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kitchensink: Assortment of technologies including Arquillian

The kitchensink quickstart demonstrates a Jakarta EE 10 web-enabled database application using JSF, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation.

What is it?

The kitchensink quickstart is a deployable Maven 3 project designed to help you get your foot in the door developing with Jakarta EE 10 on Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform.

It demonstrates how to create a compliant Jakarta EE 10 application using JSF, CDI, JAX-RS, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation. It also includes a persistence unit and some sample persistence and transaction code to introduce you to database access in enterprise Java.

Considerations for Use in a Production Environment

H2 Database

This quickstart uses the H2 database included with Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 8.0. It is a lightweight, relational example datasource that is used for examples only. It is not robust or scalable, is not supported, and should NOT be used in a production environment.

Datasource Configuration File

This quickstart uses a *-ds.xml datasource configuration file for convenience and ease of database configuration. These files are deprecated in JBoss EAP and should not be used in a production environment. Instead, you should configure the datasource using the Management CLI or Management Console. Datasource configuration is documented in the Configuration Guide.

System Requirements

The application this project produces is designed to be run on Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 8.0 or later.

All you need to build this project is Java 11.0 (Java SDK 11) or later and Maven 3.6.0 or later. See Configure Maven to Build and Deploy the Quickstarts to make sure you are configured correctly for testing the quickstarts.

Use of the EAP_HOME and QUICKSTART_HOME Variables

In the following instructions, replace EAP_HOME with the actual path to your JBoss EAP installation. The installation path is described in detail here: Use of EAP_HOME and JBOSS_HOME Variables.

When you see the replaceable variable QUICKSTART_HOME, replace it with the path to the root directory of all of the quickstarts.

Building and running the quickstart application with a JBoss EAP server distribution

Start the JBoss EAP Standalone Server

  1. Open a terminal and navigate to the root of the JBoss EAP directory.

  2. Start the JBoss EAP server with the default profile by typing the following command.

    $ EAP_HOME/bin/standalone.sh 
    Note
    For Windows, use the EAP_HOME\bin\standalone.bat script.

Build and Deploy the Quickstart

  1. Make sure you start the JBoss EAP server as described above.

  2. Open a terminal and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.

  3. Type the following command to build the quickstart.

    $ mvn clean package
  4. Type the following command to deploy the quickstart.

    $ mvn wildfly:deploy

This deploys the kitchensink/target/kitchensink.war to the running instance of the server.

You should see a message in the server log indicating that the archive deployed successfully.

Access the Application

The application will be running at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/kitchensink/.

Server Log: Expected Warnings and Errors

You will see the following warnings in the server log. You can ignore these warnings.

WFLYJCA0091: -ds.xml file deployments are deprecated. Support may be removed in a future version.

Run the Arquillian Integration Tests

This quickstart includes Arquillian integration tests. They are located under the src/test/ directory. The integration tests verify that the quickstart runs correctly when deployed on the server.

Follow these steps to run the integration tests.

  1. Make sure you start the JBoss EAP server, as previously described.

  2. Make sure you build and deploy the quickstart, as previously described.

  3. Type the following command to run the verify goal with the arq-remote profile activated.

    $ mvn verify -Parq-remote
Note

You may also use the environment variable SERVER_HOST or the system property server.host to define the target host of the tests.

Undeploy the Quickstart

When you are finished testing the quickstart, follow these steps to undeploy the archive.

  1. Make sure you start the JBoss EAP server as described above.

  2. Open a terminal and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.

  3. Type this command to undeploy the archive:

    $ mvn wildfly:undeploy

Building and running the quickstart application with OpenShift

Build the JBoss EAP Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart to OpenShift with Helm Charts

On OpenShift, the S2I build with Apache Maven will use an openshift profile used to provision a JBoss EAP server to deploy and run the quickstart in OpenShift environment. You can activate the Maven profile named openshift when building the quickstart:

$ mvn clean package -Popenshift

The provisioned JBoss EAP server for OpenShift, with the quickstart deployed, can then be found in the target/server directory, and its usage is similar to a standard server distribution. You may note that it uses the cloud feature pack which enables a configuration tuned for OpenShift environment.

