Elements of the Deployment Descriptor Files
This page is a reference for extra and changed elements added to the GlassFish proprietary deployment descriptors
classloading-delegate
With this option its possible to enable/disable class loading delegation. This allows deployed application to use libraries included on them, overriding the versions included on the server.
For more information about how class delegation can be configured on Payara Server, see the Enhanced Class loading section.
clustered-attach-postconstruct
Whether to call @PostConstruct
each time the bean is created
on a different node. Will result in multiple calls.
Valid values are true
or false
. The default value is true
.
clustered-bean
Whether this bean should be a Clustered Singleton. Can be applied only to singleton EJBs.
Valid values are true
or false
. The default value is false
.
clustered-detach-predestroy
Whether to call @PreDestroy
when the singleton is destroyed on an
instance while still being available on another. Will result in
multiple calls.
Valid values are true
or false
. The default value is true
.
clustered-key-name
The key used for replication of clustered beans. Applies to singleton EJBs when clustered-bean
is set to true
.
This element is optional. If not set, the default value is the value of the ejb-name
element.
clustered-lock-type
The type of distributed locking to be performed.
For EJB beans, only INHERIT
and LOCK_NONE
are valid.
For CDI beans, valid values are LOCK
and INHERIT
, which is equivalent to using LOCK_NONE
.
Default value is INHERIT
whitelist-package
Used to whitelist packages on extreme class loading isolation. Whitelisted packages are taken into account by the server when scanning libraries.
For more information about how extreme class loading isolation works on Payara Server, see the Enhanced Classloading section.
enable-implicit-cdi
In a WAR file, it is possible to set the property bean-discovery-mode
equal to none
to turn off implicit scanning of the archive for bean
defining annotations, as defined by the CDI 1.1 specification. The
default value of this setting is defined as annotated
in the specification,
so the archive is scanned for any bean-defining annotations, which can cause
unwanted side effects.
In the glassfish-application.xml
deployment descriptor for an EAR
file, the property enable-implicit-cdi
can be set to false
to
achieve the same goal for all modules inside the EAR assembly. The
default value is true
, in line with the default value for WAR files.
If implicit CDI scanning causes problems for an EAR assembly, the value
false
will disable implicit CDI scanning for all CDI modules inside
the EAR assembly:
<glassfish-application>
<enable-implicit-cdi>false</enable-implicit-cdi>
</glassfish-application>
The default behavior of the admin console is for the Implicit CDI checkbox to be enabled, but this will not override the application configuration.
When implicit CDI is configured by using either the
enable-implicit-cdi property in the glassfish-application.xml or the
attribute bean-discovery-mode="none" from the beans.xml file in a
WAR, the admin console checkbox *is always ignored*.
|
scanning-exclude
and scanning-include
Modern WAR and EAR files very often include a number of 3rd party JARs. In situations where some JARs require CDI scanning and others may break if scanned, these can now be explicitly included or excluded from such component scanning.
Both the glassfish-application.xml
and the glassfish-web.xml
files
support the following directives:
<scanning-exclude>*</scanning-exclude>
<scanning-include>ejb*</scanning-include>
<scanning-include>conflicting-web-library</scanning-include>
In the above example, all JARs will be excluded by default, then all
JARs beginning with ejb
will be scanned along with the JAR named
conflicting-web-library
.
container-initializer-enabled
This property configures whether to enable or disable the calling of
ServletContainerInitializer
component classes defined in JAR files
bundled inside a WAR assembly.
For performance considerations, you can explicitly disable the servlet
container initializer by setting the container-initializer-enabled
element to false
. This can help solve the deployment of web applications
that can suffer from conflicts with a custom bootstrapping process.
The default value for this configuration element is true
.
default-role-mapping
With this property, you can set whether to enable the default group to
role mappings for your application’s security settings. This element is
set up as a property
element with a Boolean
value attribute like
this:
<property name="default-role-mapping" value="true">
<description>Enable default group to role mapping</description>
</property>
Enabling the default group to role mappings will cause all named groups in the application’s linked security realm to be mapped to a role of the same name. This will save you the time of having to redefine the same roles and map them to the realm groups each time they are modified.
This will have the same effect as executing the following asadmin
command:
asadmin set configs.config.server-config.security-service.activate-default-principal-to-role-mapping=true
Except its effect will only limit itself to the application instead of
all applications deployed on the server. This setting is configured by
default to true
on the
production-ready-domain
The default value of this property is false
. This property can be set
in the glassfish-web.xml
, glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
and
glassfish-application.xml
deployment descriptors.
