Olá.
Quanto estou trabalhando com JSP eu acho muito ruim ter que pausar e iniciar a aplicação toda vez que precisar ver uma alteração. Tem alguma forma de atualizar as alterações da pagina sem fazer tudo isso?
Você pode fazer uma modificação para utilizar HotDeploy no Jboss 7 também.
Essa configuração fica no arquivo jboss-service.xml localizado na pasta conf/ da partição (all/default/etc) utilizada...
Abaixo segue um trecho do arquivo onde é especificado as configurações de scanning.
<!-- ==================================================================== -->
<!-- Deployment Scanning -->
<!-- ==================================================================== -->
<!-- An mbean for hot deployment/undeployment of archives.
-->
<mbean code="org.jboss.deployment.scanner.URLDeploymentScanner"
name="jboss.deployment:type=DeploymentScanner,flavor=URL">
<!-- Uncomment (and comment/remove version below) to enable usage of the
DeploymentCache
<depends optional-attribute- name="Deployer">jboss.deployment:type=DeploymentCache</depends>
-->
<depends optional-attribute-name="Deployer">jboss.system:service=MainDeployer</depends>
<!-- The URLComparator can be used to specify a deployment ordering
for deployments found in a scanned directory. The class specified
must be an implementation of java.util.Comparator, it must be able
to compare two URL objects, and it must have a no-arg constructor.
Two deployment comparators are shipped with JBoss:
- org.jboss.deployment.DeploymentSorter
Sorts by file extension, as follows:
"sar", "service.xml", "rar", "jar", "war", "wsr", "ear", "zip",
"*"
- org.jboss.deployment.scanner.PrefixDeploymentSorter
If the name portion of the url begins with 1 or more digits, those
digits are converted to an int (ignoring leading zeroes), and
files are deployed in that order. Files that do not start with
any digits will be deployed first, and they will be sorted by
extension as above with DeploymentSorter.
-->
<attribute name="URLComparator">org.jboss.deployment.DeploymentSorter</attribute>
<!--
<attribute name="URLComparator">org.jboss.deployment.scanner.PrefixDeploymentSorter</attribute>
-->
<!-- The FilterInstance specifies a URLLister.URLFilter for scanned
directories. This DeploymentFilter is initialized with the given
prefixes, suffixes and matches that define which URLs should be
ignored.
-->
<attribute name="FilterInstance"
attributeClass="org.jboss.deployment.scanner.DeploymentFilter"
serialDataType="javaBean">
<!-- Files starting with theses strings are ignored -->
<property name="prefixes">#,%,\,,.,_$</property>
<!-- Files ending with theses strings are ignored -->
<property name="suffixes">#,$,%,~,\,v,.BAK,.bak,.old,.orig,.tmp,.rej,.sh</property>
<!-- Files matching with theses strings are ignored -->
<property name="matches">.make.state,.nse_depinfo,CVS,CVS.admin,RCS,RCSLOG,SCCS,TAGS,core,tags</prope rty>
</attribute>
<!-- Frequency in milliseconds to rescan the URLs for changes -->
<attribute name="ScanPeriod">5000</attribute>
<!-- A flag to disable the scans -->
<attribute name="ScanEnabled">true</attribute>
<!-- URLs are comma separated and resolve relative to the server home URL
unless the given path is absolute. If the URL ends in "/" it is
considered a collection and scanned, otherwise it is simply deployed;
this follows RFC2518 convention and allows discrimination between
collections and directories that are simply unpacked archives.
URLs may be local (file:) or remote (http:). Scanning is supported
for remote URLs but unpacked deployment units are not.
Example URLs:
deploy/
scans ${jboss.server.url}/deploy/, which is local or remote
depending on the URL used to boot the server
${jboss.server.home}/deploy/
scans ${jboss.server.home}/deploy, which is always local
file:/var/opt/myapp.ear
deploy myapp.ear from a local location
file:/var/opt/apps/
scans the specified directory
http://www.test.com/netboot/myapp.ear
deploys myapp.ear from a remote location
http://www.test.com/netboot/apps/
scans the specified WebDAV location
-->
<attribute name="URLs">
deploy/
</attribute>
<!-- Indicates if the scanner should recursively scan directories that
contain no "." in their names. This can be used to group applications
and services that must be deployed and that have the same
logical function in the same directory i.e.
deploy/JMX/
deploy/JMS/
...
-->
<attribute name="RecursiveSearch">True</attribute>
</mbean>
Faça um deploy explodido (ou seja, com uma pasta e não o war / ear). Como fazer isso depende do seu mecanismo de deploy e tipo de artefato. Para um projeto web gerenciado pelo maven por exemplo você faria isso com mvn war:exploded
. Eu também precisei alterar meu build para que a pasta gerada termine em .war
, mas não sei se isso é específico da minha versão do JBoss.
projeto/target/meu-war-versao.war/
Adicionalmente boa parte dos IDEs podem ser configurados para atualizar os recursos ao salvar (estou usando o IDEA, mas sei que o Netbeans também faz isso, e acredito que o Eclipse também). Dessa forma você não precisa nem invocar o comando no maven para atualizar os recursos.
Finalmente, a mágica acontece nas suas configurações. Se você utiliza o JBoss 7 em modo standalone, altere o arquivo standalone.xml
e adicione a seguinte configuração:
<configuration>
<jsp-configuration development="true" check-interval="1" modification-test-interval="1" recompile-on-fail="true"/>
</configuration>
Dentro da tag subsystem
(xmlns=":urn:jboss:domain:web:1.1"
).
Atenção: Conforme esse post na comunidade do JBoss existe um bug na versão 7.1.1 que impede o hot deploy, use a versão 7.1.2 ou superior.