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If you are in a hurry to have Apache Geronimo up and running right away, this article will provide you with some basic steps for downloading, building (when needed) and run the server in no time. This is clearly not a complete guide so you may want to check the other links in the Apache Geronimo v1.0 - User's Guide main section for further information.
All you need is 5 to 10 minutes and to follow these basic steps.
At this time you have mainly two options to get the software. You can either download the latest, and stable, major milestone (namely M4, M5...) or get the latest available build (unstable sometimes). The fastest and easiest way is to get the binary directly from the Apache site. Since this article is intended to help you to have Apache Geronimo up and running in the fastest way only the binary download will be covered at this time.
Although this installation path is the fastest one, still you will need to install some software before installing Geronimo.
Geronimo is currently using the Sun ORB for RMI so it is required to use SUN JDK. Using a different JDK or different version of the JDK may result in compilation errors. Refer to the following URL for details on how to download and install J2SE 1.4.2:
http://java.sun.com
Apache Geronimo v1.0 does not support Java 1.5, if you use this version Geronimo will fail to start. |
Depending on the platform you plan to install and run Apache Geronimo you will select the appropriate installation image. Open a Web browser and access the following URL, there you will find the available packages for download (binaries and source code).
http://geronimo.apache.org/downloads.html
Select the file compression format compatible with your system (zip, tar, gz) by clicking directly on the link, download it and expand the binary to your hard drive in a new directory. For example in z:/geronimo, from now on this directory will be referenced as <geronimo_home>.
The installation of Apache Geronimo is as simple as uncompressing the .zip or .tar files. The next step is to start the server.
With Apache Geronimo already installed, open a command line console and change directory to <geronimo_home>/bin. In that directory you will find some script files (.bat and .sh) and three .jar files. If you look at these three files you will find:
To start the server run the following command:
java -jar server.jar
Alternatively a script is provided, the startup script will also start the server. Once the server is started you should see the following information on the command line console.
Booting Geronimo Kernel (in Java 1.4.2_09)... Started configuration 1/23 1s geronimo/rmi-naming/1.0/car Started configuration 2/23 3s geronimo/j2ee-server/1.0/car Started configuration 3/23 2s geronimo/j2ee-security/1.0/car Started configuration 4/23 9s geronimo/activemq-broker/1.0/car Started configuration 5/23 1s geronimo/activemq/1.0/car Started configuration 6/23 0s geronimo/system-database/1.0/car Started configuration 7/23 4s geronimo/directory/1.0/car Started configuration 8/23 0s geronimo/ldap-realm/1.0/car Started configuration 9/23 2s geronimo/jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 10/23 0s geronimo/geronimo-gbean-deployer/1.0/car Started configuration 11/23 2s geronimo/j2ee-deployer/1.0/car Started configuration 12/23 0s geronimo/jetty-deployer/1.0/car Started configuration 13/23 1s geronimo/welcome-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 14/23 1s geronimo/ldap-demo-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 15/23 1s geronimo/servlets-examples-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 16/23 2s geronimo/jsp-examples-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 17/23 3s geronimo/webconsole-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 18/23 1s geronimo/uddi-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 19/23 1s geronimo/jmxdebug-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 20/23 11s geronimo/daytrader-derby-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 21/23 0s geronimo/remote-deploy-jetty/1.0/car Started configuration 22/23 1s geronimo/hot-deployer/1.0/car Started configuration 23/23 0s geronimo/j2ee-system/1.0/car Startup completed in 51 seconds Listening on Ports: 1099 0.0.0.0 RMI Naming 1527 0.0.0.0 Derby Connector 4201 0.0.0.0 ActiveIO Connector EJB 4242 0.0.0.0 Remote Login Listener 8019 127.0.0.1 Jetty Connector AJP13 8080 0.0.0.0 Jetty Connector HTTP 8443 0.0.0.0 Jetty Connector HTTPS 61616 0.0.0.0 ActiveMQ Message Broker Connector Started Application Modules: WAR: geronimo/welcome-jetty/1.0/car WAR: geronimo/servlets-examples-jetty/1.0/car EAR: geronimo/daytrader-derby-jetty/1.0/car EAR: geronimo/webconsole-jetty/1.0/car WAR: geronimo/jmxdebug-jetty/1.0/car RAR: geronimo/activemq/1.0/car WAR: geronimo/ldap-demo-jetty/1.0/car WAR: geronimo/jsp-examples-jetty/1.0/car WAR: geronimo/remote-deploy-jetty/1.0/car RAR: geronimo/system-database/1.0/car EAR: geronimo/uddi-jetty/1.0/car Web Applications: http://hcunico:8080/ http://hcunico:8080/console http://hcunico:8080/console-standard http://hcunico:8080/daytrader http://hcunico:8080/debug-tool http://hcunico:8080/jsp-examples http://hcunico:8080/juddi http://hcunico:8080/ldap-demo http://hcunico:8080/remote-deploy http://hcunico:8080/servlets-examples Geronimo Application Server started
When prompted enter system as the user name and manager as the password.
The following figure illustrates the Web based console.
At this point you have Apache Geronimo up and running and the time spent has been minimal. The following section will propose a very basic sample JSP and show you how to deploy and run that sample application.
A HelloWorld like JSP is almost a default for these basic testing and everybody is already familiar with it. Create a new directory to hold all the application related files. From now on this directory will be referred as <app_home>.
Create a plain text file in the <app_home> directory named HelloWorld.jsp and copy the content of the following example.
<html> <head> <jsp:useBean id="datetime" class="java.util.Date"/> <title> Basic HelloWorld JSP </title> </head> <body bgcolor="#909DB8"> <h1> <font face="tahoma" color="white"> Hello world from GERONIMO! </font> </h1> <font face="tahoma" color="white">on ${datetime}</font> </body> </html>
Although for such a simple application it is not necessary, you will still create a Geronimo deployment plan so you would get a first view of the deployment plans. Create a directory named WEB-INF inside the <app_home> directory.
Create a plain text file in the <app_home>/WEB-INF directory named geronimo-web.xml and copy the content of the following example.
<?xml version="1.0"?> <web-app xmlns="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/web" xmlns:naming="http://geronimo.apache.org/xml/ns/naming" configId="HelloWorld"> <context-root>/hello</context-root> </web-app>
Create a plain text file in the <app_home>/WEB-INF directory named web.xml and copy the content of the following example.
<web-app version="2.4" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee"> <welcome-file-list> <welcome-file>HelloWorld.jsp</welcome-file> </welcome-file-list> </web-app>
From a command line window change directory to <app_home> and run the following command to package the HelloWorld application into a single .war file.
*jar -cvf HelloWorld.war **
This will create a HelloWorld.war file in the <app_home> directory. The next step is to deploy this application.
To deploy the application you have two options, you can use the Geronimo Console or the command line. For this example you will use the command line option. Change directory to <geronimo_home>/bin and run the following command:
java -jar deployer.jar --user system --password manager deploy <app_home>/HelloWorld.war
Once the application is successfully deployed you should see the following message:
E:\geronimo\bin>java -jar deployer.jar --user system --password manager deploy E:\HelloWorld\HelloWorld.war Deployed HelloWorld @ http://hcunico:8080/hello
This article showed you how simple is to have Apache Geronimo up and running. The overall time for getting the server running should be less than five minutes if you have the prerequisite (Java 1.4.2) already installed. Additionally, this article also showed you how to create, deploy and test a very simple JSP in less than five minutes.