Skip to content

The quickstarts demonstrate JBoss EAP, Java EE 7 and a few additional technologies. They provide small, specific, working examples that can be used as a reference for your own project.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

tedwon/jboss-eap-quickstarts

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform (JBoss EAP) Quickstarts

Summary: The quickstarts demonstrate Java EE 7 and a few additional technologies from the JBoss stack. They provide small, specific, working examples that can be used as a reference for your own project.

Introduction

These quickstarts run on Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1 or later. We recommend using the JBoss EAP ZIP file. This version uses the correct dependencies and ensures you test and compile against your runtime environment.

Be sure to read this entire document before you attempt to work with the quickstarts. It contains the following information:

Use of EAP7_HOME and JBOSS_HOME Variables

The quickstart README files use the replaceable value EAP7_HOME to denote the path to the JBoss EAP installation. When you encounter this value in a README file, be sure to replace it with the actual path to your JBoss EAP installation. The installation path is described in detail here: Use of EAP7_HOME and JBOSS_HOME Variables.

Available Quickstarts

All available quickstarts can be found here: http://www.jboss.org/developer-materials/#!formats=jbossdeveloper_quickstart. You can filter by the quickstart name, the product, and the technologies demonstrated by the quickstart. You can also limit the results based on skill level and date published. The resulting page provides a brief description of each matching quickstart, the skill level, and the technologies used. Click on the quickstart to see more detailed information about how to run it. Some quickstarts require deployment of other quickstarts. This information is noted in the Prerequisites section of the quickstart README file.

Note: Some of these quickstarts use the H2 database included with JBoss EAP. It is a lightweight, relational example datasource that is used for examples only. It is not robust or scalable, is not supported, and should NOT be used in a production environment!

