Showing posts with label FUSE ESB. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FUSE ESB. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Short Note on How to install Servicemix 4 as windows service.

To install Servicemix 4 as windows service need to start SMX from console and run features:install wrapper and wrapper:install and follow the instructions that are displayed by second karaf command.

Here is the output from a sample run :


karaf@root> features:install wrapper
karaf@root> wrapper:install
Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\bin\karaf-wrapper.exe
Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\etc\karaf-wrapper.conf

Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\bin\karaf-service.bat
Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\lib\wrapper.dll
Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\lib\karaf-wrapper.jar
Creating file: C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\lib\karaf-wrapper-main
.jar

Setup complete. You may want to tweak the JVM properties in the wrapper configu
ration file:
C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\etc\karaf-wrapper.conf
before installing and starting the service.


To install the service, run:
C:> C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\bin\karaf-service.bat install

Once installed, to start the service run:
C:> net start "karaf"

Once running, to stop the service run:
C:> net stop "karaf"

Once stopped, to remove the installed the service run:
C:> C:\work\apache-servicemix-4.4.1-fuse-01-06\bin\karaf-service.bat remove


Hope this helps and serves as note to myself for future.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Enabling JMX monitoring in Servicemix for pax-web jetty instance.

In Servicemix 4.x OSGi HTTP service is provided using pax-web. By default, it doesn't expose MBean for underlying Jetty instance running inside pax-web.

To enable monitoring this jetty instance you need to use fragment bundle that would connect underlying jetty to Servicemix MBeanServer using additional jetty configuration.

Here are steps to do this:

1. Create a OSGi Fragment-Bundle which will attach to pax-web-jetty OSGi service. Bundle Fragment project pom.xml contains following:

<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0"
xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
schemalocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/maven-v4_0_0.xsd">
<modelversion>4.0.0</modelversion>
<groupid>org.ops4j.pax.web</groupid>
<artifactid>config-jetty-jmx</artifactid>
<version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<packaging>bundle</packaging>
<name>OPS4J Pax Web - Configuring Jetty JMX connection</name>
<properties>
<bundle.symbolicname>org.ops4j.pax.web.config-jetty-jmx</bundle.symbolicname>
</properties>
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupid>org.apache.felix</groupid>
<artifactid>maven-bundle-plugin</artifactid>
<version>2.2.0</version>
<extensions>true</extensions>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>bundle-manifest</id>
<phase>process-classes</phase>
<goals>
<goal>manifest</goal>
</goals>
</execution>
</executions>
<configuration>
<instructions>
<bundle-symbolicname>${bundle.symbolicName}</bundle-symbolicname>
<bundle-version>${pom.version}</bundle-version>
<fragment-host>org.ops4j.pax.web.pax-web-jetty</fragment-host>
</instructions>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
</project>


2. This bundle (Fragment) would have additional Jetty configuration xml file jetty.xml which would (reside in src/main/resources folder) look like this:

<configure class="org.mortbay.jetty.Server">
<call id="jettyMBeanServer" class="java.lang.management.ManagementFactory" name="getPlatformMBeanServer">

<!-- =========================================================== -->
<!-- Initialize the Jetty MBean container -->
<!-- =========================================================== -->
<get id="Container" name="container">
<call name="addEventListener">
<arg>
<new class="org.mortbay.management.MBeanContainer">
<arg><ref id="jettyMBeanServer"></ref>
<call name="start">
</call>
</arg>
</new>
</arg>

</call>


3. Once the fragment bundle is built install it in Servicemix instance which is not currently running pax-web OSGi services. (I used Servicemix instance with minimal bundles only config feature was installed) I installed it using osgi:install file:///.... or something like osgi:install mvn:org.ops4j.pax.web/config-jetty-jmx where the groupId for my Fragment bundle project was org.ops4j.pax.web and artifactId config-jetty-jmx.

4. Once this is installed you can install pax-web. I deployed war feature which installs and starts pax-web feature.

5. At this stage your Fragment bundle would get attached to pax-web-jetty Host Bundle and enable JMX monitoring. To confirm this if you run osgi:list you should see something like (Note Fragment and Host entries):

[33] [Resolved ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Configuring Jetty JMX connection (1.0.0.SNAPSHOT)
Hosts: 39
[ 34] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] geronimo-servlet_2.5_spec (1.1.2)
[ 35] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] Apache ServiceMix :: Bundles :: jetty (6.1.26.1-fuse)
[ 36] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - API (0.7.3)
[ 37] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Service SPI (0.7.3)
[ 38] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Runtime (0.7.3)
[ 39] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Jetty (0.7.3)
Fragments: 33
[ 40] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Jsp Support (0.7.3)
[ 41] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Extender - WAR (0.7.3)
[ 42] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Web - Extender - Whiteboard (0.7.3)
[ 43] [Active ] [ ] [ 60] OPS4J Pax Url - war:, war-i: (1.1.3)
[ 44] [Active ] [Created ] [ 60] Apache Karaf :: WAR Deployer (2.0.0.fuse-02-00)

6. At this stage if you start JConsole and look connect to running Servicemix instance you should be able to see following MBeans appearing in MBeans tab:
a. org.mortbay.jetty.servlet
b. org.mortbay.thread
c. org.ops4j.pax.web.service.jetty.internal

I did see some InstanceAlreadyExists exceptions in Servicemix instance but wasn't able to resolve them quickly so just left there since in my opinion they are harmless.

I hope this helps anyone who wants to configure internal Jetty instance run by pax-web in Servicemix/Karaf.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Accessing archetype while using nexus repository manager as proxy

I was trying to use Eclipse with m2eclipse for creating some FUSE ESB project from the archetypes and was getting strange error :

"Unable to create project from archetype [org.apache.servicemix.tooling:servicemix-bean-service-unit:3.3.1.16-fuse -> null]
> The desired archetype does not exist (org.apache.servicemix.tooling:servicemix-bean-service-unit:3.3.1.16-fuse)"


After drilling down more and looking into it I found the problem was :
1. I did configured the nexus index catalog http://repo.open.iona.com/maven2/archetype-catalog.xml correctly.
2. However, I later realized that I am using Nexus repository manager which doesn't automatically download the catalog itself and so it is not getting all the requited information to download the correct artifacts.

The way I fixed this for now is manually downloading the archetype-catalog.xml via my Nexus repository instance like this:

wget http://my-nexus-proxy:8081/nexus/content/repositories/open.iona.m2/archetype-catalog.xml

once the catalog was available locally at my nexus repository I then used the Eclipse m2eclipse plugin in usual manner and it went and download required archetype plugins from the remote repository into my nexus instance.

I really would like to see some option in Nexus which would allow synchronization of such artifacts which are not downloaded normally by maven dependency. Some way of scheduling such stuff (I know we can schedule the task but some smart scheduling for such category of artifacts).

For now manual downloading and sync is the way to get around the problem.