Author: buildbot
Date: Sun Nov 23 13:19:47 2014
New Revision: 930206
Log:
Production update by buildbot for tapestry
Modified:
websites/production/tapestry/content/cache/main.pageCache
websites/production/tapestry/content/creating-the-skeleton-application.html
Modified: websites/production/tapestry/content/cache/main.pageCache
==============================================================================
Binary files - no diff available.
Modified:
websites/production/tapestry/content/creating-the-skeleton-application.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/production/tapestry/content/creating-the-skeleton-application.html
(original)
+++ websites/production/tapestry/content/creating-the-skeleton-application.html
Sun Nov 23 13:19:47 2014
@@ -109,27 +109,7 @@ table.ScrollbarTable td.ScrollbarNextIco
<p>The first time you use Maven, project creation
may take several minutes as Maven downloads hundreds of JAR dependencies. These
downloaded files are cached locally and will not need to be downloaded again,
but you do have to be patient on first use.</p>
</div>
</div>
-<p>After Maven finishes, you'll see a new directory, <code>tutorial in your
Package Explorer view in Eclipse.</code></p><h2
id="CreatingTheSkeletonApplication-RunningtheApplicationusingJetty">Running the
Application using Jetty</h2><p>One of the first things you can do is use Maven
to run Jetty directly.</p><p>Right-click on the tutorial project in your
Package Explorer view and select <strong>Run As > Maven Build...
></strong>, enter a Goal of <strong>"jetty:run"</strong>. This creates a
"Run Configuration" named "tutorial1" that we'll use throughout this tutorial
to start the app:</p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425050&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425050&api=v2"></p><p>Tapestry
runs best with a couple of additional options; click
the "JRE" tab and enter the following VM
Arguments:</p><pre></pre><p>-XX:MaxPermSize=256M</p><p>-Xmx600m</p><p>-Dtapestry.execution-mode=development</p><p><code><em>(If
you're using JDK 1.8 then you should omit the MaxPermSize
argument.)</em></code></p><p><code>Here's how it looks:<br
clear="none"></code></p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration-jre.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425000&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration-jre.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425000&api=v2"></p><p>Finally,
click <strong>Run</strong>.</p><p>Again, the first time, there's a dizzying
number of downloads, but before you know it, the Jetty servlet container is up
and running.</p><p>Once Jetty is initialized (which only takes a few seconds
after the first time), you'll see the following in your console:</p><div
class="preformatted panel" st
yle="border-width: 1px;"><div class="preformattedContent panelContent">
-<pre> ValidationConstraintGenerator: DEFINED
- ValidationDecoratorFactory: DEFINED
- ValidatorMacro: DEFINED
- ValueEncoderSource: DEFINED
-
-86.77% unrealized services (164/189)
-
-Application 'app' (version 1.0-SNAPSHOT-DEV) startup time: 87 ms to build IoC
Registry, 376 ms overall.
-
- ______ __ ____
-/_ __/__ ____ ___ ___ / /_______ __ / __/
- / / / _ `/ _ \/ -_|_-</ __/ __/ // / /__ \
-/_/ \_,_/ .__/\__/___/\__/_/ \_, / /____/
- /_/ /___/ 5.3.7 (development mode)
-
-
-2011-11-22 11:46:45.636::INFO: Started [email protected]:8080
-[INFO] Started Jetty Server
-</pre>
-</div></div><p> </p><p>You can now open a web browser to <a shape="rect"
class="external-link" href="http://localhost:8080/tutorial1/"
>http://localhost:8080/tutorial1/</a> to see the running
application:</p><p> </p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image
confluence-content-image-border image-left" height="525" width="700"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/startpage.png?version=6&modificationDate=1416272937000&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/startpage.png?version=6&modificationDate=1416272937000&api=v2"></p><p> </p><div
style="clear: both"></div><p style="text-align: left;">The date and time in
the middle of the page proves that this is a live application.</p><p>This is a
complete little application; it doesn't do much, but it demonstrate how to
create a number of pages sharing a common layout, and demonstrates some simple
navigation and link handling. You can see that it has three
different pages that share a common layout. (<span style="line-height:
1.4285715;"><em>Layout</em> is a loose term meaning common look and feel and
navigation across many or all of the pages of an application. Often an
application will include a Layout component to provide that
commonness.)</span></p><p> </p><style type="text/css">/*<![CDATA[*/
+<p>After Maven finishes, you'll see a new directory, <code>tutorial in your
Package Explorer view in Eclipse.</code></p><h2
id="CreatingTheSkeletonApplication-RunningtheApplicationusingJetty">Running the
Application using Jetty</h2><p>One of the first things you can do is use Maven
to run Jetty directly.</p><p>Right-click on the tutorial project in your
Package Explorer view and select <strong>Run As > Maven Build...
></strong>, enter a Goal of <strong>"jetty:run"</strong>. This creates a
"Run Configuration" named "tutorial1" that we'll use throughout this tutorial
to start the app:</p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425050&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425050&api=v2"></p><p>Tapestry
runs best with a couple of additional options; click
the "JRE" tab and enter the following VM
Arguments:</p><pre></pre><p>-XX:MaxPermSize=256M</p><p>-Xmx600m</p><p>-Dtapestry.execution-mode=development</p><p><code><em>(If
you're using JDK 1.8 then you should omit the MaxPermSize
argument.)</em></code></p><p><code>Here's how it looks:<br
clear="none"></code></p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration-jre.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425000&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/run-configuration-jre.png?version=2&modificationDate=1416744425000&api=v2"></p><p>Finally,
click <strong>Run</strong>.</p><p>Again, the first time, there's a dizzying
number of downloads, but before you know it, the Jetty servlet container is up
and running.</p><p>Once Jetty is initialized (which only takes a few seconds
after the first time), you'll see the following in your console:</p><p><img
class="confluence-embedded
-image"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/console-startup.png?version=1&modificationDate=1416745109023&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/console-startup.png?version=1&modificationDate=1416745109023&api=v2"></p><p><em>Note
the red square icon above. Later on you'll use icon to stop Jetty before
restarting the app.</em></p><p>You can now open a web browser to <a
shape="rect" class="external-link" href="http://localhost:8080/tutorial1/"
>http://localhost:8080/tutorial1/</a> to see the running
application:</p><p> </p><p><img class="confluence-embedded-image
confluence-content-image-border image-left" height="525" width="700"
src="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/startpage.png?version=6&modificationDate=1416272937000&api=v2"
data-image-src="/confluence/download/attachments/23340356/startpage.png?version=6&modificationDate=1416272937000&api=v2"></p><p>
 </p><div style="clear: both"></div><p style="text-align: left;">The date
and time in the middle of the page shows that this is a live
application.</p><p>This is a complete little web app; it doesn't do much, but
it demonstrate how to create a number of pages sharing a common layout, and
demonstrates some simple navigation and link handling. You can see that it has
several different pages that share a common layout. (<span style="line-height:
1.4285715;"><em>Layout</em> is a loose term meaning common look and feel and
navigation across many or all of the pages of an application. Often an
application will include a Layout component to provide that
commonness.)</span></p><p> </p><style type="text/css">/*<![CDATA[*/
table.ScrollbarTable {border: none;padding: 3px;width: 100%;padding:
3px;margin: 0px;background-color: #f0f0f0}
table.ScrollbarTable td.ScrollbarPrevIcon {text-align: center;width:
16px;border: none;}
table.ScrollbarTable td.ScrollbarPrevName {text-align: left;border: none;}