Quickstart Name Demonstrated Technologies Description Experience Level Required Prerequisites
app-client EJB, EAR, AppClient The app-client quickstart demonstrates how to code and package a client app and use the ${product.name} client container to start the client Main program. Intermediate null
batch-processing CDI, Batch 1.0, JSF The batch-processing quickstart shows how to use chunk oriented batch jobs to import a file to a database. Intermediate null
bean-validation CDI, JPA, BV The bean-validation quickstart provides Arquillian tests to demonstrate how to use CDI, JPA, and Bean Validation. Beginner null
bean-validation-custom-constraint CDI, JPA, BV The bean-validation-custom-constraint quickstart demonstrates how to use the Bean Validation API to define custom constraints and validators. Beginner null
bmt EJB, BMT The bmt quickstart demonstrates Bean-Managed Transactions (BMT), showing how to manually manage transaction demarcation while accessing JPA entities. Intermediate null
cdi-alternative CDI, Servlet, JSP The cdi-alternative quickstart demonstrates how to create a bean that can be implemented for different purposes without changing the source code. Intermediate null
cdi-decorator CDI, JSF The cdi-decorator quickstart demonstrates the use of a CDI Decorator to intercept bean methods and modify the business logic. Intermediate null
cdi-injection CDI, JSF The cdi-injection quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI Injection and Qualifiers in ${product.name} with a JSF front-end client. Beginner null
cdi-interceptors JPA, JSF, EJB The cdi-interceptors quickstart demonstrates how to use CDI interceptors for cross-cutting concerns such as logging and simple auditing. Intermediate null
cdi-portable-extension CDI The cdi-portable-extension quickstart demonstrates a simple CDI Portable Extension that uses SPI classes to inject beans with data from an XML file. Intermediate null
cdi-stereotype JPA, JSF, EJB The cdi-stereotype quickstart demonstrates how to apply CDI stereotypes to beans to encapsulate CDI interceptor bindings and CDI alternatives. Intermediate null
cdi-veto CDI The cdi-veto quickstart is a simple CDI Portable Extension that uses SPI classes to show how to remove beans and inject JPA entities into an application. Intermediate null
cmt EJB, CMT, JMS The cmt quickstart demonstrates Container-Managed Transactions (CMT), showing how to use transactions managed by the container. Intermediate null
contacts-jquerymobile jQuery Mobile, jQuery, JavaScript, HTML5, REST The contacts-jquerymobile quickstart demonstrates a Java EE 7 mobile database application using HTML5, jQuery Mobile, JAX-RS, JPA, and REST. Beginner null
ejb-asynchronous Asynchronous EJB The ejb-asynchronous quickstart demonstrates the behavior of asynchronous EJB invocations by a deployed EJB and a remote client and how to handle errors. Advanced null
ejb-in-ear EJB, EAR The ejb-in-ear quickstart demonstrates how to deploy an EAR archive that contains a JSF WAR and an EJB JAR. Intermediate null
ejb-in-war EJB, JSF, WAR The ejb-in-war quickstart demonstrates how to package an EJB bean in a WAR archive and deploy it to ${product.name}. Arquillian tests are also provided. Intermediate null
ejb-multi-server EJB, EAR The ejb-multi-server quickstart shows how to communicate between multiple applications deployed to different servers using an EJB to log the invocation. Advanced null
ejb-remote EJB, JNDI The ejb-remote quickstart uses EJB and JNDI to demonstrate how to access an EJB, deployed to ${product.name}, from a remote Java client application. Intermediate null
ejb-security EJB, Security The ejb-security quickstart demonstrates the use of Java EE declarative security to control access to Servlets and EJBs in ${product.name}. Intermediate null
ejb-security-interceptors EJB, Security The ejb-security-interceptors quickstart demonstrates how to use client and server side interceptors to switch the identity for an EJB call. Advanced null
ejb-throws-exception EJB, EAR The ejb-throws-exception quickstart demonstrates how to throw and handle Exceptions across JARs in an EAR. Intermediate null
ejb-timer EJB Timer The ejb-timer quickstart demonstrates how to use the EJB timer service @Schedule and @Timeout annotations with ${product.name}. Beginner null
forge-from-scratch Forge The forge-from-scratch quickstart demonstrates how JBoss Forge can generate a Java EE (JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, JSF) web-enabled database application. Intermediate null
greeter CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JTA The greeter quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI, JPA, JTA, EJB and JSF in ${product.name}. Beginner null
h2-console H2 The h2-console quickstart demonstrates how to use the H2 Console that is bundled with and built specifically for ${product.name}. Beginner null
ha-singleton-deployment EJB, Singleton Deployments, Clustering The ha-singleton-deployment quickstart demonstrates the recommended way to deploy any service packaged in an application archive as a cluster-wide singleton. Advanced null
helloworld CDI, Servlet The helloworld quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI and Servlet 3 and is a good starting point to verify ${product.name} is configured correctly. Beginner null
helloworld-html5 CDI, JAX-RS, HTML5 The helloworld-html5 quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI 1.2 and JAX-RS 2.0 using the HTML5 architecture and RESTful services on the backend. Beginner null
helloworld-jms JMS The helloworld-jms quickstart demonstrates the use of external JMS clients with ${product.name}. Intermediate null