The server provisioning functionality is provided by the EAP Maven Plugin, and you may find its configuration in the quickstart pom.xml:

        <profile>
            <id>openshift</id>
            <build>
                <plugins>
                    <plugin>
                        <groupId>org.jboss.eap.plugins</groupId>
                        <artifactId>eap-maven-plugin</artifactId>
                        <version>${version.eap.maven.plugin}</version>
                        <configuration>
                            <feature-packs>
                                <feature-pack>
                                    <location>org.jboss.eap:wildfly-ee-galleon-pack</location>
                                </feature-pack>
                                <feature-pack>
                                    <location>org.jboss.eap.cloud:eap-cloud-galleon-pack</location>
                                </feature-pack>
                            </feature-packs>
                            <layers>
                                <layer>cloud-server</layer>
                            </layers>
                            <filename>ROOT.war</filename>
                        </configuration>
                        <executions>
                            <execution>
                                <goals>
                                    <goal>package</goal>
                                </goals>
                            </execution>
                        </executions>
                    </plugin>
                </plugins>
            </build>
        </profile>
Note

Since the plugin configuration above deploys quickstart on root web context of the provisioned server, the URL to access the application should not have the /kitchensink path segment after HOST:PORT.

Getting Started with JBoss EAP for OpenShift and Helm Charts

This section contains the basic instructions to build and deploy this quickstart to JBoss EAP for OpenShift or JBoss EAP for OpenShift Online using Helm Charts.

Prerequisites

  • You must be logged in OpenShift and have an oc client to connect to OpenShift

  • Helm must be installed to deploy the backend on OpenShift.

Once you have installed Helm, you need to add the repository that provides Helm Charts for JBoss EAP.

$ helm repo add jboss-eap https://jbossas.github.io/eap-charts/
"jboss-eap" has been added to your repositories
$ helm search repo jboss-eap
NAME                    CHART VERSION   APP VERSION     DESCRIPTION
jboss-eap/eap8         ...             ...             A Helm chart to build and deploy EAP 8.0 applications

Deploy the JBoss EAP Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart to OpenShift with Helm Charts

Log in to your OpenShift instance using the oc login command. The backend will be built and deployed on OpenShift with a Helm Chart for JBoss EAP.

Navigate to the root directory of this quickstart and run the following command:

$ helm install kitchensink -f charts/helm.yaml jboss-eap/eap8
NAME: kitchensink
...
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1

The Helm Chart for this quickstart contains all the information to build an image from the source code using S2I on Java 17:

build:
  uri: https://github.com/jboss-developer/jboss-eap-quickstarts.git
  ref: 8.0.x
  contextDir: kitchensink
deploy:
  replicas: 1

This will create a new deployment on OpenShift and deploy the application.

If you want to see all the configuration elements to customize your deployment you can use the following command:

$ helm show readme jboss-eap/eap8

Let’s wait for the application to be built and deployed:

$ oc get deployment kitchensink -w
NAME         DESIRED   CURRENT   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   AGE
kitchensink   1         1         1            0           12s
...
kitchensink   1         1         1            1           2m

Get the URL of the route to the deployment.

$ oc get route kitchensink -o jsonpath="{.spec.host}"

Access the application in your web browser using the displayed URL.

Note

The Maven profile named openshift is used by the Helm chart to provision the server with the quickstart deployed on the root web context, and thus the application should be accessed with the URL without the /kitchensink path segment after HOST:PORT.

Undeploy the JBoss EAP Source-to-Image (S2I) Quickstart from OpenShift with Helm Charts

$ helm uninstall kitchensink

Run the Arquillian Integration Tests with OpenShift

This quickstart includes Arquillian integration tests. They are located under the src/test/ directory. The integration tests verify that the quickstart runs correctly when deployed on the server.

Note

The Arquillian integration tests expect a deployed application, so make sure you have deployed the quickstart on OpenShift before you begin.

Run the integration tests using the following command to run the verify goal with the arq-remote profile activated and the proper URL:

$ mvn clean verify -Parq-remote -Dserver.host=https://$(oc get route kitchensink --template='{{ .spec.host }}')
Note

The tests are using SSL to connect to the quickstart running on OpenShift. So you need the certificates to be trusted by the machine the tests are run from.