Deployment runthrough on Windows » History » Version 11

Version 10 (Chris Cannam, 2014-09-30 10:56 AM) → Version 11/16 (Chris Cannam, 2014-09-30 11:00 AM)

h1. Deployment runthrough on Windows

This is an example deployment on a 32-bit Windows 7 host.

See [[Deployment runthrough]] for a typical Linux deployment.

See [[Deployment troubleshooting]] for notes about Java and Tomcat versions and on things that might go wrong.

h2. 1. Obtain the current code from Mercurial repository

I use "EasyMercurial":http://easyhg.org/ as my Windows Mercurial client. Use "Open" -> "Remote repository" and provide @https://code.soundsoftware.ac.uk/hg/human-echolocation-java-webapp@ as the remote repository URL, cloning to a folder called @human-echolocation-java-webapp@ in my Documents folder. (See "screenshot":/attachments/download/1182/Screenshot%20-%20300914%20-%2008_51_01.png.)

h2. 2. Install the MATLAB Compiler Runtime

Navigate to http://www.mathworks.co.uk/products/compiler/mcr/ and find the download URL. (I am using release R2013b here.) Download and run the installer, accepting its default installation path of @C:\Program Files\MATLAB\MATLAB Compiler Runtime@.

h2. 3. Install Java, Tomcat, Java and Ant Tomcat

h3. Java

Navigate to http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/downloads/jdk7-downloads-1880260.html to download (in our case) Java 7 JDK. Run the installer and install to the default path.

Now make sure the JAVA_HOME environment variable points to the JDK just installed, and not to the JRE runtime (this is necessary for use of the Ant build tool later). To do this, go to the Windows Control Panel, search for "environment" and open the environment variable dialog. Add a new user environment variable setting JAVA_HOME to the JDK location. (See "screenshot":/attachments/download/1184/Screenshot%20-%20300914%20-%2010_24_01.png) screenshot)

h3. Tomcat

Apache Tomcat is a web application server commonly used for Java servlet applications.

Navigate to http://tomcat.apache.org/ and download the "32-bit/64-bit Windows Service installer" for (in our case) Tomcat 7. Again we accept the default path (@C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation\Tomcat 7.0@). Note that the installer asks you to set a username and password for the Tomcat administrator login -- this is optional, but it will save some configuration later if you set a password now. (See "screenshot":/attachments/download/1183/Screenshot%20-%20300914%20-%2010_05_03.png)

When installation is complete, you will be given the option to start Tomcat -- accept it. You should then be able to open the URL @http://127.0.0.1:8080/manager/html@ in a browser to see the Tomcat manager page. You will be asked for a username and password to access it -- these should be the same ones you provided during installation.

h3. Ant h2. 4. Bring dependent JAR files into the webapp folder

Copy @C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation\Tomcat 7.0\lib\servlet-api.jar@ and @C:\Program Files\MATLAB\MATLAB Compiler Runtime\v82\toolbox\javabuilder\jar\javabuilder.jar@ into the @human-echolocation-java-webapp@ folder.

h2. 5. Install
Apache Ant

Ant
is the tool used to build the webapp project. (One could install an entire development environment such as Eclipse, as well, but that is beyond the scope of this page!)

Navigate to http://ant.apache.org/bindownload.cgi and download the Zip archive of the current version of Ant. Unpack it anywhere you like, but make a note of the path. I am unpacking it and copying the @apache-ant-1.9.4@ folder into @C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation@ next door to Tomcat.

h2. 4. Bring dependent JAR files into the webapp folder

Copy @C:\Program Files\Apache Software Foundation\Tomcat 7.0\lib\servlet-api.jar@ and @C:\Program Files\MATLAB\MATLAB Compiler Runtime\v82\toolbox\javabuilder\jar\javabuilder.jar@ into the @human-echolocation-java-webapp@ folder.



h2. 6. Build the WAR file bundle