openejb deploy - OpenEJB Deploy Tool
openejb deploy [#options](#options.html) <file> \[<file>...\]
The OpenEJB Deploy tool is an OPTIONAL tool that allows you to deploy into a running server and get feedback as if the app was deployed and how it was deployed (deploymentIds, jndi names, etc.).
It can be used to deploy into an offline server, however in this scenario it simply copies the archive into the openejb.base/apps directory which is something that can be done manually with a simple copy command or drag and drop.
The OpenEJB Deploy tool can be executed from any directory as long as
In Windows, the deploy tool can be executed as follows:
C:\openejb-3.0> bin\openejb deploy --help
In UNIX, Linux, or Mac OS X, the deploy tool can be executed as follows:
\[user@host openejb-3.0](user@host-openejb-3.0.html)# bin/openejb deploy --help
Depending on your OpenEJB version, you may need to change execution bits to make the scripts executable. You can do this with the following command.
\[user@host openejb-3.0](user@host-openejb-3.0.html)# chmod 755 bin/openejb
From here on out, it will be assumed that you know how to execute the right openejb script for your operating system and commands will appear in shorthand as show below.
openejb deploy --help
The files passed to the Deploy Tool can be any combination of the following: - ejb 1.1, 2.0, 2.1 or 3.0 jar - application client jar - ear file containing only libraries, ejbs and application clients -- everything else will be ignored.
Archives ending in .ear or containing a META-INF/application.xml are assumed to be ear files.
Archives containing a META-INF/ejb-jar.xml file or any classes annotated with @Stateless, @Stateful or @MessageDriven, are assumed to be EJB applications. EJB applications older that EJB 3.0 should contain a complete META-INF/ejb-jar.xml inside the jar, however we do not strictly enforce that -- the act of it being incomplete makes it an EJB 3.0 application by nature.
Archives containing a META-INF/application-client.xml or with a META-INF/MANIFEST.MF containing the "Main-Class" attribute, are assumed to be Application Client archives.
| -d, --debug | Increases the level of detail on validation errors and deployment summary. |
| --dir | Sets the destination directory where the app will be deployed.
The default is |
| -conf file | Sets the OpenEJB configuration to the specified file. |
| -h, --help | Lists these options and exit. |
| -o, --offline | Deploys the app to an offline server by copying the archive into the server's apps/ directory. The app will be deployed when the server is started. The default is online. |
| -q, --quiet | Decreases the level of detail on validation and skips the deployment summary. |
| -s, --server-url <url> | Sets the url of the OpenEJB server to which the app will be deployed. The value should be the same as the JNDI Provider URL used to lookup EJBs. The default is 'ejbd://localhost:4201'. |
| -v, --version | Prints the OpenEJB version and exits. |
openejb deploy myapp\fooEjbs.jar myapp\barEjbs.jar
Deploys the beans in the fooEjbs.jar first, then deploys the beans in the barEjbs.jar. Wildcards can be used as well.
openejb deploy myapp*.jar
On running the deploy tool with a valid EJB jar the following output is printed on the console
Application deployed successfully at {0}
App(id=C:\samples\Calculator-new\hello-addservice.jar)
EjbJar(id=hello-addservice.jar, path=C:\samples\Calculator-new\hello-addservice.jar)
Ejb(ejb-name=HelloBean, id=HelloBean)
Jndi(name=HelloBean)
Jndi(name=HelloBeanLocal)
Ejb(ejb-name=AddServiceBean, id=AddServiceBean)
Jndi(name=AddServiceBean)
Jndi(name=AddServiceBeanLocal)
Note: In the above case the command used is C:\samples\Calculator-new>openejb deploy hello-addservice.jar. This contains two EJBs AddServiceBean and HelloBean.