Author: Wolf-Dieter Fink
Level: Advanced
Technologies: EJB, EAR
Summary: The ejb-multi-server
quickstart shows how to communicate between multiple applications deployed to different servers using an EJB to log the invocation.
Target Product: JBoss EAP
Source: https://github.com/jboss-developer/jboss-eap-quickstarts/
The ejb-multi-server
quickstart demonstrates communication between applications deployed to different Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform servers. Each application is deployed as an EAR and contains a simple EJB bean. The only function of each bean is to log the invocation.
This example consists of the following Maven projects, each with a shared parent:
Sub-project | Description |
---|---|
app-main |
An application that can be called by the client . It can also call the different sub-applications. |
app-one and app-two |
These are simple applications that contain an EJB sub-project to build the ejb.jar file and an EAR sub-project to build the app.ear file. Each application contains only one EJB that logs a statement on a method call and returns the jboss.node.name and credentials. |
app-web |
A simple WAR application. It consists of one Servlet that demonstrates how to invoke EJBs on a different server. |
client |
This project builds the standalone client and executes it. |
The root pom.xml
builds each of the subprojects in an appropriate order.
The server configuration is done using CLI batch scripts located in the root of the quickstart folder.
The application this project produces is designed to be run on Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1 or later.
All you need to build this project is Java 8.0 (Java SDK 1.8) or later and Maven 3.3.1 or later. See Configure Maven for JBoss EAP 7.1 to make sure you are configured correctly for testing the quickstarts.
It is important to start with a clean version of JBoss EAP before testing this quickstart. Be sure to unzip or install a fresh JBoss EAP instance.
In the following instructions, replace EAP7_HOME
with the actual path to your JBoss EAP installation. The installation path is described in detail here: Use of EAP7_HOME and JBOSS_HOME Variables.
The following users must be added to the ApplicationRealm
to run this quickstart. Be sure to use the names and passwords specified in the table as they are required to run this example.
UserName | Realm | Password | Roles |
---|---|---|---|
quickuser | ApplicationRealm | quick-123 | leave blank for none |
quickuser1 | ApplicationRealm | quick123+ | leave blank for none |
quickuser2 | ApplicationRealm | quick+123 | leave blank for none |
To add the users, open a command prompt and type the following commands:
For Linux:
EAP7_HOME/bin/add-user.sh -a -u quickuser -p quick-123
EAP7_HOME/bin/add-user.sh -a -u quickuser1 -p quick123+
EAP7_HOME/bin/add-user.sh -a -u quickuser2 -p quick+123
For Windows:
EAP7_HOME\bin\add-user.bat -a -u quickuser -p quick-123
EAP7_HOME\bin\add-user.bat -a -u quickuser1 -p quick123+
EAP7_HOME\bin\add-user.bat -a -u quickuser2 -p quick+123
If you prefer, you can use the add-user utility interactively. For an example of how to use the add-user utility, see the instructions located here: Add an Application User.
JBoss EAP server configuration for this quickstart is very complicated and not easily restored by running a JBoss CLI script, so it is important to back up your server configuration files before you begin.
-
If it is running, stop the JBoss EAP server.
-
Back up the following files, replacing EAP7_HOME with the path to your JBoss EAP installation:
EAP7_HOME/domain/configuration/domain.xml EAP7_HOME/domain/configuration/host.xml
-
After you have completed testing and undeployed this quickstart, you can replace these files to restore the server to its original configuration.
You configure the domain server by running JBoss CLI commands. For your convenience, this quickstart batches the commands into a install-domain.cli
script provided in the root directory of this quickstart.
-
Start with a fresh instance of the JBoss EAP as noted above under Start with a Clean JBoss EAP Install.
-
Be sure you add the required users as specified above under Add the Application Users.
-
Before you begin, make sure you followed the instructions above under Back Up the JBoss EAP Server Configuration Files.
-
Start the JBoss EAP server
-
Open a command prompt and navigate to the root of the EAP directory.
-
Start the server using the following command:
bin/domain.sh
-
-
Review the
install-domain.cli
file in the root of this quickstart directory. This script configures and starts multiple servers needed to run this quickstart. -
Open a new command prompt, navigate to the root directory of this quickstart, and run the following command, replacing EAP7_HOME with the path to your server:
For Linux: EAP7_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh -c --file=install-domain.cli For Windows: EAP7_HOME\bin\jboss-cli.bat -c --file=install-domain.cli
You should see the following result when you run the script:
{ "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STOPPED" } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STOPPED" } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined } The batch executed successfully process-state: reload-required { "outcome" => "success", "result" => undefined, "server-groups" => undefined, "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STARTING", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STARTING", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STARTING", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STARTING", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "STARTING", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"} } { "outcome" => "success", "result" => "Starting", "response-headers" => {"process-state" => "reload-required"}
NOTE: Depending on your machine configuration, you may see "Exception in thread "main" java.lang.OutOfMemoryError: unable to create new native thread" exceptions in the server log when you run this script. If you do, you must increase the ulimit open files and max user processes settings. Instructions to do this are located here: http://ithubinfo.blogspot.com/2013/07/how-to-increase-ulimit-open-file-and.html. After you update the ulimit settings, be sure to reboot and start with a fresh instance of the server.
There are too many additions to the configuration files to list here. Feel free to compare the domain.xml
and host.xml
to the backup copies to see the changes made to configure the server to run this quickstart.