helloworld-mbean CDI, JMX, MBean The helloworld-mbean quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI and MBean in ${product.name} and includes JConsole instructions and Arquillian tests. Intermediate null
helloworld-mdb JMS, EJB, MDB The helloworld-mdb quickstart uses JMS and EJB Message-Driven Bean (MDB) to create and deploy JMS topic and queue resources in ${product.name}. Intermediate null
helloworld-mdb-propertysubstitution JMS, EJB, MDB The helloworld-mdb-propertysubstitution quickstart demonstrates the use of JMS and EJB MDB, enabling property substitution with annotations. Intermediate null
helloworld-rs CDI, JAX-RS The helloworld-rs quickstart demonstrates a simple Hello World application, bundled and deployed as a WAR, that uses JAX-RS to say Hello. Intermediate null
helloworld-singleton EJB, Singleton The helloworld-singleton quickstart demonstrates an EJB Singleton Bean that is instantiated once and maintains state for the life of the session. Beginner null
helloworld-ws JAX-WS The helloworld-ws quickstart demonstrates a simple Hello World application, bundled and deployed as a WAR, that uses JAX-WS to say Hello. Beginner null
hibernate5 Hibernate 5 The hibernate5 quickstart demonstrates how to use Hibernate ORM 5 API over JPA, using Hibernate-Core and Hibernate Bean Validation, and EJB. Intermediate null
inter-app EJB, CDI, JSF The inter-app quickstart shows you how to use a shared API JAR and an EJB to provide inter-application communication between two WAR deployments. Advanced null
jaxrs-client JAX-RS The jaxrs-client quickstart demonstrates JAX-RS Client API, which interacts with a JAX-RS Web service that runs on ${product.name}. Beginner null
jaxws-addressing JAX-WS The jaxws-addressing quickstart is a working example of the web service using WS-Addressing. Beginner null
jaxws-ejb JAX-WS The jaxws-ejb quickstart is a working example of the web service endpoint created from an EJB. Beginner null
jaxws-pojo JAX-WS The jaxws-pojo quickstart is a working example of the web service endpoint created from a POJO. Beginner null
jaxws-retail JAX-WS The jaxws-retail quickstart is a working example of a simple web service endpoint. Beginner null
jsonp CDI, JSF, JSON-P The jsonp quickstart demonstrates how to use the JSON-P API to produce object-based structures and then parse and consume them as stream-based JSON strings. Beginner null
jta-crash-rec JTA, Crash Recovery The jta-crash-rec quickstart uses JTA and Byteman to show how to code distributed (XA) transactions in order to preserve ACID properties on server crash. Advanced null
jts JTS, EJB, JMS The jts quickstart shows how to use JTS to perform distributed transactions across multiple containers, fulfilling the properties of an ACID transaction. Intermediate cmt
jts-distributed-crash-rec JTS, Crash Recovery The jts-distributed-crash-rec quickstart uses JTS and Byteman to demonstrate distributed crash recovery across multiple application servers. Advanced jts
kitchensink CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, BV The kitchensink quickstart demonstrates a Java EE 7 web-enabled database application using JSF, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation. Intermediate null
kitchensink-angularjs AngularJS, CDI, JPA, EJB, JPA, JAX-RS, BV The kitchensink-angularjs quickstart demonstrates a Java EE 7 application using AngularJS with JAX-RS, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation. Intermediate null
kitchensink-ear CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, BV, EAR The kitchensink-ear quickstart demonstrates web-enabled database application, using JSF, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation, packaged as an EAR. Intermediate null
kitchensink-html5-mobile CDI, HTML5, REST The kitchensink-html5-mobile quickstart is based on kitchensink, but uses HTML5 and jQuery Mobile, making it suitable for mobile and tablet computers. Beginner null
kitchensink-jsp JSP, JSTL, CDI, JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, BV The kitchensink-jsp quickstart demonstrates how to use JSP, JSTL, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation in ${product.name}. Intermediate null
kitchensink-ml CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, BV, i18n, l10n The kitchensink-ml quickstart demonstrates a localized Java EE 7 compliant application using JSF, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation. Intermediate null
kitchensink-ml-ear CDI, JSF, JPA, EJB, JAX-RS, BV, EAR, i18n, l10n The kitchensink-ml-ear quickstart demonstrates a localized database application, using JSF, CDI, EJB, JPA, and Bean Validation, packaged as an EAR. Intermediate null
log4j JBoss Modules The log4j quickstart demonstrates how to use container defined modules to add dependencies on 3rd party libraries and limit the application package size. Beginner null
logging Logging The logging quickstart demonstrates how to configure different logging levels in ${product.name}. It also includes an asynchronous logging example. Intermediate None
logging-tools JBoss Logging Tools The logging-tools quickstart shows how to use JBoss Logging Tools to create internationalized loggers, exceptions, and messages and localize them. Beginner null
mail JavaMail, CDI, JSF The mail quickstart demonstrates how to send email using CDI and JSF and the default Mail provider that ships with ${product.name}. Beginner null
managed-executor-service EE Concurrency Utilities, JAX-RS, JAX-RS Client API The managed-executor-service quickstart demonstrates how Java EE applications can submit tasks for asynchronous execution. Beginner null
messaging-clustering JMS, MDB The messaging-clustering quickstart does not contain any code and instead uses the helloworld-mdb quickstart to demonstrate clustering using ActiveMQ Messaging. Intermediate helloworld-mdb
