Elasticsearch clients JBoss Module as WildFly feature pack
This creates a set of JBoss Modules containing Elasticsearch Clients as and packages the libraries into a WildFly feature pack for easy provisioning into your custom WildFly server or WildFly Swarm.
Currently only includes the low-level REST client and its sniffer.
Historically the Hibernate Search project has been releasing such modules, for convenience of Hibernate Search users running applications on WildFly or JBoss EAP.
We now moved these artifacts to a dedicated bundle so that other projects using the Elasticsearch clients don't have to download the Hibernate Search specific modules, and to attempt to have a single consistent distribution of such modules.
This should also make it easier to release a new bundle of these modules as soon as a new Elasticsearch version is released, without necessarily waiting for Hibernate Search to have adopted the new version.
Version conventions
We will use an X.Y.Z.qualifier
pattern as recommended by JBoss Project Versioning, wherein the X.Y.Z
section will match the version of the Elasticsearch version included in the modules, possibly using a 0
for the last figure when this is missing in the Elasticsearch version scheme.
We will add an additional qualifier, lexicographically increasing with further releases, to distinguish different releases of this package when still containing the same version of the Elasticsearch clients. This might be useful to address problems in the package structure, or any other reason to have to release a new version of these modules containing the same Elasticsearch version as a previously released copy of these modules.
An example version could be 5.6.4.hibernate02
to contain Elasticsearch clients version 5.6.4
.
Usage: server provisioning via Maven
Maven users can use the wildfly-server-provisioning-maven-plugin
to create a custom WildFly server including these modules:
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.wildfly.build</groupId>
<artifactId>wildfly-server-provisioning-maven-plugin</artifactId>
<version>1.2.0.Final</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<id>server-provisioning</id>
<goals>
<goal>build</goal>
</goals>
<phase>compile</phase>
<configuration>
<config-file>server-provisioning.xml</config-file>
<server-name>minimal-wildfly-with-elasticsearch-client</server-name>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
You will also need a server-provisioning.xml
in the root of your project:
<server-provisioning xmlns="urn:wildfly:server-provisioning:1.1">
<feature-packs>
<feature-pack
groupId="org.hibernate.elasticsearch-client-jbossmodules"
artifactId="elasticsearch-client-jbossmodules"
version="${elasticsearch-client-modules.version}"/>
<feature-pack
groupId="org.wildfly"
artifactId="wildfly-servlet-feature-pack"
version="${your-preferred-wildfly.version}" />
</feature-packs>
</server-provisioning>
This will make Elasticsearch clients available as an opt-in dependency to any application deployed on WildFly. To enable the dependency there are various options, documented in Class Loading in WildFly.
N.B.:
- The current version of these modules has been tested with
WildFly 11.0.0.Final
. - Depending on the WildFly feature pack you chose, some transitive dependencies may not be available in Maven Central. In that case, you should set up the JBoss Nexus repository.
Non-Maven users
Plugins for other build tools have not been implemented yet, but this should be quite straight forward to do: the above Maven plugin is just a thin wrapper invoking other libraries; these other libraries are build agnostic and are responsible for performing most of the work.
See also WildFly provisioning build tools.
The feature packs are also available for downloads as zip files on JBoss Nexus.
How to build
Use the provided settings-example.xml file, so that JBoss-specific dependencies can be found:
mvn -s settings-example.xml clean install
How to release
mvn -s settings-example.xml release:prepare
mvn -s settings-example.xml release:perform
This will produce two local commits and a local tag, then upload the artifacts to a staging repository on JBoss Nexus.
If it all works fine, don't forget to:
- release the staging repository on Nexus
- push the commits
- push the tag