commit | 30eeae2fac1fa30e2d1286c57734a3ec561659e4 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Georg Kallidis <georg.kallidis@cedis.fu-berlin.de> | Thu Nov 15 15:02:55 2018 +0100 |
committer | Georg Kallidis <georg.kallidis@cedis.fu-berlin.de> | Thu Nov 15 15:02:55 2018 +0100 |
tree | 9f78fd84873bd4dbbaa64ea0db03f5f052ff526e | |
parent | fa48492514fd707c52bfdaaee1be56f676472867 [diff] |
Update to Log4j 2; Update to Turbine 5.0; Using in log4j.xml lookup web:rootdir, requires dependency log4j-web; Removed deprecated loggingRoot parameter in web.xml; Fixed jetty port configuration; Updated documentation, mysql server v5.5 is required at least for sql connectzor v8.x
Maven Archetype to generate a webapp utilizing Turbine 5.0
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes. See deployment for notes on how to deploy the project on a live system.
You should have Java 8 or later installed. The archetype sets up a new application using MySQL as the default database store. However, you can adjust this to use any database supported by Apache Torque 4.0. Therefore, you should be at least have a database instance where you have access rights to create a new database schema and populate it with the tables the application generates. Finally, this is a maven archetype, so of course you should install a local version of Maven (tested with 3.5.4).
Eclipse integration:
You need to first add the Apache maven archetypes to your IDE so that you can take advantage of using the turbine-webapp-5.0 plugin to generate a new web application.
The location of the remote catalog file is: http://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/archetype-catalog.xml
Step-by-step instructions on how to accomplish this can be found here: https://howtodoinjava.com/eclipse/how-to-import-maven-remote-archetype-catalogs-in-eclipse/
Please feel free to contribute. We are always happy to encourage new committers to the project.
This project is licensed under the Apache Software License 2.0