numberguess CDI, JSF The numberguess quickstart demonstrates the use of CDI (Contexts and Dependency Injection) and JSF (JavaServer Faces) in ${product.name}. Beginner null
payment-cdi-event CDI, JSF The payment-cdi-event quickstart demonstrates how to create credit and debit CDI Events in ${product.name}, using a JSF front-end client. Beginner null
picketlink-sts WS-Trust, SAML The picketlink-sts quickstart demonstrates how to deploy a fully compliant WS-Trust Security Token Service (STS). Advanced null
resteasy-jaxrs-client JAX-RS, CDI The resteasy-jaxrs-client quickstart demonstrates an external JAX-RS RestEasy client, which interacts with a JAX-RS Web service that uses CDI and JAX-RS. Intermediate helloworld-rs
servlet-async Asynchronous Servlet, CDI, EJB The servlet-async quickstart demonstrates how to use asynchronous servlets to detach long-running tasks and free up the request processing thread. Intermediate null
servlet-filterlistener Servlet Filter, Servlet Listener The servlet-filterlistener quickstart demonstrates how to use Servlet filters and listeners in an application. Intermediate null
servlet-security Servlet, Security The servlet-security quickstart demonstrates the use of Java EE declarative security to control access to Servlets and Security in ${product.name}. Intermediate null
shopping-cart SFSB EJB The shopping-cart quickstart demonstrates how to deploy and run a simple Java EE 7 shopping cart application that uses a stateful session bean (SFSB). Intermediate null
shrinkwrap-resolver CDI, Arquillian, Shrinkwrap The shrinkwrap-resolver quickstart demonstrates three common use cases for ShrinkWrap Resolver in ${product.name.full}. Intermediate null
spring-greeter Spring MVC, JSP, JPA The spring-greeter quickstart is based on the greeter quickstart, but differs in that it uses Spring MVC for Mapping GET and POST requests. Beginner null
spring-kitchensink-asyncrequestmapping JSP, JPA, JSON, Spring, JUnit The spring-kitchensink-asyncrequestmapping quickstart showcases the use of asynchronous requests is an example using JSP, JPA and Spring 4.x. Intermediate null
spring-kitchensink-basic JSP, JPA, JSON, Spring, JUnit The spring-kitchensink-basic quickstart is an example of a Java EE 7 application using JSP, JPA and Spring 4.x. Intermediate null
spring-kitchensink-controlleradvice JSP, JPA, JSON, Spring, JUnit The spring-kitchensink-controlleradvice quickstart showcases Spring 4.x's @ControllerAdvice, which was introduced in Spring 3.2. Intermediate null
spring-kitchensink-matrixvariables JSP, JPA, JSON, Spring, JUnit The spring-kitchensink-matrixvariables quickstart showcases Spring 4.x's support for Matrix Variables in URLs that was introduced in Spring 3.2. Intermediate null
spring-kitchensink-springmvctest JSP, JPA, JSON, Spring, JUnit The spring-kitchensink-springmvctest quickstart demonstrates how to create an MVC application using JSP, JPA and Spring 4.x. Intermediate null
spring-petclinic JPA, Junit, JMX, Spring MVC Annotations, AOP, Spring Data, JSP, webjars, Dandellion The spring-petclinic quickstart shows how to run the Spring PetClinic Application in ${product.name} using the ${product.name} BOMs. Advanced null
spring-resteasy Resteasy, Spring The spring-resteasy quickstart demonstrates how to package and deploy a web application that includes resteasy-spring integration. Beginner null
tasks JPA, Arquillian The tasks quickstart includes a persistence unit and sample persistence code to demonstrate how to use JPA for database access in ${product.name}. Intermediate null
tasks-jsf JSF, JPA The tasks-jsf quickstart demonstrates how to use JPA persistence with JSF as the view layer. Intermediate tasks
tasks-rs JPA, JAX-RS The tasks-rs quickstart demonstrates how to implement a JAX-RS service that uses JPA persistence. Intermediate tasks
temperature-converter CDI, JSF, SLSB EJB The temperature-converter quickstart does temperature conversion using an EJB Stateless Session Bean (SLSB), CDI, and a JSF front-end client. Beginner null
thread-racing Batch, CDI, EE Concurrency, JAX-RS, JMS, JPA, JSON, Web Sockets A thread racing web application that demonstrates technologies introduced or updated in the latest Java EE specification. Beginner null
websocket-client Web Socket, CDI Events, JSON, SSL Demonstrates use of a Javascript WebSocket client, WebSocket configuration, programmatic binding, and secure WebSocket. Intermediate null
websocket-endpoint CDI, WebSocket, JSON-P Shows how to use WebSockets with JSON to broadcast information to all open WebSocket sessions in ${product.name}. Beginner null
websocket-hello WebSocket, CDI, JSF The websocket-hello quickstart demonstrates how to create a simple WebSocket application. Beginner null
wsat-simple WS-AT, JAX-WS The wsat-simple quickstart demonstrates a WS-AT (WS-AtomicTransaction) enabled JAX-WS Web service, bundled as a WAR, and deployed to ${product.name}. Intermediate null
wsba-coordinator-completion-simple WS-BA, JAX-WS The wsba-coordinator-completion-simple quickstart deploys a WS-BA (WS Business Activity) enabled JAX-WS Web service WAR (CoordinatorCompletion protocol). Intermediate null
wsba-participant-completion-simple WS-BA, JAX-WS The wsba-participant-completion-simple quickstart deploys a WS-BA (WS Business Activity) enabled JAX-WS Web service WAR (ParticipantCompletion Protocol). Intermediate null
xml-dom4j DOM4J, Servlet, JSF The xml-dom4j quickstart demonstrates how to use Servlet and JSF to upload an XML file to ${product.name} and parse it using a 3rd party XML parsing library. Intermediate null
xml-jaxp JAXP, SAX, DOM, Servlet The xml-jaxp quickstart demonstrates how to use Servlet and JSF to upload an XML file to ${product.name} and validate and parse it using DOM or SAX. Intermediate null

