...
Administering
...
Moves
...
This
...
page
...
focuses
...
on
...
the
...
Administration
...
section
...
of
...
Moves.
...
To
...
see
...
a
...
description
...
of
...
the
...
startup
...
properties
...
required
...
look
...
at
...
...
...
...
...
.
...
The
...
entities
...
that
...
need
...
to
...
be
...
administered
...
for
...
moves
...
are
...
listed
...
below.
...
Table of Contents |
---|
In general you should set entities up in the order that they appear above. The entities are described in detail below.
Anchor | ||||
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Repositories
Repositories are maven repositories, accessible to moves over http/https. An example is the the SAIS Group repository at https://maven-mit-edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/nexus/content/groups/saisGroupRepo.
...
Maven
...
has
...
a
...
well
...
defined
...
format,
...
which
...
specifies
...
where
...
to
...
find
...
an
...
application
...
within
...
a
...
repository.
...
Each
...
Application
...
has
...
an
...
'ArtifactId',
...
a
...
'GroupId'
...
and
...
a
...
'Version'.
...
So,
...
for
...
example,
...
moves
...
itself
...
has
...
artifactId=sais-moves-web,
...
groupId=edu.mit.ist.es,
...
versionId=2.0.0.
...
Maven
...
will
...
translate
...
this,
...
by
...
default
...
into
...
a
...
final
...
location
...
of
...
...
The
...
properties
...
you
...
need
...
to
...
configure
...
for
...
a
...
repository
...
are:
...
- server
...
- (e.g.
...
- maven.mit.edu)
...
- port (e.g.
...
- null
...
- -
...
- if
...
- port
...
- is
...
- null,
...
- moves
...
- uses
...
- the
...
- default
...
- port
...
- for
...
- the
...
- protocol
...
- supplied)
...
- protocol
...
- (e.g.
...
- https)
...
- base
...
- url
...
- (e.g.
...
- /nexus/content/groups/saisGroupRepo)
...
The
...
base
...
url
...
can
...
contain
...
the
...
following
...
replacement
...
properties.
...
Property |
---|
...
Name |
---|
...
Description | |||
---|---|---|---|
${groupId} | replaced with the groupId of the application being deployed | ||
${artifactId} | replaced with the artifactId of the application being deployed | ||
${version} | replaced with the version of the application being deployed | ||
<ac:structured-macro ac:name="unmigrated-wiki-markup" ac:schema-version="1" ac:macro-id="64c42153-76fc-46dc-ae28-ecac98667c1a"><ac:plain-text-body><![CDATA[ | ${app.[paramName]} | replaced with the parameter value with key 'paramName' of the application being deployed | ]]></ac:plain-text-body></ac:structured-macro> |
The values for all parameters except 'version' are specified in the Administration -> Stacks -> Application section of moves. The version is selected during the deploy/build workflows by the user who has requested a deploy/build workflow.
Note that in order to access the MIT repository, you must also have correctly configured SSL access and a Maven username and password that is authorized to view the repository you have configured. See the properties webservices.trustStore, webservices.trustStorePassword, mit.maven.repository.username
...
and
...
mit.maven.repository.password
...
as
...
described
...
in
...
the
...
page
...
...
...
...
...
for
...
details.
...
Note
...
that
...
when
...
you
...
have
...
configured
...
an
...
app
...
that
...
has
...
at
...
least
...
one
...
release
...
in
...
the
...
MIT
...
repository,
...
you
...
can
...
test
...
repository
...
connectivity
...
by
...
going
...
to
...
Administration
...
->
...
Stacks
...
and
...
clicking
...
on
...
the
...
'ping
...
app'
...
icon
...
( ) for your app. The resulting page will look like the following:
If your app and repository are configured correctly, versions that exist in Maven should appear on the resulting page. You should be able to click on the download icon ( ) for any page and save the application binaries to your hard drive. (Tip: open jar, war or ear files using winzip or any other program that will allow you to verify that the downloaded application is valid.
If you cannot download an application using this test, you will NOT be able to deploy that application using Moves!!!
