Showing posts with label App Engine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label App Engine. Show all posts

Sunday, June 05, 2011

JSF 1.2 (Mojarra) Reference Implementation (RI) on Google App Engine

Image representing Google App Engine as depict...Image via CrunchBase
I am working on publishing the various methods for deploying JSF on Google App Engine. This example is deployed using JSF 1.2 reference implementation. I am using NetBeans 6.9.1 with the Google App Engine plugin. The code used is vanilla JSF with no additional frameworks.

The web.xml and Maven pom.xml files are posted on the deployed application which is running on the App Engine itself.

The implementation can be found here: http://gae-jsf12.bluelotussoftware.com/
Enhanced by Zemanta

Saturday, March 26, 2011

NetBeans Google App Engine Plugin - Changing Deployment Settings

The current Google App Engine plugin for NetBeans does not have a UI interface to change the username and password that it has saved. It also does not display its properties in Preferences tab. The only way to change the stored username and password is to modify the deployment.properties file located in .netbeans/6.9/config/Preferences/org/netbeans/modules/j2ee/appengine

You simply need to change the email address and password in this file. Hopefully, the development will continue on this plugin to add this functionality in the future.

NetBeans 6.9.1 and Google App Engine

A couple of weeks ago David Chandler from Google gave a talk at the Greenville Java Users Group (GreenJUG) about Google App Engine. I was very impressed with the presentation and demo. I decided to explore a little with NetBeans and a plugin for GAE.

The NetBeans support for Google App Engine Plugin is a quick install and works on NetBeans 6.9.1. Once it is installed create a sample Guestbook application to enable the App Engine features. The complete functionality is not enabled until you use it like a number of other NetBeans plugins.


After you create the project you must modify the appengine-web.xml to point to a registered project on appengine for example guestbook and set the version.


Finally we deploy it by selecting the project and deploying it using the context menu. The first time you deploy an application it will prompt you for your login and password. It retains the values for future deployments.


That was easy! Once you get your first application deployed, you have opened the way for future development.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Popular Posts