Loading property files in weblogic 10.3 - weblogic

I have an application which acesses a lot of property files. In jboss 5.1 we can load this from the conf directory. I would like to know if there is any such way of loading the property files in weblogic 10.3 .
I don't want to include it in an jar and place in the lib,since these property files are configurable files. The user needs to configure certain properties of the application.
Also placing the property files in the domain directory is not very good and I also would like to know if there is any other way of achieving the same .
Regards
Raj

You can place the properties files needed by your application(s) to the classpath of Weblogic and then remove the files from your WAR/JAR/EAR.
If you choose a specific folder that is not yet in your classpath, just log on the Weblogic console, and navigate through Environment -> Servers -> [Your server name] -> Configuration -> Server Start
Now it is just about adding the folder containing your properties file(s) to the classpath.

Related

Rapidoid custom config file is ignored

I'm very new to Rapidoid and I'm experiencing problem with initial configuration of the application. I'm using Rapidoid 5.5.5 with following Rapidoid modules defined in pom:
rapidoid-commons
rapidoid-http-server
rapidoid-web
Java 11 is used to run the application.
I've prepared a custom config-develop.yml file where I've changed value for port to use from default 8080 to 18888 and added some menu items in gui: section however when I start application none of my changes were used: generated log does not have any data about accepting/use of parameters from my file and configuration files are the files that are included into rapidoid-commons Maven artefact.
Also, the log shows that classpath used is limited to /target/classes folder (I'm using Maven as build tool). So, these are my questions:
What are the rules for merging configuration information when multiple config-*.yml files are present in search path?
How I can tell Rapidoid to ignore some configuration files?
Is it possible to specify explicit name for configuration file as part of initialisation process?
I'm happy to provide additional information if this will help to find an answer to the questions above.
With best regards,
Nick

How to change the path that jar files use in java Web Applications

I have written a java Servlet web application, using NetBeans 7.2.1. The program have some jar file libraries that I have attached to the project. The application runs fine using NetBeans and Apache Tomcat 7.0.27.
My problem is that some of the jar file libraries that I am using in the project, need to access to some folders and files. I put these folder and files on the same directory as the whole NetBeans project is. but I got this exception:
Exception: java.lang.RuntimeException: java.io.FileNotFoundException
So I used these codes to find out where should I put them:
out.println("current directory: " + new File(".").getAbsolutePath());
out.println("current directory: " + System.getProperty("user.dir"));
out.println("current directory: " + getServletContext().getRealPath(("/")));
So I figured out that the current working directory is:
C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation\Apache Tomcat 7.0.27\bin
My question is that how can I set different directory address for each web application? I have many web applications and some of them use the same resource file names. I can't just put all of them in one directory.
Please note that I don't have access to the source code of jar files to change the. I just need a way to set the absolute path that the jar files use.
I have the same problem when I put the WAR file on the unix server. The extracted WAR file is in this location on the server:
/data02/tools/Apache/Tomcat/apache-tomcat-6.0.37/webapps/BANNEROnline
But I figure I should put the resource folders and files in this path (moosavi3 is my username!):
/home/moosavi3
How can I change the path?
The working directory is the directory from which java.[exe,bin] is started. I assume the bin directory is where the tomcat start-up script is? If the jars are all using this working directory I don't believe there is a way to make different web-apps have different working directory, they're all loaded on the same jvm (java.exe) from the same working directory.
A working directory is the directory from which a binary is started, it is not some arbitrary value that you can change.
I suspect these jar files where meant to be run as standalone applications and expected the filesystem resources they are trying to access to be in the same location as themselves.
Any filesystem resources would have to be moved to the location of your java.exe so that the correct file path resolution can result from your jars.
Standard Servlet project requires external libraries to be placed in the 'WEB-INF/lib' directory under project root. You can search google for 'servlet directory structure' and do your own research for more information. Shared libraries between web applications can be placed in the 'lib' directory under tomcat root, they should be picked up by tomcat jvm. My recommendation would be to keep the dependencies project specific, because you may need different versions in different projects in the future.
Update:
Read this page on the tomcat documentation, it will explain exactly how the project should be structured, and how to add a library that will be shared across all web applications:
http://tomcat.apache.org/tomcat-7.0-doc/appdev/deployment.html
Update 2:
The following Stackoverflow link explains several options how to add a static file to your web application, that will available at runtime.
https://stackoverflow.com/a/2161583/940754
Update 3:
Add a path to the classpath using the project's manifest:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/deployment/jar/downman.html