Anchor | ||||
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|
Environments
Environments are really just a lookup that identifies the function of containers within a stack. The standard environments are 'Production', 'QA', and 'Development'. These are already set up when Moves is deployed, so they will not need to be changed. However, we allow creation of new future environments (for example 'Continuous Integration' or 'Staging'). Note that the property file may need to be edited (and the moves application restarted). See the section 'Oracle Application Server usernames and passwords' in Moves Property File settings.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Stacks
A Stack is simply a grouping of Applications and Containers by Environment. Stacks allow Moves to answer the question 'What is the container for Application 'X' in Environment 'Y'. Once you create a Stack, you can add containers to it for each environment. When we subsequently configure an application, we will tell it what Stack is associated with that application. (So, for example, the application 'OGS Application' might reference 'OGS Stack'. 'OGS Stack' references containers for 'Production', 'QA', and 'Development'). By looking at these relationships, Moves knows which container to deploy to when asked to deploy to a particular environment.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Containers
A container is the service that an application is deployed to. When you configure a new Container, you will be asked to select from one of the container types. The two container types that are currently available are
- OC4J Container (deploys to Oc4j containers)
- Mock Container (does nothing, used to test workflows)
In the future we will implement other containers according to MIT needs (tomcat/weblogic etc).
For the Oc4j container, the deployerUrl must be configured. This is the url you would normally type if you are manually deploying an application using the oracle admin_client.jar utility. Typically you will use a deployerUrl of the form deployer:oc4j:opmn://
...
...
:
...
...
/
...
...
for
...
OAS
...
clusters.
...
You
...
will
...
use
...
a
...
deployerUrl
...
of
...
the
...
form
...
deployer:oc4j:localhost
...
...
for
...
OAS
...
standalone
...
instances.
...
The
...
deployment
...
process
...
essentially
...
just
...
runs
...
the
...
admin_client
...
program.
...
Below
...
is
...
the
...
configuration
...
page
...
for
...
containers.
Moves will need to know
- Where is your oc4j home directory (so it can locate the admin_client.jar
...
- program)
...
- What
...
- is
...
- the
...
- deployer
...
- url
...
- for
...
- the
...
- cluster
...
- (or
...
- standalone
...
- instance)
...
- What
...
- is
...
- the
...
- username
...
- and
...
- password
...
- to
...
- use
...
- for
...
- the
...
- target
...
- container
...
The
...
following
...
checklist
...
should
...
help
...
you
...
successfully
...
configure
...
a
...
container.
...
- Start
...
- off
...
- by
...
- making
...
- sure
...
- you
...
- have
...
- network
...
- access
...
- between
...
- the
...
- Moves
...
- Server
...
- and
...
- the
...
- Container
...
- you
...
- wish
...
- to
...
- deploy
...
- to.
...
- (For
...
- non-local
...
- deployments
...
- you
...
- will
...
- need
...
- the
...
- IS&T
...
- infrastructure
...
- team
...
- to
...
- complete
...
- these
...
- steps).
...
- open
...
- a
...
- shell
...
- on
...
- the
...
- machine
...
- where
...
- Moves
...
- is
...
- running
...
- .
...
- cd
...
- to
...
- the
...
- ORACLE_HOME
...
- folder
...
- for
...
- this
...
- machine
...
- (typically
...
- /home/oracle/product/10.1.3/j2ee/home
...
- )
Wiki Markup type *java -jar admin_client.jar \[deployerUrl] \[oc4j-admin-username] \[oc4j-admin-password] -listApplications*. You should see a list of zero or more applications. *You MUST be able to execute this step without getting errors before even bothering returning to Moves!!!* The most common sources of error here are no network connection (firewall or ipconfig issues), bad usernames/passwords, incorrect deployer urls.
...
- Upon
...
- completion
...
- of
...
- this
...
- step,
...
- make
...
- a
...
- note
...
- of
...
- the
...
- deployerUrl,
...
- oc4j-admin-username
...
- and
...
- oc4j-admin-password.
...
- For
...
- the
...
- environment
...
- type
...
- that
...
- you
...
- will
...
- be
...
- using,
...
- verify
...