Suggested Approach to the Quickstarts

We suggest you approach the quickstarts as follows:

  • Regardless of your level of expertise, we suggest you start with the helloworld quickstart. It is the simplest example and is an easy way to prove your server is configured and started correctly.
  • If you are a beginner or new to JBoss, start with the quickstarts labeled Beginner, then try those marked as Intermediate. When you are comfortable with those, move on to the Advanced quickstarts.
  • Some quickstarts are based upon other quickstarts but have expanded capabilities and functionality. If a prerequisite quickstart is listed, be sure to deploy and test it before looking at the expanded version.

System Requirements

The applications these projects produce are designed to be run on Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 7.1 or later.

All you need to build these projects is Java 8.0 (Java SDK 1.8) or later and Maven 3.3.1 or later. See Configure Maven for JBoss EAP 7.1 to make sure you are configured correctly for testing the quickstarts.

To run these quickstarts with the provided build scripts, you need the JBoss EAP distribution ZIP. For information on how to install and run JBoss, see the Red Hat JBoss Enterprise Application Platform Documentation Getting Started Guide located on the Customer Portal.

You can also use JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse to run the quickstarts.

Run the Quickstarts

The root folder of each individual quickstart contains a README file with specific details on how to build and run the example. In most cases you do the following:

Build and Deploy the Quickstarts

See the README file in each individual quickstart folder for specific details and information on how to run and access the example.

Build the Quickstart Archive

In most cases, you can use the following steps to build the application to test for compile errors or to view the contents of the archive. See the specific quickstart README file for complete details.

  1. Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of the quickstart you want to build.

  2. Use this command if you only want to build the archive, but not deploy it:

         mvn clean install
    

Build and Deploy the Quickstart Archive

In most cases, you can use the following steps to build and deploy the application. See the specific quickstart README file for complete details.

  1. Make sure you start the JBoss EAP server as described in the quickstart README file.

  2. Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of the quickstart you want to run.

  3. Use this command to build and deploy the archive:

         mvn clean install wildfly:deploy
    

Undeploy an Archive

The command to undeploy the quickstart is simply:

    mvn wildfly:undeploy

Verify the Quickstarts Build with One Command

You can verify the quickstarts build using one command. However, quickstarts that have complex dependencies must be skipped. For example, the resteasy-jaxrs-client quickstart is a RESTEasy client that depends on the deployment of the helloworld-rs quickstart. As noted above, the root pom.xml file defines a complex-dependencies profile to exclude these quickstarts from the root build process.

To build the quickstarts:

  1. Do not start the JBoss EAP server.

  2. Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of the quickstarts.

  3. Use this command to build the quickstarts that do not have complex dependencies:

         mvn clean install '-Pdefault,!complex-dependencies'
    

Undeploy the Deployed Quickstarts with One Command

To undeploy the quickstarts from the root of the quickstart folder, you must pass the argument -fae (fail at end) on the command line. This allows the command to continue past quickstarts that fail due to complex dependencies and quickstarts that only have Arquillian tests and do not deploy archives to the server.

You can undeploy quickstarts using the following procedure:

  1. Start the JBoss EAP server.

  2. Open a command prompt and navigate to the root directory of the quickstarts.

  3. Use this command to undeploy any deployed quickstarts:

         mvn wildfly:undeploy -fae
    

To undeploy any quickstarts that fail due to complex dependencies, follow the undeploy procedure described in the quickstart's README file.

Run the Quickstarts in Red Hat JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse

You can also start the server and deploy the quickstarts or run the Arquillian tests from Eclipse using JBoss tools. For general information about how to import a quickstart, add a JBoss EAP server, and build and deploy a quickstart, see Use JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse to Run the Quickstarts.

Optional Components

The following components are needed for only a small subset of the quickstarts. Do not install or configure them unless the quickstart requires it.

About

The quickstarts demonstrate JBoss EAP, Java EE 7 and a few additional technologies. They provide small, specific, working examples that can be used as a reference for your own project.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 44.8%
  • Java 41.7%
  • CSS 7.1%
  • HTML 6.0%
  • Shell 0.2%
  • Batchfile 0.1%
  • GLSL 0.1%