-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
mattdumas/XKE-UsineLogiciels
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
========================================================================== === Spring PetClinic Sample Application ========================================================================== @author Ken Krebs @author Juergen Hoeller @author Rob Harrop @author Costin Leau @author Sam Brannen @author Scott Andrews ========================================================================== === Data Access Strategies ========================================================================== PetClinic features alternative DAO implementations and application configurations for JDBC, Hibernate, and JPA, with HSQLDB and MySQL as target databases. The default PetClinic configuration is JDBC on HSQLDB. See "src/main/resources/jdbc.properties" as well as web.xml and applicationContext-*.xml in the "src/main/webapp/WEB-INF" folder for details. A simple comment change in web.xml switches between the data access strategies. The JDBC and Hibernate versions of PetClinic also demonstrate JMX support via the use of <context:mbean-export/> for exporting MBeans. SimpleJdbcClinic exposes the SimpleJdbcClinicMBean management interface via JMX through the use of the @ManagedResource and @ManagedOperation annotations; whereas, the HibernateStatistics service is exposed via JMX through auto-detection of the service MBean. You can start up the JDK's JConsole to manage the exported bean. All data access strategies can work with JTA for transaction management by activating the JtaTransactionManager and a JndiObjectFactoryBean that refers to a transactional container DataSource. The default for JDBC is DataSourceTransactionManager; for Hibernate, HibernateTransactionManager; for JPA, JpaTransactionManager. Those local strategies allow for working with any locally defined DataSource. Note that the sample configurations for JDBC, Hibernate, and JPA configure a BasicDataSource from the Apache Commons DBCP project for connection pooling. ========================================================================== === Build and Deployment ========================================================================== The Spring PetClinic sample application is built using Maven. When the project is first built, Maven will automatically download all required dependencies (if these haven't been downloaded before). Thus the initial build may take a few minutes depending on the speed of your Internet connection, but subsequent builds will be much faster. Available build commands: - mvn clean --> cleans the project - mvn clean test --> cleans the project and runs all tests - mvn clean package --> cleans the project and builds the WAR After building the project with "mvn clean package", you will find the resulting WAR file in the "target/" directory. By default, an embedded HSQLDB instance in configured. No other steps are necessary to get the data source up and running: you can simply deploy the built WAR file directly to your Servlet container. For MySQL, you'll need to use the corresponding schema and SQL scripts in the "db/mysql" subdirectory. Follow the steps outlined in "db/mysql/petclinic_db_setup_mysql.txt" for explicit details. In you intend to use a local DataSource, the JDBC settings can be adapted in "src/main/resources/jdbc.properties". To use a JTA DataSource, you need to set up corresponding DataSources in your Java EE container. Notes on enabling Log4J: - Log4J is disabled by default due to issues with JBoss. - Uncomment the Log4J listener in "WEB-INF/web.xml" to enable logging. Notes on service static resources: - Most web containers provide a 'default' servlet for serving static resources; Petclinic relies on it for its images. - On containers without such a mapping (ex: GlassFish), uncomment the 'default' declaration in "WEB-INF/web.xml". ========================================================================== === JPA on Tomcat ========================================================================== This section provides tips on using the Java Persistence API (JPA) on Apache Tomcat 4.x or higher with a persistence provider that requires class instrumentation (such as TopLink Essentials). To use JPA class instrumentation, Tomcat has to be instructed to use a custom class loader which supports instrumentation. See the JPA section of the Spring reference manual for complete details. The basic steps are: - Copy "org.springframework.instrument.tomcat-3.0.0.RELEASE.jar" from the Spring distribution to "TOMCAT_HOME/server/lib". - If you're running on Tomcat 5.x, modify "TOMCAT_HOME/conf/server.xml" and add a new "<Context>" element for 'petclinic' (see below). You can alternatively deploy the WAR including "META-INF/context.xml" from this sample application's "src/main/webapp" directory, in which case you will need to uncomment the Loader element in that file to enable the use of the TomcatInstrumentableClassLoader. <Context path="/petclinic" docBase="/petclinic/location" ...> <!-- please note that useSystemClassLoaderAsParent is available since Tomcat 5.5.20; remove it if previous versions are being used --> <Loader loaderClass="org.springframework.instrument.classloading.tomcat.TomcatInstrumentableClassLoader" useSystemClassLoaderAsParent="false"/> ... </Context>
About
No description, website, or topics provided.
Resources
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published