Deploying on JBoss / Wildfly
JBoss Deployment Descriptor
PowerAuth server contains the following configuration in jboss-deployment-structure.xml
file for JBoss:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<jboss-deployment-structure xmlns="urn:jboss:deployment-structure:1.2">
<deployment>
<exclusions>
<module name="org.apache.xerces" />
<module name="org.apache.xalan" />
</exclusions>
<exclude-subsystems>
<!-- disable the logging subsystem because the application manages its own logging independently -->
<subsystem name="logging" />
</exclude-subsystems>
<resources>
<!-- use WAR provided Bouncy Castle -->
<resource-root path="WEB-INF/lib/bcprov-jdk18on-${BC_VERSION}.jar" use-physical-code-source="true"/>
</resources>
<dependencies>
<module name="com.wultra.powerauth.server.conf" />
</dependencies>
<local-last value="true" />
</deployment>
</jboss-deployment-structure>
The deployment descriptor requires configuration of the com.wultra.powerauth.server.conf
module.
JBoss Module for PowerAuth Server Configuration
Create a new module in PATH_TO_JBOSS/modules/system/layers/base/com/wultra/powerauth/server/conf/main
.
The files described below should be added into this folder.
Main Module Configuration
The module.xml
configuration is used for module registration. It also adds resources from the module folder to classpath:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<module xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.3" name="com.wultra.powerauth.server.conf">
<resources>
<resource-root path="." />
</resources>
</module>
Logging Configuration
Use the logback.xml
file to configure logging, for example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration scan="true" scanPeriod="30 seconds">
<property name="LOG_FILE_DIR" value="/var/log/powerauth" />
<property name="LOG_FILE_NAME" value="powerauth-server" />
<property name="INSTANCE_ID" value="${jboss.server.name}" />
<appender name="FILE" class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.RollingFileAppender">
<file>${LOG_FILE_DIR}/${LOG_FILE_NAME}-${INSTANCE_ID}.log</file>
<immediateFlush>true</immediateFlush>
<rollingPolicy class="ch.qos.logback.core.rolling.SizeAndTimeBasedRollingPolicy">
<fileNamePattern>${LOG_FILE_DIR}/${LOG_FILE_NAME}-${INSTANCE_ID}-%d{yyyy-MM-dd}-%i.log</fileNamePattern>
<maxFileSize>10MB</maxFileSize>
<maxHistory>5</maxHistory>
<totalSizeCap>100MB</totalSizeCap>
</rollingPolicy>
<encoder>
<charset>UTF-8</charset>
<pattern>%d{ISO8601} [%thread] %-5level %logger{36} - %msg%n</pattern>
</encoder>
</appender>
<logger name="com.wultra" level="INFO" />
<logger name="io.getlime" level="INFO" />
<root level="INFO">
<appender-ref ref="FILE" />
</root>
</configuration>
Application Configuration
The application-ext.properties
file is used to override default configuration properties, for example:
# Database Configuration - Oracle
spring.datasource.url=jdbc:oracle:thin:@//[host]:[port]/[servicename]
spring.datasource.username=powerauth
spring.datasource.password=powerauth
spring.datasource.driver-class-name=oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
# Application Service Configuration
powerauth.service.applicationEnvironment=TEST
PowerAuth Server Spring application uses the ext
Spring profile which activates overriding of default properties by application-ext.properties
.