Changes for page Deployment-Book

Last modified by Aaron Rosenzweig on 2012/01/23 04:38

From version 6.1
edited by Pascal Robert
on 2011/05/08 23:48
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 8.1
edited by Pascal Robert
on 2011/05/08 03:17
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Content
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1 += Deployment =
2 +
1 1  == Using Apache: Develop Like you Deploy ==
2 2  
3 -Most of the WebObjects deployments are done in a UNIX (Mac OS X, Linux, BSD) environments, and most of the time deployment also involve Apache httpd. Since you are probably developing your applications on a Mac OS X box and Apache httpd come bundled with it, it's really easy to setup a deployment-like setup on your development box. You can also get a small deployment environment by renting a VM on services like Amazon EC2 or Linode.
4 -
5 -Deployment typically need the following tools:
6 -
7 -* A Web server (Apache httpd)
8 -* A Web server module (mod//webobjects for Apache)//
9 -* wotaskd
10 -* JavaMonitor
11 -
12 -For a deployment-like environment on your deployment box, JavaMonitor is not needed, but you do need wotaskd, the Web server and the module.
13 -[[WO:WO 5.4 Getting Started]]
14 -[[WO:Running Through Apache - Leopard & Snow Leopard Client - Summary]]
15 -
16 16  == Why Deployment at the Beginning? ==
17 17  
18 -You might wondering: why bother with deployment so early one? So of the reasons are:
19 -
20 -* You can use features like mod//rewrite, which are not available when using DirectConnect.//
21 -* You can detect deployment problems early on. Nothing is worst than finding deployment problems when you deploy it and found out that you forgot a lot of things.
22 -* You can use static content or scripts (PHP, etc.) that are not bundled in your applications.
23 -
24 24  == Structure of .framework and .woa Build Products ==
25 25  
26 26  {{code}}
... ... @@ -34,49 +34,14 @@
34 34   -> Info.plist
35 35   -> Java
36 36   -> Properties
37 - -> *.eomodeld
38 38   -> WebServerResources
39 39   -> English.lproj, ...
40 - -> .css/.png
41 41   -> .css/.png
42 42  
43 43  {{/code}}
44 44  
45 -{{code}}
46 -
47 -.woa
48 - -> AppName
49 - -> AppName.cmd
50 - -> WOBootstrap.jar
51 - -> Content
52 - -> Frameworks
53 - -> Info.plist
54 - -> MacOS
55 - -> MacOSClassPath.txt
56 - -> MacOSXServerClassPath.txt
57 - -> Resources
58 - -> English.lproj, ...
59 - -> ValidationTemplate.strings, Localizable.strings
60 - -> .wo, .api
61 - -> CustomInfo.plist
62 - -> Java
63 - -> *.eomodeld
64 - -> Properties
65 - -> UNIX
66 - -> UNIXClassPath.txt
67 - -> WebServerResources
68 - -> English.lproj, ...
69 - -> .css/.png
70 - -> Windows
71 - -> CLSSPATH.TXT
72 - -> SUBPATHS.TXT
73 -
74 -{{/code}}
75 -
76 76  == WebObjects and Classpaths ==
77 77  
78 -The classpath that your applications use can be different in development and deployment, and that's one of the reasons why you should create a deployment environment early on. The WebObjects runtime includes the following directories when you deploy your applications:
79 -
80 80  == Organizing Deployments ==
81 81  
82 82  == Apache Configuration ==
... ... @@ -83,14 +83,8 @@
83 83  
84 84  == SSL Configuration ==
85 85  
86 -It's useful to create a https configuration on your deployment-like setup. By doing that, you can try out switching between SSL and non-SSL and make sure that switching is working well. On your development box, no need to purchase a SSL certificate, you can create a self-signed certificate for free. To create a self-signed certificate on OS X, check [[this page>>http://wiki.objectstyle.org/confluence/display/WO/Development-SSL+requests+via+https+protocol]].
34 +== Deployment Components: JavaMonitor, Wotaskd and javawoservice ==
87 87  
88 -{{code}}
89 -
90 -Deployment Components: JavaMonitor, Wotaskd and javawoservice
91 -
92 -{{/code}}
93 -
94 94  == Setting up JavaMonitor ==
95 95  
96 96  == Editing spawnofwotaskd.sh ==
... ... @@ -97,36 +97,14 @@
97 97  
98 98  == Configuring an Application ==
99 99  
100 -* By using JavaMonitor's GUI
101 -* By using JavaMonitor's REST services
102 -
103 103  == Logging and Permissions ==
104 104  
105 -Permissions are a typical deployment problem that arise from time to time in the mailing lists. By default, on deployment boxes, applications are running under the "appserver" user, but when you upload your application to your deployment server, the script that launch your application will be owned by the user who uploaded the application and "appserver" might not be able to launch the application. If your application doesn't launch and you don't get any logging going on, good chance that the problem is related to permissions on the launch script.
106 -
107 107  == Optimization: Adjusting Timeouts, Memory Usage, and Number of Instances ==
108 108  
109 109  == Trouble Shooting: Where to look when things go wrong ==
110 110  
111 -The first thing to do when an application doesn't launch by JavaMonitor/wotaskd is to launch it by command line. To do so, open a command line shell, logging as the "appserver" and start the launch script manually. For example, if you have an application named "MyApp.woa" in /Library/WebObjects/Applications, do the following commands:
112 -
113 -* sudo s
114 -* su - appserver
115 -* cd /Library/WebObjects/Applications/MyApp.woa
116 -* ./MyApp
117 -
118 -99% of the time, that procedure will show the problems, in particular permissions and classpath problems.
119 -
120 120  == Deployment alternatives (servlet, mod//proxy)// ==
121 121  
122 -== Handling Transitions between http and https ==
50 +== Wonder versions of wotaskd and JavaMonitor ==
123 123  
124 -== Using Jenkins for builds ==
125 -
126 -Using a continuous build system is useful. Many people in the community don't even build their applications on their development boxes anymore, they use a continuous build system to build projects from a source control repository. This is even more useful if you have more than one developer working on your projects, by centralizing builds, you can detect source merge problems, etc. You can even run unit tests and do deployments from a build system.
127 -
128 -The most popular continuous build system is Jenkins. It's an open source project build in Java, with many useful plugins.
129 -
130 -== Using a staging server ==
131 -
132 -It's not a requirement early on, but if your development and development environments are not alike (for example: development on OS X, deployment on Linux), you should create a staging environment that is setup exactly like your production environment. By "exactly", we means that for instance if your production environment is using CentOS 5 64bits (x86//64), your staging environment should use the same OS, and the same version of Apache, etc. A staging environment will allow your customers to try new versions of your apps without putting them on your production server, and you can detect environment-specific problems.//
52 +== Handling Transitions between http and https ==