NAME Java::SJ - Highly configurable Java program startup system SYNOPSIS sj myprogram.sj DESCRIPTION This module allows you to very easily run Java services that rely on complex configuration at the VM and library level. It also provides an easy way of specifying a sensible 'default' configuration that can be overridden by specific applications should they need to. The system is configured on a machine and application level. The system looks for configuration files in a set of well-known locations, currently these are: * /etc/sj.conf * .sj.conf in users HOME directory * .sj.conf in current working directory Every application is defined in terms of a similar configuration file. The configuration system has been designed so that it is easy to write a simple and minimal configuration file for a program. Provided the system has a fairly complete configuration associated with it then an application configuration file need only have the class name to be executed. FEATURES Some of the Goodness(tm) that you get with SJ is as follows: Easy co-existence of multiple Virtual Machines Any number of VMs can be supported and used concurrently on the same machine. Developers don't need to know where the JDK/JRE resides, just a symbolic name for it. Easy co-existence of multiple versions of JAR files Any number of different versions of the same JAR file may co-exist. SJ sorts out which ones to use and only places those JAR files that are required in an application's CLASSPATH Control over BOOTCLASSPATH variables All three flavours of the bootclasspath can be configured on a system-wide and application specific basis. Process control PID files can be automatically generated and placed wherever you wish. Cache of executable scripts Application configuration files are cached as executable scripts that can be directly invoked. This will probably make more sense as a set of examples, so here goes. EXAMPLES Simple Configuration The above minimal system configuration simply tells the system where to find a virtual machine called 'ibm' and that it should be used as the default VM unless an application specifically requests another one. myclass The above minimal application configuration simply provides a class file name to run. If both of the above simple configuration files were used then the class 'myclass' would have to be in the system's CLASSPATH environment variable already. Useful Configuration The above simple configuration is only really useful to test that the system is working. Running a simple class on the command line isn't normally very difficult and so sj doesn't actually add very much to the above case. If we had a system where we wished to test that the same code was compatible with multiple virtual machines and multiple library versions then the following configuration files would enable us to run these programs with different parameters easily. The above system configuration contains a lot more information than our initial simple example. Variables There are explicitly declared variables that SJ will use when figuring out where things should be read from/written to. Variables may be defined in terms of other variables, even if they have not been declared yet. The syntax for referring to variables thorughout is the same as Ant, ${variable_name}. PID file It states that by default a PID file should be written when running an application. This is most useful for multithreaded server applications where you want to be able to kill or HUP the server without figuring out what the lead process PID is. Classpath The classpath definition instructs SJ to look for the latest available versions of xalan, xerces and xml-apis and version 1.0.3 of the commons-cli libraries and add these to the classpath when running any program. SJ will look for the libraries in the path defined by ${dir.lib}. SJ is currently very simplistic about library versioning. If it needs to look for a specific version of a library then it simply looks for the library name and library version number joined by a single hyphen. So in the case of the commons-cli library SJ would look for commons-cli-1.0.3.jar in the ${dir.lib} directory. You may be wondering how SJ figures out which is the 'latest' version of a JAR file if no version is specified. Quite simply it chooses the one whose filename begins with the required name and is lexicographically last in an ordered list of those filenames that match. It's not great but with any half-sensible version numbering scheme it will work. Virtual Machines There are four virtual machines defined here. In addition to the home directory for each there is now information regarding the vendor and version. Currently this is for informational purposes only but future versions of SJ should be able to choose a VM based on the version or vendor. myclass myclass myclass The above application configurations are exactly the same as the simple version with the addition of a vm reference tag to determine which VM they should be executed under. High Granularity In addition to being able to specify which VMs and libraries to use you have complete control over the environment that the VM is run under, the properties that are passed the the VM and even default command line options on a per system, VM and application basis. The above system configuration is identical to our useful configuration except we have now added directives that SJ will use to alter the environment and command line parameters passed to the application and VMs. Using VM specific parameters you can make sure that the correct threading models are used or that memory limuts are enforced unless someone needs to tweak the settings. In an application configuration file it is possible to override previously declared parameters such as the -Xmx directive above for the blackdown VM. For example: myclass The Java::SJ::Config documentation describes every configuration directive in detail, also have a look in the sample directory for ideas. TODO Test, test, test. BUGS None known so far. Please report any and all to Nigel Rantor SUPPORT / WARRANTY This module is free software. IT COMES WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. LICENSE The Java::SJ module is Copyright (c) 2003 Nigel Rantor. England. All rights reserved. You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file. AUTHORS Nigel Rantor SEE ALSO Java::SJ::Config.