This is a full JEE6 sample with JSF2.0, EJB3.1 and JPA2.0.
This example uses the JEE Stackato Framework.
Stackato detects if your application is a JEE application contains the file /src/main/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml.
The Stackato JEE Framework creates a resources for each relationnal database service created. In this example, we create a mysql service.
To access to this service, there is a persistence-unit tag in the persistence.xml file which binds automatically to your database.
It's that easy!
It is possible to build the application either with Ant or Maven.
Make sure your have Ant installed. Then, cd into the root directory and execute:
ant clean package
That will create the catalog.war file within the 'target' directory.
Make sure you have Maven installed. Then, cd into the root directory and execute:
mvn clean package
That will create the catalog.war file within the 'target' directory.
To run the application, make sure you have the Stackato client installed and that you are logged in successfully for your desired target environment (e.g. http://api.stackato.local).
Then execute:
stackato push -n
Notice that it detected the app type as "Java EE Application".
Then go on your application url.
That's all. Have fun!