I have not written for over a month, as I had been busy travelling back and forth delivering Flex and Flash training between Boston and Toronto. During my "off-off-off" time (when a developer does not do work, research, or watch a couple of hours worth of Lost Season 2 lol), I took a moment to explore configuring Live Cycle Data Services (LCDS, formerly Flex Data Services 2.x or FDS2) with Apache's Tomcat Server.
There were a number of reasons I began to explore configuring LCDS/FDS2 with other J2EE servers.
One reason was that I could not get a stand-alone version of JRun with Updater 6 to run on Windows Vista. To note, I could install JRun 4.x with the SP1 update onto Vista, but I could not install the SP6 updater. The installation of Updater 6 would halt mid-way through, and updater 6 is required to run LCDS/FDS2.
I suppose I could have tried to install LCDS/FDS2 with the integrated JRun option on Windows Vista, but this leads me to my second reason to try and configure LCDS/FDS2; not all business clients run integrated JRun services. The clientele I work with (and the students I teach Flex to) may be using an in-house J2EE server such as Tomcat, JBoss, WebSphere, or Sun Microsystem's new GlassFish Server (In particular, I will be writing about GlassFish Server in a later blog entry). I am not knocking JRun, its a good J2EE Server, but you need to keep your clients happy!
A third reason is that clients, consultants, and developers using LCDS/FDS2 with their applications may need not only to know how to get LCDS/FDS2 configured with their J2EE servers, they may need to tweak settings appropriately. I know that on the Adobe Web site there is a "Flex Test-Drive Server" available, and it is a pre-configured Tomcat Server running FDS2, but the information provided focuses more on developing applications with Flex and Java then the actual configuration itself. I do recommend that you do explore the article itself anyway as it will give some details on the requirements to set up LCDS/FDS2 with Tomcat - see http://www.adobe.com/devnet/flex/articles/java_testdrive.html, and credits should go to Christophe Coenraets, whose blog entries I also used as a point of reference (visit his site - http://coenraets.org/) .
Therefore in my upcoming blog entries I am going to attempt to do the following:
Install and configure Tomcat for LCDS/FDS2
Install LCDS (or FDS2, it will be the same process) on Tomcat.
Set up web services and messaging services on Tomcat (this was required for my courses , and good for local development for testing Flex code that access web services, uses messaging or data synchronization)
Set up ColdFusion 8 on Tomcat (also required for my courses that I teach as a potential back-end).
Alright, I am done for now. BRB with the next entry.
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4 comments:
What ever came of your follow-ups to this blog? I am very interested to know your installation setup on a J2EE. I'm trying it myself, but things are just not hooking up correctly.
Can anyone teach me how to configure flex project using j2ee server with tomcat.
Help need alot.
Hey please give the details about which u hv described above.
I want this information.
i m in a critical situation.
How to configure LCDS with stand alone Tomcat ?
hope u will reply...
Hi, It is also a great place to keep your customers informed of new products, policies and other important information.
Thanks for great sharing.
Adolph
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