- that
...
- the
...
- oracle
...
- username
...
- and
...
- password
...
- found
...
- in
...
- the
...
- previous
...
- step
...
- are
...
- correctly
...
- set
...
- up
...
- in
...
- the
...
- properties
...
- file.
...
- See
...
...
...
...
...
- ,
...
- specifically
...
- the
...
- section
...
- 'Oracle
...
- Application
...
- Server
...
- usernames
...
- and
...
- passwords'.
...
- On
...
- the
...
- Administration->Stacks->Container
...
- page,
...
- make
...
- sure
...
- the
...
- environment
...
- type
...
- is
...
- correctly
...
- set,
...
- and
...
- that
...
- the
...
- deployerUrl
...
- matches
...
- the
...
- previous
...
- step.
...
- Save
...
- the
...
- container.
...
Use the Server Test Page! Simply click on the "container ping" icon ( ) for the container you want to test. The page should list the same applications as were listed in the prior step. If the Server Test Page returns an error, go through the steps above again. You will NOT be able to deploy to a container that does not return a successful response on the Server Test Page!Anchor ServerTestPage ServerTestPage
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Applications
Applications represent web apps (.war or .ear applications) that can be deployed to a container. Application configuration is used to
- Find released applications in maven
- Deploy applications to a container
The following screen shot shows the parameters used for the Template Web Application.
...
Application Parameters explained.
...
The application parameters are used to
- find an application version in the MIT maven repository
- deploy an application to a container
Let's look at the parameters used to find an application in the MIT maven repository first. When we set up the baseUrl in the Repository configuration section, it was defined as something like /nexus/content/groups/saisGroupRepo/$
...
{app.groupId}/$
...
{app.artifactId}/$
...
{version}/$
...
{app.artifactId}-${version}$
...
{app.applicationSuffix}
...
.
...
Moves
...
will
...
dynamically
...
replace
...
anything
...
that
...
matches
...
$
...
{app.
...
...
...
}
...
with
...
the
...
value
...
of
...
the
...
parameter
...
that
...
it
...
finds
...
in
...
the
...
application's
...
configuration.
...
- applicationPrefix - Not used
- applicationSuffix - This is usually .war (for war files) or "*.ear"
...
- for
...
- ear
...
- files.
...
- Moves
...
- will
...
- replace
...
- {app.applicationSuffix}
...
- with
...
- this
...
- value
...
- when
...
- creating
...
- the
...
- actual
...
- repository
...
- url.
...
- artifactId - The artifactId from the maven pom.xml
...
- file
...
- for
...
- this
...
- application.
...
- groupId - The groupId from the maven pom.xml
...
- file
...
- for
...
- this
...
- application.
...
- any
...
- "."s
...
- in
...
- groupId
...
- are
...
- replaced
...
- with
...
- "/"s.
...
Thus,
...
in
...
our
...
example
...
above,
...
version
...
1.2.3
...
of
...
the
...
application
...
would
...
be
...
found
...
in
...
the
...
repository
...
url
...
/nexus/content/groups/saisGroupRepo/edu/mit/ist/es/template/1.2.3/template-123.war
...
h7. Debugging Application Parameters.
anchor:ApplicationTestPage}
...
Application parameters are complex, because we wish to maintain compatibility across different Maven repository layouts and different containers. Although this is complex, help is at hand! To debug your MIT Maven repositories, click on the Maven Repository Ping Tool ( ). See figure below.
If you have set up maven correctly, AND if a build exists in Maven for the application you configured, then each version in Maven will show up like in the attached file. Click on the Download Icon ( ) for a version, and the component should be downloaded from the Maven repository. Make sure you open the downloaded file in a program that can read zip files (e.g. winzip). The resulting download should show a folder hierarchy with '.class' files, '.jsp' files etc If this doesn't work, then you should use the following debugging approach
- IF NO applications can be pinged, check that you can connect to Maven using a web browser. Use the version URL defined in the container ping page. If you get a 404
- Use the username and password defined in the Moves properties file (see Moves Property File settings).
- Use the hostname defined in the Administration -> Repository page.
