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When using the Jetty distribution, you will first need to enable the session-store-infinispan-remote module for your Jetty base using the --add-to-start argument on the command line.
$ java -jar ../start.jar --create-startd
INFO : Base directory was modified
$ java -jar ../start.jar --add-to-start=session-store-infinispan-remote
ALERT: There are enabled module(s) with licenses.
The following 1 module(s):
+ contains software not provided by the Eclipse Foundation!
+ contains software not covered by the Eclipse Public License!
+ has not been audited for compliance with its license
Module: session-store-infinispan-remote
+ Infinispan is an open source project hosted on Github and released under the Apache 2.0 license.
+ http://infinispan.org/
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html
Proceed (y/N)? y
INFO : server transitively enabled, ini template available with --add-to-start=server
INFO : sessions transitively enabled, ini template available with --add-to-start=sessions
INFO : session-store-infinispan-remote initialized in ${jetty.base}/start.d/session-store-infinispan-remote.ini
MKDIR : ${jetty.base}/lib/infinispan
DOWNLD: http://central.maven.org/maven2/org/infinispan/infinispan-remote/7.1.1.Final/infinispan-remote-7.1.1.Final.jar to ${jetty.base}/lib/infinispan/infinispan-remote-7.1.1.Final.jar
MKDIR : ${jetty.base}/resources
COPY : ${jetty.home}/modules/session-store-infinispan-remote/resources/hotrod-client.properties to ${jetty.base}/resources/hotrod-client.properties
INFO : Base directory was modifiedDoing this enables the remote Infinispan Session module and any dependent modules or files needed for it to run on the server.
The example above is using a fresh ${jetty.base} with nothing else enabled.
Because Infinispan is not a technology provided by the Eclipse Foundation, users are prompted to assent to the licenses of the external vendor (Apache in this case).
When the --add-to-start argument was added to the command line, it enabled the the session-store-infinispan-remote module as well as the sessions and server modules, which are required for Infinispan session management to operate.
It also downloaded the needed Infinispan-specific jar files and created a directory named ${jetty.base}/lib/infinispan/ to house them.
In addition to adding these modules to the classpath of the server it also added several ini configuration files to the ${jetty.base}/start.d directory.
Note
If you have updated versions of the jar files automatically downloaded by Jetty, you can place them in the associated
${jetty.base}/lib/directory and use the--skip-file-validation=<module name>command line option to prevent errors when starting your server.
Opening the start.d/session-store-infinispan-remote.ini will show a list of all the configurable options for the JDBC module:
# --------------------------------------- # Module: session-store-infinispan-remote # Enables session data store in a remote Infinispan cache # --------------------------------------- --module=session-store-infinispan-remote #jetty.session.infinispan.remoteCacheName=sessions #jetty.session.infinispan.idleTimeout.seconds=0 #jetty.session.gracePeriod.seconds=3600 #jetty.session.savePeriod.seconds=0
By default whenever the last concurrent request leaves a session, that session is always persisted via the SessionDataStore, even if the only thing that changed on the session is its updated last access time.
A non-zero value means that the SessionDataStore will skip persisting the session if only the access time changed, and it has been less than savePeriod seconds since the last time the session was written.
Note
Configuring
savePeriodis useful if your persistence technology is very slow/costly for writes. In a clustered environment, there is a risk of the last access time of the session being out-of-date in the shared store for up tosavePeriodseconds. This allows the possibility that a node may prematurely expire the session, even though it is in use by another node. Thorough consideration of themaxIdleTimeof the session when setting thesavePeriodis imperative - there is no point in setting asavePeriodthat is larger than themaxIdleTime.
During testing, it can be helpful to run an in-process instance of Infinispan.
To enable this you will first need to enable the session-store-infinispan-embedded module for your Jetty base using the --add-to-start argument on the command line.
java -jar ../start.jar --add-to-start=session-store-infinispan-embedded
ALERT: There are enabled module(s) with licenses.
The following 1 module(s):
+ contains software not provided by the Eclipse Foundation!
+ contains software not covered by the Eclipse Public License!
+ has not been audited for compliance with its license
Module: session-store-infinispan-embedded
+ Infinispan is an open source project hosted on Github and released under the Apache 2.0 license.
+ http://infinispan.org/
+ http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html
Proceed (y/N)? y
INFO : server initialised (transitively) in ${jetty.base}/start.d/server.ini
INFO : sessions initialised (transitively) in ${jetty.base}/start.d/sessions.ini
INFO : session-store-infinispan-embedded initialised in ${jetty.base}/start.d/session-store-infinispan-embedded.ini
DOWNLOAD: http://central.maven.org/maven2/org/infinispan/infinispan-embedded/7.1.1.Final/infinispan-embedded-7.1.1.Final.jar to ${jetty.base}/lib/infinispan/infinispan-embedded-7.1.1.Final.jar
INFO : Base directory was modifiedDoing this enables the embedded Infinispan Session module and any dependent modules or files needed for it to run on the server.
The example above is using a fresh ${jetty.base} with nothing else enabled.
Because Infinispan is not a technology provided by the Eclipse Foundation, users are prompted to assent to the licenses of the external vendor (Apache in this case).
When the --add-to-start argument was added to the command line, it enabled the the session-store-infinispan-embedded module as well as the sessions and server modules, which are required for Infinispan session management to operate.
It also downloaded the needed Infinispan-specific jar files and created a directory named ${jetty.base}/lib/infinispan/ to house them.
In addition to adding these modules to the classpath of the server it also added several ini configuration files to the ${jetty.base}/start.d directory.
Opening the start.d/session-store-infinispan-remote.ini will show a list of all the configurable options for the JDBC module:
# --------------------------------------- # Module: session-store-infinispan-embedded # Enables session data store in a local Infinispan cache # --------------------------------------- --module=session-store-infinispan-embedded #jetty.session.gracePeriod.seconds=3600 #jetty.session.savePeriod.seconds=0
By default whenever the last concurrent request leaves a session, that session is always persisted via the SessionDataStore, even if the only thing that changed on the session is its updated last access time.
A non-zero value means that the SessionDataStore will skip persisting the session if only the access time changed, and it has been less than savePeriod seconds since the last time the session was written.
Note
Configuring
savePeriodis useful if your persistence technology is very slow/costly for writes. In a clustered environment, there is a risk of the last access time of the session being out-of-date in the shared store for up tosavePeriodseconds. This allows the possibility that a node may prematurely expire the session, even though it is in use by another node. Thorough consideration of themaxIdleTimeof the session when setting thesavePeriodis imperative - there is no point in setting asavePeriodthat is larger than themaxIdleTime.