Author: Pete Muir Level: Beginner Technologies: CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JTA Summary: Demonstrates the use of CDI 1.0, JPA 2.0, JTA 1.1, EJB 3.1 and JSF 2.0 Target Product: EAP
This example demonstrates the use of CDI 1.0, JPA 2.0, JTA 1.1, EJB 3.1 and JSF 2.0 in JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 or JBoss AS 7.
When you deploy this example, two users are automatically created for you: emuster
and jdoe
. This data is located in the src/main/resources/import.sql file
.
To test this example:
username
field and click on Greet!
.No such user exists!
.Add a new user
link. Enter the username, first name, and last name and then click Add User
. The user is added and a message displays the new user id number.Greet a user!
link to return to the Greet!
page.There is a tutorial for this quickstart in the Getting Started Developing Applications Guide.
All you need to build this project is Java 6.0 (Java SDK 1.6) or better, Maven 3.0 or better.
The application this project produces is designed to be run on JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 or JBoss AS 7.
If you have not yet done so, you must Configure Maven before testing the quickstarts.
The following shows the command line to start the server with the web profile:
For Linux: JBOSS_HOME/bin/standalone.sh
For Windows: JBOSS_HOME\bin\standalone.bat
NOTE: The following build command assumes you have configured your Maven user settings. If you have not, you must include Maven setting arguments on the command line. See Build and Deploy the Quickstarts for complete instructions and additional options.
Type this command to build and deploy the archive:
mvn clean package jboss-as:deploy
This will deploy target/jboss-as-greeter.war
to the running instance of the server.
The application will be running at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/jboss-as-greeter.
When you are finished testing, type this command to undeploy the archive:
mvn jboss-as:undeploy
You can also start the server and deploy the quickstarts from Eclipse using JBoss tools. For more information, see Use JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse to Run the Quickstarts
If you want to debug the source code or look at the Javadocs of any library in the project, run either of the following commands to pull them into your local repository. The IDE should then detect them.
mvn dependency:sources
mvn dependency:resolve -Dclassifier=javadoc