In an EAR assembly, only the property set in the
glassfish-application.xml
will take effect and if set in the
glassfish-web.xml
and glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
, it will be ignored.
Setting this configuration property in any of these files will always take
precedence over any setting configured on the server.
jaxrs-roles-allowed-enabled
Since Payara Server 4.1.2.181; 5.181
Payara Server and Micro since versions 4.1.2.181 and 5.181 support @RolesAllowed
out of the box to secure JAX-RS resources.
In some cases this may clash with existing code that interprets the same annotation using custom code.
The out-of-the-box support of @RolesAllowed
for JAX-RS resources can be switched off by setting the <jaxrs-roles-allowed-enabled>
tag in WEB-INF/glassfish-web.xml
of a war archive to false
. E.g.
<jaxrs-roles-allowed-enabled>false</jaxrs-roles-allowed-enabled>
max-wait-time-in-millis
Since Payara Server 4.1.2.172
Payara Server has re-implemented a property of the glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
descriptor that was available in GlassFish in versions prior to 4.0.
The bean-pool
element allows users to specify controls on a per-EJB basis for
pooled stateless EJBs. Payara Server has reintroduced max-wait-time-in-millis
to govern what happens when the number of requests for an EJB exceeds the number
of beans available in the pool.
A value of -1
disables the property and means that, when the pool is at
maximum usage and another request is made, a new EJB instance is created
immediately, with no upper bound.
A value of 0
means the server will wait indefinitely for an existing EJB
instance to be freed.
A value between 1
and MAX_INTEGER
means that the server will wait for the
given amount of milliseconds for an EJB to be freed. Only after this
max-wait-time-in-millis
is exceeded will the server create a new instance of
the requested EJB.
For more detail, see the Enhanced EJB configuration section.
webservice-default-login-config
Since Payara Server 4.1.2.173
When declaring a secured Web Service based on an EJB using the glassfish-ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor, it’s necessary to define the login configuration (authentication
method, security realm name, etc.) for each EJB Web Service that is secured inside
the assembly. For example, if an application contains 2 EJB web services called
EJBWS1 and EJBWS2, and they need to be secured using BASIC
authentication against
the file security realm, the following configuration would be needed:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE glassfish-ejb-jar PUBLIC "-//GlassFish.org//DTD GlassFish Application Server 3.1 EJB 3.1//EN" "http://glassfish.org/dtds/glassfish-ejb-jar_3_1-1.dtd">
<glassfish-ejb-jar>
<ejb>
<ejb-name>EJBWS1</ejb-name>
<webservice-endpoint>
<port-component-name>EJBWS1Port</port-component-name>
<endpoint-address-uri>EJBWS1/EJBWebService</endpoint-address-uri>
<login-config>
<auth-method>BASIC</auth-method>
<realm>file</realm>
</login-config>
</webservice-endpoint>
</ejb>
<ejb>
<ejb-name>EJBWS2</ejb-name>
<webservice-endpoint>
<port-component-name>EJBWS2Port</port-component-name>
<endpoint-address-uri>EJBWS2/EJBWebService</endpoint-address-uri>
<login-config>
<auth-method>BASIC</auth-method>
<realm>file</realm>
</login-config>
</webservice-endpoint>
</ejb>
</glassfish-ejb-jar>
Notice that the login-config
element is repeated exactly like it is in the 2 EJB
definitions. Not only that, but if these Web services are defined using annotations
for each EJB component, then the JAX-WS information (Port Component Name, Endpoint
Address, etc.) would be duplicated too, which is too cumbersome for cases when
there are lots of EJB Web service definitions.
For this scenario, the webservice-default-login-config
has been introduced to
simplify this configuration. When this element is declared, the login configuration
inside it will apply to all of the EJB defined Web Services by default.
The previous example can be simplified like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE glassfish-ejb-jar PUBLIC "-//GlassFish.org//DTD GlassFish Application Server 3.1 EJB 3.1//EN" "http://glassfish.org/dtds/glassfish-ejb-jar_3_1-1.dtd">
<glassfish-ejb-jar>
<webservice-default-login-config>
<auth-method>BASIC</auth-method>
<realm>file</realm>
</webservice-default-login-config>
</glassfish-ejb-jar>
All sub-elements tags of the login-config can be used inside this element.
|
If an EJB Web service definition needs a different login configuration from the default, just redefine it as shown in the example and it will override the default configuration. |