diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'sca-java-2.x/branches/2.0-Beta2/samples/README')
-rw-r--r-- | sca-java-2.x/branches/2.0-Beta2/samples/README | 154 |
1 files changed, 154 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/sca-java-2.x/branches/2.0-Beta2/samples/README b/sca-java-2.x/branches/2.0-Beta2/samples/README new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..15736845da --- /dev/null +++ b/sca-java-2.x/branches/2.0-Beta2/samples/README @@ -0,0 +1,154 @@ +The Apache Tuscany SCA Samples +============================== + +Welcome to the Apache Tuscany SCA Java runtime. You can find more general +documentation about the runtime at: + +http://tuscany.apache.org/documentation-2x/ + +Here we give a short overview of what you can find in the samples directory. +More detail on the individual sample contributions can be found at: + +http://tuscany.apache.org/documentation-2x/20-beta-samples-documentation.html + +There are several samples subdirectories in the distribution; + +getting-started +=============== + +This is a good place to start if you've not tried Tuscany SCA Java before. This +directory contains a number of simple "SCA Contributions" that can be run using +the Tuscany SCA runtime. An SCA Contribution is the way that SCA composite +applications are packaged so they can be run. For general information on SCA +see http://tuscany.apache.org/documentation-2x/sca-introduction.html + +learning-more +============= + +This directory contains many more SCA Contributions that you can try with +the Tuscany SCA Java runtime. Some demonstrate particular features of the +runtime, or example, the contributions under the async directory demonstrate +the asynchronous programming model that the runtime supports. + +SCA is extensible. You can plug in extensions to support many different types +of technology. The Tuscany SCA Java runtime comes with lots of extensions +and the majority of contributions here demonstrate these extensions. They are +organized under directories following the name of the extension, for example, +contributions that demonstrate the web services binding in operation can +be found in the binding-ws directory. When you want to use the web service +binding with an SCA service a reference it appears in the composite XML in +the following way: + +<service> + <binding.ws/> +</service> + +Hence it should be easy to map between extensions, as they appear in +composite files and other samples that demonstrate various features of the +extension. + +The contributions here can be run with using the approach that you find +most convenient from the running-tuscany directory. + +running-tuscany +=============== + +The Tuscany SCA Java runtime can be used directly from the command line. It can +also be embedded in other programs. As such there are many different ways that +you can start the Tuscany SCA runtime and deploy contributions to it. Each +directory here describes a different way of running Tuscany. In most cases these +different approaches can be used to run any of the contributions from the +getting-started or learning-more directories. + +applications +============ + +The contributions here demonstrate more fully formed applications when +compared to the contributions found the getting-started or learning-more +directories. + +extending-tuscany +================= + +Once you're familiar with Tuscany and SCA you're likely to find that to +implement you're application you need particular bindings, implementation +types, policies or databindings. The examples in this directory show you +how to extend the Tuscany runtime to include the technologies you need to use. + +Running samples +--------------- + +Running a samples contribution involves 3 basic steps + +1) build the contribution + +Using ant, maven or eclipse (see below) + +2) launch the contribution + +Using one of the approaches described in the running-tuscany directory + +3) send a test message to the a component service + +When you want to exercise an SCA composite application you have to send a +message to a component service. There are several ways of doing this depending +on how the sample contribution has been configured. For example, you could +send a SOAP message using the Web Services explorer in Eclipse, you could +use a separate client program that uses the SCA client API, the sample +contribution itself may even include initialization code that sends a test +message when the contribution is started. The documentation for each sample +describes what to do to send a test message. + +Building the sample contributions using Ant +-------------------------------------------- +Most sample contributions are provided with a build.xml file. When you see one +you can build it using Ant. + +These build.xml files are designed to work with the Tuscany SCA Java binary +distribution and build a classpath that, by various means, refers to the +jars that are shipped in the modules directory. For them to work properly +they should be run from the directory in which you find the build.xml file. + +cd <sampledir> +ant + +The result of this process will be the built contribution (a jar file) in the +target subdirectory of the sample contribution directory. + +Once the sample is built you have the option of running the sample in whatever +way best suits you. + +Building SCA Samples Using Maven +-------------------------------- +All sample contributions are provided with a pom.xml Maven build file. The +Maven build process will work from both source and binary distributions. + +cd <sampledir> +mvn + +This will take a little while to complete. Experience with Maven tells us that +sometimes there are problems downloading the dependencies that Apache Tuscany +SCA requires. If Maven reports that it cannot download required dependencies +try running the Maven build again. + +When using Maven the samples are unit tested using JUnit test cases and so you +will sometimes see test output during the build process. + +The result of this process will be the built contribution (a jar file) in the +target subdirectory of the sample contribution directory. + +Once the sample is built you have the option of running the sample in whatever +way best suits you. + +Building Samples In An IDE +--------------------------- + +The easiest way to use the samples in an IDE is to use Maven to generate all +of the IDE project files for you automatically. You don't have to do this +though and can use a series of manual steps in order to import the Tuscany +samples into an IDE. + +Both approaches to importing SCA contribution projects into Eclipse are +documented at: + +http://tuscany.apache.org/import-existing-tuscany-sca-projects-into-eclipse.html |