9

I have two wars which I deploy in two maven projects using tomcat plugin. I want to do this in one step and be able to deploy more than one war in a single maven project. How can I do this? any suggestions?

2 Answers 2

6

I'm not in a position to test this, but there are two approaches I can think of. Either may work for you.

Option 1:

In one of the projects you can define the configuration for the tomcat plugin. In the snippet below there are two executions defined, both bound to the pre-integration-test phase (this might not be the best phase to do this, but it seems a good starting point as the war will have been packaged). Each execution will deploy the war defined in its configuration's warFile property.

<project>
  ...
  <build>
    ...
    <plugins>
      ...
      <plugin>
        <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
        <artifactId>tomcat-maven-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>1.0-beta-1</version>
        <executions>
          <execution>
            <id>deploy1</id>
            <phase>pre-integration-test</phase>
            <configuration>
              <warFile>path/to/my/warFile1.war</warFile>
            </configuration>
            <goals>
              <goal>deploy</goal>
            </goals>
          </execution>
          <execution>
            <id>deploy2</id>
            <phase>pre-integration-test</phase>
            <configuration>
              <warFile>path/to/my/warFile2.war</warFile>
            </configuration>
            <goals>
              <goal>deploy</goal>
            </goals>
          </execution>
        </executions>
      </plugin>
      ...
    </plugins>
    ...
  </build>
  ...
</project>

Option 2: This is probably the better approach. Define one execution in each war (you can omit the warFile element as the default can be used). You can then define a third project with a modules declaration referencing each war project. When the parent is built both wars will be be built and the wars deployed.

The modules declaration for the third project:

<modules>
  <module>relative/path/to/war1</module>
  <module>relative/path/to/war2</module>
<modules>

And the config for each war project:

<project>
  ...
  <build>
    ...
    <plugins>
      ...
      <plugin>
        <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
        <artifactId>tomcat-maven-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>1.0-beta-1</version>
        <executions>
          <execution>
            <id>deploy</id>
            <phase>pre-integration-test</phase>
            <goals>
              <goal>deploy</goal>
            </goals>
          </execution>
        </executions>
      </plugin>
      ...
    </plugins>
    ...
  </build>
  ...
</project>

Maven has some properties you can use to avoid absolute paths.

${maven.repo.local} will resolve to the local repository
${project.basedir} is the project directory (the root of the project)
${project.build.directory} is the build directory (default is "target")
${project.build.outputDirectory} is the directory where compilation output goes (default is "target/classes")
2
  • hey, thank you very much for your suggestion. I had a followup question. in the pom instead of giving absolute path to the war file is there a way that the war file can be picked up from the local repository or remote repository path.
    – nagl
    Jul 28, 2009 at 2:49
  • I've added some properties to the answer, you can specify a relative path by using ${property}/path/to/reference Jul 28, 2009 at 10:16
0

you can create a "super war" and deploy that, as well

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.