Definition
Cargo provides Ant tasks to perform all the operations available from the Java APIFunctional tests
The usage of Cargo for executing functional tests on a container does not mandate these ANT tasks. You could directly use the Cargo Java API from your Java unit test classes (JUnit, TestNG, etc), as described on the Functional testing page.
Explanation
Before using the Ant API you need to register the Cargo Ant tasks into Ant. This is done in the following manner:
<taskdef resource="cargo.tasks"> <classpath> <pathelement location="${cargo-core-uberjar.jar}"/> <pathelement location="${cargo-ant.jar}"/> </classpath> </taskdef>
Some additional dependencies might also be required for the ANT task. Please see the Installation page for details.
The Cargo ANT tasks in detail
Here are the different task actions available to call on this plugin:
Action | Description |
---|---|
| Start a container. That task will:
Note: A container that's started with the |
| Start a container and wait for the user to press
|
| Stop a container. |
restart | Stop and start again a container. If the container was not running before calling |
| Create the configuration for a local container, without starting it. Note that the |
| Deploy a deployable to a running container. |
| Undeploy a deployable from a running container. |
| Undeploy and deploy again a deployable. If the deployable was not deployed before calling |
Wait after the container has started
Many wonder the difference between the start
and run
actions:
- If you want to just start the container and then do other tasks (for example, execute tests), use the
start
action. That action should therefore ONLY be used for integration testing. - If you want start the container and have ANT "blocked" afterwards (i.e., until you press
CTRL + C
to stop), use therun
action.run
is therefore the action to use for manual testing.
Examples
Orion 2.x
Here's a full example showing how to deploy a WAR, and expanded WAR and an EAR in an Orion 2.x container. Please note that the output
and log
attribute are optional. The property
elements allow you to tune how the container is configured. Here we're telling it to start on port 8180 and to generate the maximum amount of logs in the container output
file.
<taskdef resource="cargo.tasks"> <classpath> <pathelement location="path/to/cargo-uberjar.jar"/> <pathelement location="path/to/cargo-ant-tasks.jar"/> </classpath> </taskdef> <cargo containerId="orion2x" home="c:/apps/orion-2.0.3" output="target/output.log" log="target/cargo.log" action="start"> <configuration> <property name="cargo.servlet.port" value="8180"/> <property name="cargo.logging" value="high"/> <deployable type="war" file="path/to/my/simple.war"/> <deployable type="war" file="path/to/my/expandedwar/simple"/> <deployable type="ear" file="path/to/my/simple.ear"/> </configuration> </cargo>
Tomcat 5.x
This example gives a walk through of how to get a Cargo Ant build to work with Tomcat 5.x .
Prerequisites
- It is assumed that Tomcat 5.x is already installed
- The cargo-core-uberjar.jar and cargo-ant.jar JARs have been downloaded
- A mimimum knowledge of Ant is required
- User already has a
war
target that properly generates a working war file
Steps
Follow the following steps to configure your build.xml
:
- Create a folder under your basedir called cargolib that will hold cargo-core-uberjar.jar and cargo-ant.jar
- Define a property for cargolib
<property name="cargolib.dir" value="${basedir}/cargolib"/>
- Define 2 new properties
cargo-uberjar
andcargo-antjar
as shown below:
<property name="cargo-uberjar" value="${cargolib.dir}/cargo-core-uberjar.jar"/> <property name="cargo-antjar" value="${cargolib.dir}/cargo-ant.jar"/>
Add additional properties for defining the following:
Property
Description
tomcat.home
Installation directory of tomcat5x
tomcatlog.dir
This is where our logs are going to be generated
tomcatconfig.dir
Cargo needs an empty config folder
pathtowarfile
The full path of the war file e.g c:/devtools/myapp/dist/myfile.war
Add the following code to your build.xml :
<taskdef resource="cargo.tasks"> <classpath> <pathelement location="${cargo-uberjar}"/> <pathelement location="${cargo-antjar}"/> </classpath> </taskdef> <target name="cargostart" depends="war"> <delete dir="${tomcatconfig.dir}" /> <mkdir dir="${tomcatlog.dir}"/> <mkdir dir="${tomcatconfig.dir}"/> <echo message="Starting Cargo..."/> <echo message="Using tomcat.home = ${tomcat.home} "/> <echo message="Using war = ${mywarfile} "/> <echo message="Jars used = ${cargo-uberjar} , ${cargo-antjar}"/> <cargo containerId="tomcat5x" home="${tomcat.home}" output="${tomcatlog.dir}/output.log" log="${tomcatlog.dir}/cargo.log" action="start"> <configuration home="${tomcatconfig.dir}"> <property name="cargo.servlet.port" value="8080"/> <property name="cargo.logging" value="high"/> <deployable type="war" file="${mywarfile}"/> </configuration> </cargo> </target>
Remote deployment
Here's a full example showing how to deploy a WAR to a remote Tomcat 6.x container.
<taskdef resource="cargo.tasks"> <classpath> <pathelement location="path/to/cargo-uberjar.jar"/> <pathelement location="path/to/cargo-ant-tasks.jar"/> </classpath> </taskdef> <cargo containerId="tomcat6x" action="deploy" type="remote"> <configuration type="runtime"> <property name="cargo.hostname" value="production27"/> <property name="cargo.servlet.port" value="8080"/> <property name="cargo.remote.username" value="admin"/> <property name="cargo.remote.password" value=""/> <deployable type="war" file="path/to/simple-war.war"> <property name="context" value="application-context"/> </deployable> </configuration> </cargo>
For more details, please check the example in the Remote Container section for the ANT tasks. The ANT tasks support the deployer actions deploy
, undeploy
and redeploy
.