IntelliJ IDEA 12: settings/deployment deploys to src/main/webapp instead of /?

IntelliJ IDEA 12 has a setting called "Deployment" which hot deploys updated files to the exploded folder either by request or automatically. Except it copies /src/main/webapp/index.html to [specified deployment folder]/src/main/webapp/index.html. How can I get it to copy from /src/main/webapp into the specified deployment folder without preserving source code folder structure?
I think, this could help you.
Go to:
File -> Project Structure -> Chose your web module -> Chose Web facet in your module -> Edit your Web resource directories.

What is the file structure of the Share Webscript extensions for Alfresco 4.0.3+

I've been reading David Drapers' blog on the new feature - the extension of share webscripts, but I didn't find any working examples. What is the file naming and structure convention?
From what I gather, I have a module configuration file, and I don't know how to name it or where to put it (share/WEB-INF/classes/alfresco?)
Also, I understood that my custom client side resources (.js and .css files) go to META-INF/custom-dashlet/extension/ in the JAR file. Is this correct? Finally, the *.get.js and *.get.html.ftl go to webscripts/com/mycompany/mypackage/*?
So I have now:
*share/WEB-INF/lib/mypackage.jar*
and in it:
*META-INF/mypackage/extension/myfile.js
webscripts/com/mycompany/mypackage/myfile.get.js
webscripts/com/mycompany/mypackage/myfile.get.html.ftl
*
and the
*share/WEB-INF/classes/alfresco/something.xml*
This question was also posted to the Alfresco forums here: https://forums.alfresco.com/en/viewtopic.php?f=48&t=46438
The answer provided was as follows:
An extension module a Surf configuration object so you should place XML files containing module configuration in any of the locations where Surf config gets picked up... e.g. <web-server>/webapps/share/WEB-INF/classes/alfresco/site-data (there are lots of places where Surf configuration gets picked up, but alfresco/site-data on the classpath is the most common). Extension config files should be placed in the extensions folder within the directory. So you could place an extension config file in: alfresco/site-data/extensions or alfresco/web-extension/site-data/extensions, for example.
You could create a JAR file containing this folder structure. Everything that the extension refers to (e.g. WebScripts, other Surf config objects such as Pages, Template-Instances, Components, etc) should just be placed in their normal location. These can also be built into a JAR file.
If you want to access resources (e.g. CSS, images, JS) from a JAR file then place them in the META-INF folder of the JAR. You should place your JAR file in the <web-server>/webapps/share/WEB-INF/lib directory (obviously your server will need to be restarted to pick up new JAR contents).
WebScripts should be in (on the classpath):
alfresco/site-webscripts
alfresco/web-extension/site-webscripts
webscripts
You can also configure other locations in the Surf configuration from which to load Surf config objects/WebScripts. It's pretty much endlessly customizable but you should probably just stick to the default locations configured for Share.

How can I write into a file within an Eclipse bundle?

I have an xml configuration file located into my plugin resources. I want to update this file whenever in the plugin happens some event. I found some methods to find and read the contents of a file located my plugin classpath, but I'm looking for a way to write into such a file.
Is there any way?
Many thanks.
That location (the install directory) is intended to be read-only since it may be shared in a network install scenario. I suggest you instead write the XML file to your plugin's state location which is intended for just this purpose:
String path = Activator.getDefault().getStateLocation().toString();
I should add that this gives you a fully qualified path to the directory created by Eclipse for any files your plugin wants to store. This directory is unique to your plugin.