原文 http://docs.codehaus.org/display/BTM/Tomcat13
These instructions have been verified against BTM 1.3.1.
Contents
Step 1: Copy the BTM jars
Copy the following jars from the BTM distribution to the Tomcat lib/
directory:
- btm-1.3.1.jar
- geronimo-jta_1.0.1B_spec-1.0.1.jar
- slf4j-api-1.5.2.jar
- slf4j-jdk14-1.5.2.jar
- btm-tomcat55-lifecycle.jar (it works with both Tomcat 5.5 and Tomcat 6)
You will also need to copy your JDBC driver's JAR file in that same folder. In this example, we've used Derby 10.3.2.1 so we copied derby.jar
in Tomcat's lib/
directory.
Step 2: Configure BTM as the transaction manager
Windows: Create a file named setenv.bat
with the following commands under Tomcat's bin/
directory:
set CATALINA_OPTS=-Dbtm.root=%CATALINA_HOME% -Dbitronix.tm.configuration=%CATALINA_HOME%\conf\btm-config.properties
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Unix: Create a file named setenv.sh
with the following commands under Tomcat's bin/
directory:
CATALINA_OPTS=
"-Dbtm.root=$CATALINA_HOME -Dbitronix.tm.configuration=$CATALINA_HOME/conf/btm-config.properties"
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Now create a file named btm-config.properties
with the following properties under Tomcat's conf/
directory:
bitronix.tm.serverId=tomcat-btm-node0
bitronix.tm.journal.disk.logPart1Filename=${btm.root}/work/btm1.tlog
bitronix.tm.journal.disk.logPart2Filename=${btm.root}/work/btm2.tlog
bitronix.tm.resource.configuration=${btm.root}/conf/resources.properties
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Then edit the file named server.xml
under Tomcat's conf/
directory. Under this line:
<Listener className=
"org.apache.catalina.mbeans.GlobalResourcesLifecycleListener"
/>
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add this one:
<Listener className=
"bitronix.tm.integration.tomcat55.BTMLifecycleListener"
/>
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The <Listener>
tag will make sure BTM is started when Tomcat starts up and shutdown when Tomcat shuts down.
The next step is to edit the file named context.xml
under Tomcat's conf/
directory. Under this line:
<WatchedResource>WEB-INF/web.xml</WatchedResource>
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add this one:
<Transaction factory=
"bitronix.tm.BitronixUserTransactionObjectFactory"
/>
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The <Transaction>
tag will bind the transaction manager at the standard JNDI location java:comp/UserTransaction
.
Finally, create an empty file named resources.properties
under Tomcat's conf/
directory.
Step 3: Configure datasources that are transaction aware
You have to put your datasources configurations in Tomcat's conf/resources.properties
file. Here's an example of using BTM with a DataSource that implements javax.sql.XADataSource:
resource.ds1.className=org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedXADataSource
resource.ds1.uniqueName=jdbc/mydatasource
resource.ds1.minPoolSize=
0
resource.ds1.maxPoolSize=
5
resource.ds1.driverProperties.databaseName=../work/db1
resource.ds1.driverProperties.createDatabase=create
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This will create a bitronix.tm.resource.jdbc.PoolingDataSource
that implements javax.sql.DataSource
and interacts with the javax.sql.XADataSource
provided in this instance by Derby.
If your database vendor does not provide an XADataSource
, you can use BTM's bitronix.tm.resource.jdbc.lrc.LrcXADataSource
as the XADataSource
to allow your database connections to be controlled by the transaction manager:
resource.ds2.className=bitronix.tm.resource.jdbc.lrc.LrcXADataSource
resource.ds2.uniqueName=jdbc/exampleNonXADS
resource.ds2.minPoolSize=
0
resource.ds2.maxPoolSize=
5
resource.ds2.driverProperties.driverClassName=org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedDriver
resource.ds2.driverProperties.url=jdbc:derby:../work/db2;create=
true
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Again, we've used Derby as an example, but as the LrcXADataSource
uses only the class name and url of a java.sql.Driver
, you can use it with any database providing a JDBC driver.
Step 4: Configure transaction manager and datasources initialization in your META-INF/context.xml
In the web application where you want one or more datasource to be used, you have to create a META-INF/context.xml file.
<
Context
>
<
Resource
name
=
"jdbc/mydatasource"
auth
=
"Container"
type
=
"javax.sql.DataSource"
factory
=
"bitronix.tm.resource.ResourceObjectFactory"
uniqueName
=
"jdbc/mydatasource"
/>
<
Resource
name
=
"jdbc/exampleNonXADS"
auth
=
"Container"
type
=
"javax.sql.DataSource"
factory
=
"bitronix.tm.resource.ResourceObjectFactory"
uniqueName
=
"jdbc/exampleNonXADS"
/>
</
Context
>
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The <Resource>
tags will bind a bitronix.tm.resource.ResourceObjectFactory object each, passing it a javax.naming.Reference containing a javax.naming.StringRefAddr containing the datasource's uniqueName
as addrType
.
Tomcat specific This mechanism is internal to Tomcat. You do not have to worry about how it works, the |
The bitronix.tm.resource.ResourceObjectFactory
class will return the datasource previously configured in in Tomcat's conf/resources.properties
with the specified uniqueName
when it is fetched from JNDI.
Step 5: Configure datasources references in your web.xml
Before your code can access configured datasources via JNDI ENC URLs, you need to declare resource references in your web.xml
:
<?
xml
version
=
"1.0"
encoding
=
"ISO-8859-1"
?>
<!DOCTYPE web-app PUBLIC
"-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Web Application 2.3//EN"
<
web-app
>
<
resource-env-ref
>
<
resource-env-ref-name
>jdbc/mydatasource</
resource-env-ref-name
>
<
resource-env-ref-type
>javax.sql.DataSource</
resource-env-ref-type
>
</
resource-env-ref
>
<
resource-env-ref
>
<
resource-env-ref-name
>jdbc/exampleNonXADS</
resource-env-ref-name
>
<
resource-env-ref-type
>javax.sql.DataSource</
resource-env-ref-type
>
</
resource-env-ref
>
</
web-app
>
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Now you can do JNDI lookups on those URLs to access the configured datasources:
DataSource exampleNonXADS = (DataSource) ctx.lookup(
"java:comp/env/jdbc/exampleNonXADS"
);
DataSource mydatasource = (DataSource) ctx.lookup(
"java:comp/env/jdbc/mydatasource"
);
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and you can do JNDI lookups on this URL to access the transaction manager:
UserTransaction ut = (UserTransaction) ctx.lookup(
"java:comp/UserTransaction"
);
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