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Automating messaging resource configurations using wsadmin.sh

The scripting library provides Jython script procedures to assist in automating the environment. Use the resource management scripts to configure and manage your Java Messaging Service (JMS) configurations.

The scripting library provides a set of procedures to automate the most common application server administration functions. There are three ways to use the Jython script library.

The messaging resource management procedures in the scripting library are located in the app_server_root/scriptLibraries/resources/JMS/V70 subdirectory. Each script from the directory automatically loads when you launch the wsadmin tool. To automatically load our custom Jython scripts (*.py) when the wsadmin tool starts, save your automation scripts to a new subdirectory in the app_server_root/scriptLibraries directory.

To create custom scripts using the scripting library procedures, save the modified scripts to a new subdirectory to avoid overwriting the library. Do not edit the script procedures in the scripting library.bprac

Use the scripts to perform multiple combinations of administration functions. Use the following sample combination of procedures to create a JMS provider and configure JMS resources for the JMS provider.


Tasks

  1. Optional: Launch the wsadmin tool.

    Use this step to launch the wsadmin tool and connect to a server, or run the tool in local mode. If we launch the wsadmin tool, use the interactive mode examples in this topic to run scripts.

    • Enter the following command from the bin directory to launch the wsadmin tool and connect to a server:
      bin>wsadmin -lang jython
      

    • Enter the following command from the bin directory to launch the wsadmin tool in local mode and using the Jython scripting language:
      bin>wsadmin -conntype none -lang jython
      

    When the wsadmin tool launches, the system loads all scripts from the scripting library.

  2. Configure a JMS provider.

    Run the createJMSProvider procedure from the script library and specify the required arguments. To run the script, specify the node, server, JMS provider name, external initial contextual factory name, and external provider URL. We can optionally specify additional attributes in the following format: [["attr1", "value1"], ["attr2", "value2"]]. The following table provides additional information about the arguments to specify:

    Argument Description
    Node name Name of the node of interest.
    Server name Name of the server of interest.
    JMS provider name Name to assign to the new JMS provider.
    External initial contextual factory name Java class name of the initial context factory for the JMS provider.
    External provider URL JMS provider URL for external JNDI lookups.

    The following example creates a JMS provider in the configuration:

    bin>wsadmin -lang jython -c "AdminJMS.createJMSProvider("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider", "extInitCF",
     "extPURL", [["description", "testing"], ["supportsASF", "true"], ["providerType", "jmsProvType"]])"
    

    We can also use interactive mode to run the script procedure:

    wsadmin>AdminJMS.createJMSProvider("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider", "extInitCF",
     "extPURL", [["description", "testing"], ["supportsASF", "true"], ["providerType", "jmsProvType"]])
    
    The script returns the configuration ID of the new JMS provider.

  3. Configure a generic JMS connection factory.

    Run the createGenericJMSConnectionFactory procedure from the script library and specify the required arguments. To run the script, specify the node, server, JMS provider name, name of the new connection factory, JNDI name, and external JNDI name. We can optionally specify additional attributes in the following format: [["attr1", "value1"], ["attr2", "value2"]]. The following table provides additional information about the arguments to specify:

    Argument Description
    Node name Name of the node of interest.
    Server name Name of the server of interest.
    JMS provider name Name of the JMS provider.
    Connection factory name Name to assign to the new connection factory
    JNDI name JNDI name the system uses to bind the connection factory into the name space.
    External JNDI name JNDI name used to bind the queue into the application server name space. As a convention, use the fully qualified JNDI name; for example, in the form jms/Name, where Name is the logical name of the resource. This name is used to link the platform binding information. The binding associates the resources defined by the deployment descriptor of the module to the actual (physical) resources bound into JNDI by the platform.

    The following example creates a JMS connection factory in the configuration:

    bin>wsadmin -lang jython -c "AdminJMS.createGenericJMSConnectionFactory("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider",
     "JMSCFTest", "jmsjndi", "extjmsjndi", [["XAEnabled", "true"], ["authDataAlias", "myalias"],
     ["description", "testing"]])"
    

    We can also use interactive mode to run the script procedure:

    wsadmin>AdminJMS.createGenericJMSConnectionFactory("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider", 
      "JMSCFTest", "jmsjndi", "extjmsjndi", [["XAEnabled", "true"], ["authDataAlias", "myalias"],
     ["description", "testing"]])
    
    The script returns the configuration ID of the new generic JMS connection factory.

  4. Create a generic JMS destination.

    Run the createGenericJMSDestination procedure from the script library and specify the required arguments. To run the script, specify the node, server, JMS provider name, generic JMS destination name, JNDI name, and external JNDI name. We can optionally specify additional attributes in the following format: [["attr1", "value1"], ["attr2", "value2"]]. The following table provides additional information about the arguments to specify:

    Argument Description
    Node name Name of the node of interest.
    Server name Name of the server of interest.
    JMS provider name Name of the JMS provider.
    Generic JMS destination name Name to assign to the new generic JMS destination.
    JNDI name JNDI name the system uses to bind the connection factory into the name space.
    External JNDI name JNDI name used to bind the queue into the application server name space. As a convention, use the fully qualified JNDI name; for example, in the form jms/Name, where Name is the logical name of the resource. This name is used to link the platform binding information. The binding associates the resources defined by the deployment descriptor of the module to the actual (physical) resources bound into JNDI by the platform.

    The following example uses a template to use a template to create a generic JMS destination in the configuration:

    bin>wsadmin -lang jython -c "AdminJMS.createGenericJMSDestination("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider",
     "JMSDest", "destjndi", "extDestJndi", [["description", "testing"], ["category", "jmsDestCatagory"],
       ["type", "TOPIC"]]))"
    

    We can also use interactive mode to run the script procedure:

    wsadmin>AdminJMS.createGenericJMSDestination("myNode", "myServer", "myJMSProvider",
     "JMSDest", "destjndi", "extDestJndi", [["description", "testing"], ["category", "jmsDestCatagory"],
       ["type", "TOPIC"]]))
    
    The script returns the configuration ID of the new generic JMS destination.

The wsadmin script libraries return the same output as the associated wsadmin commands. For example, the AdminServerManagement.listServers() script returns a list of available servers. The AdminClusterManagement.checkIfClusterExists() script returns a value of true if the cluster exists, or false if the cluster does not exist. If the command does not return the expected output, the script libraries return a 1 value when the script successfully runs. If the script fails, the script libraries return a -1 value and an error message with the exception.

By default, the system disables failonerror option. To enable this option, specify true as the last argument for the script procedure:

wsadmin>AdminApplication.startApplicationOnCluster("myApplication","myCluster","true")


What to do next

Create custom scripts to automate the environment by combining script procedures from the scripting library. Save custom scripts to a new subdirectory of the app_server_root/scriptLibraries directory.


Subtopics

  • Use the script library to automate the application serving environment