Installing and Building GTLAB
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Transcript Installing and Building GTLAB
Installing and Building
GTLAB
GTLAB and OGCE
OGCE contains multiple sub-projects
Portlet-based Grid portal (with Gridsphere and Tomcat).
Workflow suite (services and add-ins to the portal)
Information Web services
Gadget container
JavaScript libraries
GTLAB
These are packaged with Maven and include everything you need
except Java and (for some services) MySQL.
We try to make things installable with minimal fuss.
Edit one config file (pom.xml)
Run one command (mvn clean install)
You may need to futz a little with MySQL
Getting GTLAB
See http://www.collab-ogce.org/ogce/index.php/GTLAB
You can use your favorite SVN client to check out.
svn co https://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/ogce/GTLAB
(latest)
svn co https://ogce.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/ogce/tags/GTLABrelease-SC08-1.1 (tagged)
The tagged represents a stable preview release. The latest is
whatever was checked in last.
“Latest” will also give you easy access to any updates
“svn update”
Best option if you want to actively develop and get fixes right away.
No SVN? Get the TAR
SourceForge’s SVN/CVS
viewer now provides a
“Download GNU Tar”
option.
http://ogce.svn.sourceforg
e.net/viewvc/ogce/GTLAB/
for latest.
http://ogce.svn.sourceforg
e.net/viewvc/ogce/tags/G
TLAB-release-SC08-1.1/ for
tag
What’s in GTLAB?
Directory
Description
jsf_standalone
Gadget and stand-alone code and web pages
portal_deploy
Deployed applications go here. Includes
Tomcat.
templateTag
Template directory for making new tags
global-config
Global jars and config files for Tomcat
certificates
TeraGrid Certificates. Other Certificates go
here.
transition
Directory for converting standalone applications
into portlets (currently obsolete)
portlet
Portlet versions of the GTLAB standalone
applications
Build GTLAB
Unpack or checkout code
Cd GTLAB
All commands are executed
from here.
Edit properties at the top
of pom.xml.
Change IP
Change project.home if you
unpack someplace besides
$HOME.
Run “mvn clean install”
<properties>
<portal.server.ip>
156.56.104.143
</portal.server.ip>
<host.base.url>
http://${portal.server.ip}:8080/
</host.base.url>
<project.home>
${env.HOME}/GTLAB
</project.home>
<tomcat.version>
apache-tomcat-5.5.27
</tomcat.version>
<catalina.home>
${project.home}/portal_deploy/${tomcat.version}/
</catalina.home>
<dot.globus.home>
${env.HOME}/.globus/
</dot.globus.home>
</properties>
Run Examples
From GTLAB, start tomcat with ./startup.sh.
From GTLAB, stop Tomcat with ./shutdown.sh
Point browser to http://localhost:8080/GTLAB
Start with MyProxy Example
Next Steps
Play with examples.
These are really bare bones. Make something interesting.
Make a Google gadget.
Mix and match tags in a pipeline to make a new
application.
Use the dependency tag.
Note you can mix and match JSF and JSP if you are not
familiar with JSF.
Try making a new tag.
Explained next.
Making a New JSF Page from Tags
I recommend starting from the examples.
jsf_standalone/src/main/webapp/examples
“Build” the examples with
mvn –o clean install –f jsf_standalone/pom.xml
The “-o” option is used to build offline. Will also avoid
unnecessary Maven repository updates.
The “-f” specifies only build this specific module.
I recommend not futzing with the deployed versions under
portal_deploy.
A computer is a state machine. State must be reproducible.
Making a New Tag
Run the following command from GTLAB:
mvn clean process-resources -Dtag.name=test Dprojectname=Test -f templateTag/pom.xml
Add -Ddest.dir=/tmp for a dry run.
Replace “test” with the name of your tag.
Replace “Test” with the name for your Bean.
This will make 4 files
TestBean.java, TestTag.java, TestBeanFactory.java,
UITest.java
Edits also 3 config files
gtlab-factory.xml, managed-beans.xml, components.xml
This will compile but to implement something useful, you will
need to edit the highlighted files.
Implementing a Tag
The place to start is TestBean.java (or whatever you
used for –Dprojectname=…).
This includes several inherited methods that can be
implemented.
Most important is submit(). Use the try/catch block. This
is where the action is.
If you need to hook tags into chains, implement
getOutput() and setInput().
Also take a look at the other beans.
What Can You Implement as a
Tag?
What can you do in your bean? Anything server-side Java can
do.
Some suggestions:
Implement a tag client to a remote Web service. Amazon has
some interesting ones….
Implement an RSS/Atom feed client to Twitter, your blog,
Facebook, etc.
Combine the feeds as a mash-up.
Connect to a database with JDBC.
Implement a JMS publisher or subscriber.
Use Google Java APIs to interact with Blogger, Calendar, and
YouTube.
Try interacting with Facebook.