-
Make sure you have started and configured the JBoss EAP server successfully as described above.
-
Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.
-
Type this command to build the artifacts:
mvn clean install
You should see
BUILD SUCCESS
at the end of the buildSUCCESS
messages for each component. -
In the same command prompt, deploy the applications using the provided CLI batch script by typing the following command:
For Linux: EAP7_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh -c --file=deploy-domain.cli For Windows: EAP7_HOME\bin\jboss-cli.bat -c --file=deploy-domain.cli
This will deploy the
app-*.ear
files to different server-groups of the running domain. You should see the following result when you run the script:The batch executed successfully process-state: reload-required
You may see the following warnings in the server log. You can ignore these warnings.
[Server:app-oneB] 13:00:13,346 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 13) JGRP000015: the send buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 1MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max send buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.wmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneB] 13:00:13,346 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 13) JGRP000015: the receive buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 20MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max receive buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.rmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneB] 13:00:13,347 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 13) JGRP000015: the send buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 1MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max send buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.wmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneB] 13:00:13,347 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 13) JGRP000015: the receive buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 25MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max receive buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.rmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneA] 13:00:13,407 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 11) JGRP000015: the send buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 1MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max send buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.wmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneA] 13:00:13,408 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 11) JGRP000015: the receive buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 20MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max receive buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.rmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneA] 13:00:13,408 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 11) JGRP000015: the send buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 1MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max send buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.wmem_max on Linux) [Server:app-oneA] 13:00:13,408 WARN [org.jboss.as.clustering.jgroups.protocol.UDP] (ServerService Thread Pool -- 11) JGRP000015: the receive buffer of socket MulticastSocket was set to 25MB, but the OS only allocated 212.99KB. This might lead to performance problems. Please set your max receive buffer in the OS correctly (e.g. net.core.rmem_max on Linux)
NOTE: If ERRORs appear in the server.log
when installing or deploying the quickstart, stop the domain and restart it. This should ensure further steps run correctly.
This example shows how to invoke an EJB from a remote standalone application.
-
Make sure that the deployments are successful as described above.
-
Navigate to the quickstart
client/
subdirectory. -
Type this command to run the application:
mvn exec:java
The client will output the following information provided by the applications:
InvokeAll succeed: MainApp[anonymous]@master:app-main > [ app1[quickuser1]@master:app-oneB > app2[quickuser2]@master:app-twoA ; app2[quickuser2]@master:app-twoA ]
This output shows that the
MainApp
is called with the useranonymous
at nodemaster:app-main
and the sub-call is proceeded by themaster:app-oneA
node andmaster:app-twoA
node asquickuser2
.Review the server log files to see the bean invocations on the servers.
Note: This quickstart requires
quickstart-parent
artifact to be installed in your local Maven repository. To install it, navigate to quickstarts project root directory and run the following command:mvn clean install
-
If it is necessary to invoke the client with a different JBoss EAP version the main class can be invoked by using the following command from the root directory of this quickstart. Replace EAP7_HOME with your current installation path. The output should be similar to the previous mvn executions.
java -cp EAP7_HOME/bin/client/jboss-client.jar:app-main/ejb/target/ejb-multi-server-app-main-ejb-client.jar:app-two/ejb/target/ejb-multi-server-app-two-ejb-client.jar:client/target/ejb-multi-server-client.jar org.jboss.as.quickstarts.ejb.multi.server.Client
NOTE:
- If exec is called multiple times, the invocation for
app1
might useapp-oneA
andapp-oneB
node due to cluster loadbalancing. - A JBoss EAP will deny the invocation of unsecured methods of
appOne
/appTwo
since security is enabled but the method does not include @Roles. You need to setdefault-missing-method-permissions-deny-access = false
for theejb3
subsystem within the domain profileha
anddefault
to allow the method invocation. See theinstall-domain.cli
script.
The JSF example shows different annotations to inject the EJB. Also how to handle the annotation if different beans implement the same interface and therefore the container is not able to decide which bean needs to be injected without additional informations.
- Make sure that the deployments are successful as described above.
- Use a browser to access the JSF application at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/ejb-multi-server-app-main-web/
- Insert a message in the Text input and invoke the different methods. The result is shown in the browser.
- See server logfiles and find your given message logged as INFO.
An example how to access EJBs from a separate instance which only contains a web application.
- Make sure that the deployments are successful as described above.
- Use a browser to access the Servlet at the following URL: http://localhost:8380/ejb-multi-server-app-web/
- The Servlet will invoke the remote EJBs directly and show the results, compare that the invocation is successful
-
Make sure you have started the JBoss EAP server as described above.
-
Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.
-
When you are finished testing, type this command to undeploy the archive:
For Linux: EAP7_HOME/bin/jboss-cli.sh --connect --file=undeploy-domain.cli For Windows: EAP7_HOME\bin\jboss-cli.bat --connect --file=undeploy-domain.cli
- If it is running, stop the JBoss EAP server.
- Restore the
EAP7_HOME/domain/configuration/domain.xml
andEAP7_HOME/domain/configuration/host.xml
files with the back-up copies of the files. Be sure to replace EAP7_HOME with the path to your server.
EJB Client (ejb-client) currently has limited support in the Eclipse Web Tools Platform (WTP). For that reason, this quickstart is not supported in Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio.
If you want to debug the source code of any library in the project, run the following command to pull the source into your local repository. The IDE should then detect it.
mvn dependency:sources