Remove application name after localhost in jetty - maven

I build application using maven and run it using jetty plugin. Lets name of application be AAA, then, how can i configure jetty for entering on my application by URL http://localhost:PORT/ instead of http://localhost:PORT/AAA/
I saw answers when using Tomcat, but i am intresting in jetty.

You could set <contextPath> to / in the plugin configuration as documented here or here (based on the version of the plugin used.
<contextPath>/</contextPath>

Related

Use of spring-boot-maven-plugin

While creating a spring boot project I define property in pom.xml as <packaging>war</packaging> with which I can create a war and thereafter deploy the war into server maybe tomcat or WAS.
But I came across a plugin named spring-boot-maven-plugin whose documentation states that it's use is to package executable jar or war archives and run an application in-place.
My query is why do we need this at all ?
If my packaging can tell me what to create and then can deploy it to run, what is the used of this plugin.
I am trying to understand a new project so wanted to be sure that every line makes sense
The maven plugin will create an "executable" archive. In the case of the war packaging, you would be able to execute your app with java -jar my-app.war. If you intend to deploy your Spring Boot application in an existing Servlet container, then this plugin is, indeed, not necessary.
The maven plugin does more things like running your app from the shell or creating build information.
Check the documentation
The Spring Boot Maven Plugin provides Spring Boot support in Apache Maven, letting you package executable jar or war archives and run an application “in-place”.
Refer this - https://www.javaguides.net/2019/02/use-of-spring-boot-maven-plugin-with.html

tomcat7-maven-plugin to deploy spring boot with appropriate spring profile selected

My goal is to be able to use the tomcat-maven plugin to deploy my spring boot application from the command line where an argument is supplied that tells spring which profile to use like this:
mvn tomcat7:deploy -Dspring.profiles.active="dev"
I've tried several different things such as the solution described here but the default application.properties is still always selected.
The only way that I've been able to get the application-dev.properties selected is by using
mvn spring-boot:run -Dspring.profiles.active="dev"
But we don't want to have tomcat packaged in our war
I'm new to maven and spring boot and I've been spinning my wheels for the better part of a a day now so any advice would be appreciated.
Consider using MAVEN_OPTS environment variable to set VM argument. (Linux/osx) example you would need to execute before your maven goal:
export MAVEN_OPTS="-Dspring.profiles.active=dev"
I found out the issue and I was able to get the correct profile selected using
export SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE=dev. The problem that I was having was when I was starting my local tomcat server through the eclipse UI my environment variables were being ignored. When starting tomcat through startup.bat the environment variable gets used and spring uses the correct profile.

How to use Websphere liberty in spring boot application

I want to use Websphere liberty in spring boot application instead of tomcat server. If I am correct it is not supported out of the box. How can I configure spring boot/websphere liberty to achieve this?
Using the Liberty app accelerator you can download a zip containing a Maven buildable 'Spring Boot with Spring MVC' app as your starting point. Just run mvn install and you'll get the app running at http://localhost:9080/myLibertyApp/
Actually, you can now create runnable jar files with WebSphere Liberty. You need v8.5.5.9 or higher. Create a runnable jar this way:
server package {server name} --archive={jar name}.jar --include=minify,runnable
Resultant jar can be run as you'd expect:
java -jar {jar name}.jar
Since very recently (May 2018) you can deploy a Spring Boot jar with Liberty, as it seems. See https://developer.ibm.com/wasdev/blog/2018/05/11/spring-boot-applications-on-liberty/. Haven't tried it out yet, though.

Spring Maven rest web service - What is the URL when deploying on real web server?

I followed this tutorial https://spring.io/guides/gs/rest-service/ by creating maven project in intellij, addind pom.xml etc. Then I run on localhost exactly as written in the tutorial and all works:
http://localhost:8080/greeting
When greeting came from the annotation of method in the controller #RequestMapping("/greeting").
Then I made JAR artifact & deployed it to Tomact on 'real server' (Elastic beanstalk environment running EC2 instance on AWS).
I got from AWS the base URL of my webserver running Tomact. What is now the suffix to my service? This is NOT working:
http://someEnvironmentName.elasticbeanstalk.com/greeting
EDIT: How I made the artifact JAR
In intellij I can compile & run maven project and then test it in localhost. So what I did:
Right click on the project name->Open Module Settings->Artifacts->Add->Jar
Build->Build Artifacts->Selecting the Jar from above
Maybe I need to build WAR? And how to deal with the POM.xml? Now my pom is exactly as in the linked tutorial.
Thanks,
If you use spring-boot, you don´t need a tomcat because spring include an embedded tomcat. Only you run the application with Maven. So, the advantage of spring-boot is not dependent on an application server and using other containers such as Docker.
Do you put the port in the call to your webserver?
On the other hand, check your server logs to see if there are any problem.
Solution (Thanks to #JBNizet suggestion):
Follow this link http://docs.spring.io/spring-boot/docs/current/reference/htmlsingle/#howto-create-a-deployable-war-file
Modify the Application.java file
Modify the pom.xml (By adding one more dependency)
Then if you are using Intellij IDE under Build->Build Artifacts will be automatically option for WAR file.
Just deploy to AWS elasticbeanstalk instance running EC2 in the usual way. The URL is:
http://someEnvironmentName.elasticbeanstalk.com/greeting

Hot deploy war maven project in embedded tomcat

I have maven war project.
I know inplace. it deploys to a given server. But i want to deploy on embedded tomcat and dont want to restart everytime. just say
for first time run deploy
Then change some java class and say redeploy. All in embedded tomcat.
Is this possible ?
Could the Tomcat Maven Plugin help with this?
You can use it by using the command tomcat:run
This page describes how to set up your POM/settings to make calling the plugin easier (using a prefix vs having to use full groupId/artifactId of plugin on the command line).
Maybe you can have a look at the executable war/jar feature see http://tomcat.apache.org/maven-plugin-2/executable-war-jar.html
So that will produce a simple jar which contains tomcat classes. You will be able to simply run: java -jar pathtofile.jar.

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