present or add it.