Skip to content

cicsdev/cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc

Repository files navigation

cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc

Build

This project demonstrates a Spring Boot JDBC application integrated with IBM CICS that can be deployed to a CICS Liberty JVM server. The application makes use of the employee sample table supplied with Db2 for z/OS. The application allows you to add, update, delete or display employee information from the table EMP. The sample also provides a set of Gradle and Maven build files for use either in Eclipse or standalone build environments.

Requirements

  • CICS TS V5.3 or later
  • A configured Liberty JVM server
  • Java SE 1.8 or later on the workstation
  • IBM Db2 V11 or later on z/OS
  • An Eclipse development environment on the workstation (optional)
  • Either Gradle or Apache Maven on the workstation (optional if using Wrappers)

Reference

More information about the development of this sample can be found in the IBM tutorial Spring Boot Java applications for CICS, Part 4: JDBC

Downloading

  • Clone the repository using your IDE's support, such as the Eclipse Git plugin
  • or, download the sample as a ZIP and unzip onto the workstation

Tip: Eclipse Git provides an 'Import existing Projects' check-box when cloning a repository.

Building

You can build the sample using an IDE of your choice, or you can build it from the command line. For both approaches, using the supplied Gradle or Maven wrapper is the recommended way to get a consistent version of build tooling.

On the command line, you simply swap the Gradle or Maven command for the wrapper equivalent, gradlew or mvnw respectively.

For an IDE, taking Eclipse as an example, the plug-ins for Gradle buildship and Maven m2e will integrate with the "Run As..." capability, allowing you to specify whether you want to build the project with a Wrapper, or a specific version of your chosen build tool.

The required build-tasks are typically clean bootWar for Gradle and clean package for Maven. Once run, Gradle will generate a WAR file in the build/libs directory, while Maven will generate it in the target directory.

Note: When building a WAR file for deployment to Liberty it is good practice to exclude Tomcat from the final runtime artifact. We demonstrate this in the pom.xml with the provided scope, and in build.gradle with the providedRuntime() dependency.

Note: If you import the project to your IDE, you might experience local project compile errors. To resolve these errors you should run a tooling refresh on that project. For example, in Eclipse:

  • for Gradle, right-click on "Project", select "Gradle -> Refresh Gradle Project",
  • for Maven, right-click on "Project", select "Maven -> Update Project...".

Tip: In Eclipse, Gradle (buildship) is able to fully refresh and resolve the local classpath even if the project was previously updated by Maven. However, Maven (m2e) does not currently reciprocate that capability. If you previously refreshed the project with Gradle, you'll need to manually remove the 'Project Dependencies' entry on the Java build-path of your Project Properties to avoid duplication errors when performing a Maven Project Update.

Gradle Wrapper (command line)

Run the following in a local command prompt:

On Linux or Mac:

./gradlew clean bootWar

On Windows:

gradlew.bat clean bootWar

This creates a WAR file in the build/libs directory.

Maven Wrapper (command line)

Run the following in a local command prompt:

On Linux or Mac:

./mvnw clean package

On Windows:

mvnw.cmd clean package

This creates a WAR file in the target directory.

Deploying to a CICS Liberty JVM Server

  • Ensure you have the following features defined in your Liberty server.xml:
    • <servlet-3.1> or <servlet-4.0> depending on the version of Java EE in use.
    • <cicsts:security-1.0> if CICS security is enabled.
    • <jsp-2.3>
    • <jdbc-4.0> or <jdbc-4.1>

Note: servlet-4.0 will only work for CICS TS V5.5 or later

  • add a dataSource definition to 'server.xml'.

E.g. as follows for JDBC type 2 connectivity (substitute your values as necessary):

<dataSource id="t2" jndiName="jdbc/jdbcDataSource" transactional="false" commitOrRollbackOnCleanup="commit">
        <jdbcDriver>   
            <library name="DB2LIB">
                <fileset dir="/usr/lpp/db2v11/jdbc/classes" includes="db2jcc4.jar db2jcc_license_cisuz.jar"/>
                <fileset dir="/usr/lpp/db2v11/jdbc/lib" includes="libdb2jcct2zos4_64.so"/>
            </library>
        </jdbcDriver>
        <properties.db2.jcc currentSchema="YOUR_SCHEMA" driverType="2"/>
        <connectionManager agedTimeout="0"/>
</dataSource>

...or for JDBC type 4 connectivity (substitute your values as necessary):

<dataSource id="t4" jndiName="jdbc/jdbcDataSource" type="javax.sql.XADataSource">
    <jdbcDriver>   
        <library name="DB2LIB">
            <fileset dir="/usr/lpp/db2v11/jdbc/classes" includes="db2jcc4.jar db2jcc_license_cisuz.jar"/>
            <fileset dir="/usr/lpp/db2v11/jdbc/lib" includes="libdb2jcct2zos4_64.so"/>
        </library>
    </jdbcDriver>
    <properties.db2.jcc driverType="4" 
        serverName="YOUR.SERVER.CORPORATION.COM"   
        portNumber="YOUR_PORT_NUMBER" 
        currentSchema="YOUR_SCHEMA"       
        databaseName="YOUR_DATABASE" 
        user="USER"
        password="PASSWORD"               
    />     
</dataSource>        
  • set spring.datasource.jndi-name in application.properties

The file application.properties in /src/main/resources/ contains the property

spring.datasource.jndi-name=jdbc/jdbcDataSource

This will direct the application to the dataSource definition in the server.xml which must have parameter jndiName set to the same value as specified in the application properties file

  • Deployment option 1:

    • Copy and paste the built WAR from your target or build/libs directory into a Eclipse CICS bundle project and create a new WAR bundlepart that references the WAR file. Then deploy the CICS bundle project from CICS Explorer using the Export Bundle Project to z/OS UNIX File System wizard.
  • Deployment option 2:

    • Manually upload the WAR file to zFS and add an <application> element to the Liberty server.xml to define the web application with access to all authenticated users. For example the following application element can be used to install a WAR, and grant access to all authenticated users if security is enabled.
   <application id="com.ibm.cicsdev.springboot.jdbc-0.1.0"  
     location="${server.config.dir}/springapps/com.ibm.cicsdev.springboot.jdbc-0.1.0.war"  
     name="com.ibm.cicsdev.springboot.jdbc-0.1.0" type="war">
     <application-bnd>
        <security-role name="cicsAllAuthenticated">
            <special-subject type="ALL_AUTHENTICATED_USERS"/>
        </security-role>
     </application-bnd>  
   </application>

Trying out the sample

  1. Ensure the web application started successfully in Liberty by checking for msg CWWKT0016I in the Liberty messages.log:

    • A CWWKT0016I: Web application available (default_host): http://myzos.mycompany.com:httpPort/cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc-0.1.0
    • I SRVE0292I: Servlet Message - [cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc-0.1.0]:.Initializing Spring embedded WebApplicationContext
  2. Copy the context root from message CWWKT0016I along with the REST service suffix into you web browser. For example display all the Employees from the EMP table:

    • http://myzos.mycompany.com:httpPort/cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc-0.1.0/allEmployees

    The browser will prompt for basic authentication. Enter a valid userid and password - according to the configured registry for your target Liberty JVM server.

  3. For more information on how to use this sample, request the context root:

    • http://myzos.mycompany.com:httpPort/cics-java-liberty-springboot-jdbc-0.1.0/

License

This project is licensed under Eclipse Public License - v 2.0.

About

Java™ Spring Boot application demonstrating how to use the Spring Boot JdbcTemplate in CICS® Liberty

Topics

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages