This project contains a simple Servlet application.
Download sample.servlet.war.
- Download and install Eclipse with the WebSphere Developer Tools.
- Create a new Liberty Profile Server. See step 3 for details.
- Clone this repository.
- Import the sample into Eclipse using File -> Import -> Maven -> Existing Maven Projects option.
- Right click on the project and go to Properties > Project Facets and select Dynamic Web Module (if not already selected).
- Deploy the sample into Liberty server. Right click on the servlet sample and select Run As -> Run on Server option. Find and select the Liberty profile server and press Finish.
- Go to: http://localhost:9080/servlet
This project can be built with Apache Maven. The project uses Liberty Maven Plug-in to automatically download and install the Liberty Java EE Web Profile 7 runtime from Maven Central. Liberty Maven Plug-in is also used to create, configure, and run the application on the Liberty server.
Use the following steps to run the application with Maven:
-
Execute the full Maven build. The Liberty Maven Plug-in will download and install the Liberty server.
$ mvn clean install
-
To run the server with the Servlet sample execute:
$ mvn liberty:run-server
Once the server is running, the application will be available under http://localhost:9080/servlet.
Please refer to the Liberty Maven Plug-in repository for documentation about using the Liberty Maven Plug-in.
This project can also be built and run with Gradle. The provided build.gradle
file applies the Liberty Gradle Plug-in and is configured to automatically download and install the Liberty Java EE Web Profile 7 runtime from Maven Central. The Liberty Gradle Plug-in has built-in tasks that can be used to create, configure, and run the application on the Liberty server.
Use the following steps to run the application with the Gradle wrapper (Windows machines use gradlew.bat
):
-
Execute the full Gradle build. The Liberty Gradle Plug-in will download and install the Liberty server.
$ ./gradlew clean build
-
To start the server with the Servlet sample execute:
$ ./gradlew libertyStart
Alternatively, execute the run command:
$ ./gradlew libertyRun --no-daemon
Once the server has started, the application will be available under http://localhost:9080/servlet.
- To stop the server, execute:
$ ./gradlew libertyStop
Note, if Gradle is properly installed, Gradle commands can be executed directly using gradle
and wouldn't require gradlew
.
Please refer to the Liberty Gradle Plug-in repository for documentation about using the Liberty Gradle Plug-in.
Click the button below to deploy your own copy of this application to Bluemix.
© Copyright IBM Corporation 2017.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.