- Check that you do not see java SSL exceptions in the log, or in the container ping page. (These can be cryptic to read). If you suspect SSL exceptions, make sure that the Moves Trust Store is properly configured (see Moves Property File settings).
- Check that the Repository Location urls do not give 404 errors when you click on them.
Once you have verified that a build exists in the MIT Maven repository for this application, then you MUST be able to download a version using the Download Icon ( ). If you can't download a version and open it in winzip (or other archive program), Moves will certainly not be able to deploy the application.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Build Configuration
The Build Configuration allows you to configure certain aspects of Moves without restarting the server.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Build Configuration - Maven
This page allows you to define
- Where maven is located on the system
- Whether to include verbose logging in builds (This should really be moved to the build workflow)
- Where build artifacts are stored
- How long a build should take before we kill it.
- Where the mit maven repository is located (This is duplicated in Admin ->Repositories because the setup for Moves and Maven is quite different)
- The maven goal for releasing an app. This is fully qualified, and contains the groupId, artifactId and version of the plugin. This allows us to "upgrade" the plugin when it has been adequately tested). An example is edu.mit.maven.plugins:mit-release-plugin:1.2.3:release.
...
- Usually
...
- only
...
- the
...
- version
...
- number
...
- will
...
- change
...
- (in
...
- this
...
- example
...
- the
...
- version
...
- is
...
- 1.2.3).
...
- The
...
- maven
...
- goal
...
- for
...
- populating
...
- build
...
- drop
...
- downs.
...
- This
...
- is
...
- fully
...
- qualified,
...
- and
...
- contains
...
- the
...
- groupId,
...
- artifactId
...
- and
...
- version
...
- of
...
- the
...
- plugin.
...
- This
...
- allows
...
- us
...
- to
...
- "upgrade"
...
- the
...
- plugin
...
- when
...
- it
...
- has
...
- been
...
- adequately
...
- tested).
...
- An
...
- example
...
- is
...
- edu.mit.maven.plugins:mit-release-plugin:1.2.3:info.
...
- Usually
...
- only
...
- the
...
- version
...
- number
...
- will
...
- change
...
- (in
...
- this
...
- example
...
- the
...
- version
...
- is
...
- 1.2.3).
...
Wiki Markup Maven System Properties. These are passed as -D\[propertName]=\[propertyValue] parameters to Maven. For MIT we need to provide correct values for the java system properties javax.net.ssl.trustStore and javax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword
...
- Maven
...
- System
...
- Properties.
...
- These
...
- are
...
- used
...
- to
...
- set
...
- up
...
- the
...
- shell
...
- environment
...
- that
...
- Maven
...
- runs
...
- in.
...
- Typically
...
- this
...
- means
...
- correctly
...
- setting
...
- MAVEN_OPTS,
...
- JAVA_HOME,
...
- M2_HOME,
...
- PATH,
...
- and
...
- the
...
- subversion
...
- environment
...
- variable
...
- SVN_SSH.
...
- SVN_SSH
...
- is
...
- used
...
- to
...
- tell
...
- subversion
...
- where
...
- the
...
- public
...
- key
...
- is
...
- to
...
- connect
...
- over
...
- SSH
...
- without
...
- prompting
...
- for
...
- a
...
- password.
...
javax.net.ssl.trustStore
...
- and
...
- javax.net.ssl
...
- .trustStorePassword
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Build Configuration - Subversion
In the subversion config page, we just need to tell moves
- What is the command for svn
- Where the public key is that allows us to connect via the SVN+SSH protocol without a password prompt (this is done by specifying the SVN_SSH environment variable
- Where the MIT releases project lives. The MIT releases project is maintained by developers and acts as a directory. This directory defines
- What apps can be BUILT using moves
- Where that project's Subversion trunk lives.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Build Configuration - OC4J
The OC4J Home folder tells us where to find admin_client.jar.
Anchor | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
Removing Artifacts
TODO: removing artifacts is not implemented through the UI yet.
A utility exists within the Moves Application for deleting old Log and File entries. Simply select a date and click submit. Artifacts/Logs older than this date will be removed.