Payara Server Embedded Arquillian Container

The Payara Server Embedded container lifecycle is managed by Arquillian and resides in the same JVM where tests are executed using a local protocol.

Usage

The Payara Server Embedded Arquillian container can be found on Maven Central, and can be included in your project using the following Maven coordinates:

<dependency>
  <groupId>fish.payara.arquillian</groupId>
  <artifactId>arquillian-payara-server-embedded</artifactId>
  <version>${version}</version>
</dependency>

You can find the latest artifact version from here.

Configuring the Container

The container can be configured via the arquillian.xml using the standard Arquillian Container Configuration mechanism.

Table 1. Configuration Options
Name Description Default

bindHttpPort

The port number of the http-listener for the embedded Payara Server.

8181

bindHttpsPort

The port number of the https-listener for the embedded Payara Server.

8182

cleanup

Specifies whether Arquillian should cleanup on shutdown. This recursively deletes files in the instanceRoot directory.

true

configurationReadOnly

Specifies whether Payara should write back any changes to specified configuration file or config/domain.xml at the specified instance root.

true

configurationXml

Set the location of configuration file i.e. domain.xml using which the Payara Server should run.

installRoot

The install root directory is the parent directory of a Payara Server instance directory and corresponds to the base directory for an installation of Payara Server.

instanceRoot

The instance root directory is the domain directory and embedded Payara Server uses the server instance directory for domain configuration files.

the default domain directory

resourcesXml

A comma-separated list of Payara resources.xml files containing resources that will be added to the Payara instance using the add-resources command.

Examples

To configure the Arquillian Container options, you need to use an arquillian.xml file placed on the test classpath. Here’s an example arquillian.xml file. It configures adminPort with a static value. It configures bindHttpsPort as a value of a system property my.httpsport, which you can specify for example in the maven surefire plugin using the systemPropertyVariables option or on command line like mvn -Dmy.httpsport=8081 test.

Example arquillian.xml file
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<arquillian xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xmlns="http://jboss.org/schema/arquillian"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://jboss.org/schema/arquillian
                http://jboss.org/schema/arquillian/arquillian_1_0.xsd">

    <container qualifier="payara-embedded" default="true">
        <configuration>
            <property name="bindHttpPort">8080</property>
            <property name="bindHttpsPort">${my.httpsport}</property>
        </configuration>
    </container>
</arquillian>

If you want to configure more containers, you can switch between them by setting the arquillian.launch system property to the container’s qualifier. This is how you can do it with the maven surefire plugin (my.httpsport system property is used to set the bindHttpsPort property in arquillian.xml):

Example Surefire plugin configuration in a pom.xml file
<plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
    <configuration>
        <systemPropertyVariables>
            <arquillian.launch>payara</arquillian.launch>
            <my.httpsport>8081</my.httpsport>
        </systemPropertyVariables>
    </configuration>
</plugin>