Posts Tagged liberty
How to install WebSphere 8.5 Liberty profile on Mac
Posted by Sébastien Stormacq in IBM, Java, Mac OS X on 09/09/2012
WebSphere 8.5 Liberty Profile is a small, fast, agile WebSphere runtime that you – developers – can use to develop, test or embed in your applications. The runtime is provided free of charge from IBM. Like every Java EE Profile, it implements a subset of the Java EE Specification, while ensuring 100% “upwards” fidelity to the full WebSphere Application Server.
On my i7 – quad core – machine, WAS Liberty starts in less than 1 sec. With not application deployed.
Installing the runtime is as easy as unzipping a file on your drive, here are the steps
- download from wasdev.net (46 Mb only)
- unzip
java -jar wlp-developers-8.5.0.0.jar
After displaying and approving the distribution license, you will be ready for the next step
- Optional : create a server instance (an instance “defaultServer” is created for you automatically, this step is optional)
# cd wlp # chmod u+x bin/server # ./bin/server create MyInstance Server MyInstance created.
- start it
# ./bin/server start MyInstance
Or just this line to start the default instance
#./bin/server start
Server MyInstance started with process ID 59946.
Now that you have the runtime, you are ready to install the tooling to manipulate it from Eclipse.
- Start Eclipse (Indigo or Juno)
- Open Eclipse MarketPlace
- Search for “liberty” and click on “Install”
- In the “Eclipse” menu, click on “Preferences”
- In the “Preferences” pane, select “Server”, then “Runtime Environment” and click on “Add”
- Select “WebSphere Application 8.5 Liberty Profile”
- Give the name you want, point to your Installation directory (see bullet 2 in the installation instructions above) and click “Finish”
- Switch to the “Server” window in the “Java EE” perspective
- Right-click – New -> Server, choose your newly created runtime instance
- Don’t leave the “Server” window, right click on the server name and choose “Start”
The “Console” window should automatically open, and within a few seconds, you should see the following line to appear :
Launching default (wlp-1.0.0.20120428-1251/websphere-kernel_1.0.0) on Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM, version 1.7.0_07-b10 (en_US) [AUDIT ] CWWKE0001I: The server default has been launched. [AUDIT ] CWWKZ0058I: Monitoring dropins for applications. [AUDIT ] CWWKF0011I: The server default is ready to run a smarter planet.
You have now a fully functional WebSphere Liberty profile installed and the corresponding tooling in Eclipse. The tooling allows you to stop/start the application server, but also to manage its configuration and, obviously, to deploy applications on it.
In the next blog entry, I will show you how to deploy a REST based web service on Liberty
Enjoy !