To Deploy to WebSphere Liberty

Restriction: This topic applies only when the Enterprise Server feature is enabled.

WebSphere Liberty is a lightweight alternative to the traditional WebSphere application servers. This topic describes how to deploy an application developed using the Interface Mapping Toolkit to a WebSphere Liberty application server.

Important: The instructions in this topic assume that you have created a Liberty server profile, including a server.xml file, which is required before deploying an EJB or a resource adapter to Liberty. See your WebSphere Liberty documentation for details.

To start WebSphere Liberty

At a command prompt, enter the following command from the bin directory of your WebSphere Liberty installation:

server start server_name

To deploy the resource adapter

  1. Install the WebSphere Liberty servlet-3.1, jca-1.7, and ejbRemote-3.2 features, which are not installed by default. To do this, you must run the installUtility command from the bin directory of your WebSphere Liberty installation. For example, the command-line to install the servlet-3.1 feature might look something like this:
    installUtility install servlet-3.1

    See your WebSphere Liberty documentation for details.

  2. Add the following code at the top of the server.xml file for your Liberty profile. This code enables the minimum subset of features required for resource adapter and EJB support:
    <featureManager>
    	<feature>ejbRemote-3.2</feature>
    	<feature>ejbLite-3.2</feature>
    	<feature>localConnector-1.0</feature>
    	<feature>jca-1.7</feature>
    	<feature>jsp-2.3</feature>
    	<feature>servlet-3.1</feature>
    	<feature>jndi-1.0</feature> 
    </featureManager>
    Note: To avoid a conflict with the servlet-3.1 feature, do not add the webProfile-8.0 feature to the same server.xml file.
  3. Also in the server.xml file, add a definition for the type of resource adapter you are using:
    Non-transactional
    <resourceAdapter id="mfcobol-notx" location="<PathToResourceAdapter>\mfcobol-notx.rar" >
    <classloader apiTypeVisibility="spec, ibm-api, stable, api"/>
    </resourceAdapter>
    XA
    <resourceAdapter id="mfcobol-notx" location="<PathToResourceAdapter>\mfcobol-xa.rar" >
    	<classloader apiTypeVisibility="spec, ibm-api, stable, api"/>
    </resourceAdapter>
    Local transaction
    <resourceAdapter id="mfcobol-localtx" location="<PathToResourceAdapter>\mfcobol-localtx.rar" >
    	<classloader apiTypeVisibility="spec, ibm-api, stable, api"/>
    </resourceAdapter>
    
  4. Add a connection factory. For example, the following code defines a connection factory that specifies some of the resource adapter properties:
    <connectionFactory jndiName="eis/MFCobol_v1.5">
    	<resource-ref id="CCIMFCobol_v1.5">
    		<res-ref-name>CCIMFCobol_v1.5</res-ref-name>
    	</resource-ref>
    	<properties.mfcobol-notx ServerHost="localhost"/>
    	<properties.mfcobol-notx ServerPort="9003"/>
    	<properties.mfcobol-notx Trace="false"/>
    	<properties.mfcobol-notx EnhancedTrace="false"/>
    </connectionFactory>
    Important: Within the connection factory definition, you can override the values for properties defined in the resource adapter's ra.xml file, such as the Trace and ServerPort properties as shown in the above example. However, do not alter the values for the resource-ref id (CCIMFCobol_v1.5) and the jndiName (eis/MFCobol_v1.5). Any alteration of these values prevents the resource adapter from working properly with Micro Focus-generated EJBs.

To deploy an EJB to Liberty

Add an application definition to your server.xml file. The definition must include the path to your .ear file, and specify that the application uses the same class loader as the resource adapter. For example, the application definition to deploy an EJB that uses a non-transactional resource adapter might look like this:

<application id="TestApp" name=" TestApp" type="ear" location="..\ear\TestApp.ear">
 	<classloader classProviderRef="mfcobol-notx" />
</application>

To stop the Liberty server

At a command prompt, enter the following command from the bin directory of your WebSphere Liberty installation:

server stop server_name