| Apache CXF Documentation > Index > Deployment > AppServerGuide |
This document provides app server-specific configuration information for running Apache CXF.
If you package the war in the ear, you might need to add the jboss specific file (jboss-app.xml) in the $EAR/META-INF folder to config the classloader.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <jboss-app> <loader-repository> apache.cxf:loader=spring_http.ear <loader-repository-config> java2ParentDelegation=false </loader-repository-config> </loader-repository> </jboss-app>
If you are coming across LinkageErrors involving the QName class, try repackaging the stax-api jar without the javax.xml.namespace.QName class. (In JBoss 4.0.5GA at least) a conflicting version of this class is included in JBoss's lib and lib/endorsed directories. This was the only way I could get CXF working in my environment.
There are two ways to deploy a CXF WAR archive in WebLogic. (Note: This has been validated on WebLogic9.2.)
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE application PUBLIC "-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD J2EE Application 1.3//EN" "http://java.sun.com/dtd/application_1_3.dtd"> <application> <display-name>spring_http</display-name> <module> <web> <web-uri>spring_http.war</web-uri> <context-root>spring</context-root> </web> </module> </application>
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <weblogic-application xmlns="http://www.bea.com/ns/weblogic/90"> <application-param> <param-name>webapp.encoding.default</param-name> <param-value>UTF-8</param-value> </application-param> <prefer-application-packages> <package-name>javax.jws.*</package-name> </prefer-application-packages> </weblogic-application>
The prefer-application-packages element you see above sets up WebLogic's Filtering Classloader
. Each class whose package matches one of the package-name elements listed will be searched for first within the EAR before relying on the WebLogic system classloader's version. If a package for a particular class is not listed here, WebLogic will try to load its own (possibly older) version first, so if you are getting deployment errors due to any particular class you might wish to add its package here.
Also note you can, and may need to, specify other options in the weblogic-application.xml file such as XML processing factories as shown here
. See the WebLogic guide
for more information.
Currently, I've only found on way to make cxf work with websphere: adding jars to the 'endorsed' folder. (Note: this has been validated against Websphere6.1.0.0)
And then restart the Websphere server. (Because we changed the endorsed folder, we need to restart it to make it take effect).
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Please make sure your classpath doesn't have the servlet-2.5 library, since WebSphere6.1 is servlet-2.4 compliant! |
If you put your wsdl4j-1.6.1 jar in $WAS_HOME/java/jre/lib/endorsed, all your applications will depend on your version of wsdl4j. Another solution is to create a new class loader in your server which loads before parent class loader, create a shared library with your version of wsdl4j, and add this shared library to your new class loader. This version of wsdl4j will only be available for your specific server and not affect applications running in other servers.
Step by step
Tested in WAS 6.1 only but should work in earlier versions as well.
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This guide requires heavy customization of the OC4J configuration. Bear in mind that some of steps presented below are either undocumented or unsupported. We strongly advice you to perform those steps in a separate container, dedicated exclusively for CXF. |
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Also see: http://chadthedeveloper.blogspot.com/2008/06/cxf-vs-oc4j-round-1.html |
This guide covers only 10.1.3.X.X version of OC4J. Note that OC4J 10.1.2 is not JSE 1.5 certified server. OC4J 11_g_ is fully JEE 5.0 certified stack
and comes with their own JAX-WS implementation.
Oracle OC4J comes with highly customized XML stack by Oracle including SAX, StAX, JAXP, JAX-WS, SAAJ, WSDL and few others. All of those frameworks are Oracle proprietary implementations in the OC4J distribution. This gives Oracle really good interoperability between their products but it makes it rather hard to introduce something which needs different implementation of above APIs (like CXF).
OC4J 10.1.3 comes with preliminary implementation of JAX-WS (JSR-181) |
A few components need to be customized in OC4J to allow CFX integration:
Unfortunately, these components have to be configured in different parts of OC4J.
A key part of successfully integrating CXF into OC4J is to understand how class loaders work in OC4J. When starting OC4J there are generally three stages where customization could occur:
Customizing in the last step is quite easy to achieve
- basically OC4J has quite powerful class loader and an easy customization console. Unfortunately there are some components that could not be configured this way. They are configured during OC4J boot. Unfortunately one of this is OC4J webservices stack (located in $ORACLE_HOME/webservices/lib).
Before start please download Apache CXF 2.0.6 or better
and Xerces 2.8.1![]()
If you use a version of CXF that includes stax-api.jar that in turn include the QName class, remove javax.xml.namespace.QName from the stax-api shipped with CXF. Oracle apparently has it already in $ORACLE_HOME/j2ee/home/lib/jax-qname-namespace.jar.
The basic idea behind how to do this is described in detail here![]()
Create OC4J shared library named cxf.foundation and fill it with:
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When building Your application DO NOT INCLUDE THOSE COMPONENTS again. |
OC4J has preliminary support for JAX-WS, unfortunately this means that during OC4J boot it loads outdated JAX-WS APIs and implementation by Oracle. This occurs even before shared libraries comes into action, at a very early stage of OC4J boot. Boot-time OC4J libraries are configured in boot.xml file in $ORACLE_HOME/j2ee/home/oc4j.jar bootstrap jar. To get rid of this:
<!-- WS jax-rpc --> <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/jaxr-api.jar"/> <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/jaxrpc-api.jar"/> <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/jaxb-api.jar"/> <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/saaj-api.jar"/> <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/jws-api.jar" if="java.specification.version == /1\.[5-6]/"/>
and comment out line which include jws-api.jar entry, like below
<!-- <code-source path="${oracle.home}/webservices/lib/jws-api.jar" if="java.specification.version == /1\.[5-6]/"/> -->
Additionally Oracle provides it's own implementation of WSDL functionality which conflicts with wsdl4j.jar. To get rid of this add -Xbootclasspath/p:"<path to wsdlj>/wsdl4j-1.6.1.jar;<path to jaxb2>/jaxb-api-2.0.jar" option to JVM parametrs (either in command line running OC4J standalone or in OPMN).
When deploying please follow those steps:
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You can automate above steps by packaging You war into ear archive (even though) if it's only war and providing orion-application.xml proprietary descriptor as described here |
This primarily happens when:
Please be sure You properly installed and enabled for Your application cxf.foundation shared library as described here. If Yes please be sure that You didn't include xercesImpl.jar in Your war. If You still have problems please see how You can debug JAXP problems
- be sure that org.apache.xerces.jaxp.DocumentBuilderFactoryImpl are instantiated from within JAXP and not oracle.xml.parser.v2.DocumentBuilder.
Please be sure that wsdl4j.jar is loaded before wsdl.jar as described here
Try something simple. Download OC4J standalone and bootstrap it from command line directly: java [options] -jar oc4j.jar. Enable SAX debugging
. Be sure You don't include douplicated jars in Your application like xercesImpl, xalan, xml-apis and geronimo-ws-metadata_2.0_spec-1.1.1.jar. Review steps above once more. It works
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Q: I have this error: javax.xml.ws.WebServiceException: Cannot create SAAJ factory instance.
A: Please make sure you have the saaj-impl-1.3.jar in the classpath and make sure your app picks up this one instead of weblogic one.
Utilizing the OC4J Class Loading Framework![]()
Deploy XFire in WebLogic![]()
Understanding WebLogic ClassLoader![]()
JBoss Class Configuration![]()
Troubleshooting SAX![]()