It’s not failing I guess... I thought it was supposed to auto populate when the 
cluster started up. Then I was just trying to run the class file through java, 
but that wasn’t working. I was hoping there was some sort of command line 
option to put the data in there. 

I’m trying to research how to quickly write a java app that will load them, but 
I can’t seem to find any instructions or examples. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Jun 19, 2019, at 1:05 AM, Denis Magda <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Cache loading can be triggered from the application side only at the moment. 
> It's unsupported for Python yet.
> 
> The easiest way here is to make LoadCaches.java workable in your Docker 
> environment. Share an exception generated by the class. You said it failing 
> there.
> 
> -
> Denis
> 
> 
>> On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 9:56 PM Steven Castano <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>> Create a sample app how? In java or something? Is there no way to get the 
>> instance to load the caches when it starts?
>> 
>> I’m not a big java coder at all, I do most of my stuff in Python… is there a 
>> simple way in python to connect to the cluster and issue the load caches 
>> command? Or maybe an already made Java app that someone has out there that I 
>> could use as an example?
>> 
>> *SMC
>> 
>> Steven Castano | [email protected]
>> Secure PGP Key: www.stevenmcastano.com/pgpkey
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jun 19, 2019, at 12:43 AM, Denis Magda <[email protected]> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Steven,
>>> 
>>> Create a sample app based on LoadCaches and deploy it in Docker. It should 
>>> work out.
>>> 
>>> --
>>> Denis Magda
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Fri, Jun 14, 2019 at 5:17 PM Steven Castano <[email protected]> 
>>>> wrote:
>>>> Thanks… that got me much farther… I was able to generate a config, get the 
>>>> docker image built with the Dockerfile and deploy a running container 
>>>> which now connects back to the web console. It shows all of my caches 
>>>> created for each of the tables I wanted to import, but I can’t seem to 
>>>> figure out how to load the data. the LoadCaches.java file doesn’t want to 
>>>> run inside the docker container. So I appear to have all my caches, but 
>>>> they’re all empty. The screencast only shows how to run it in an IDE, not 
>>>> on the command line once it’s built.
>>>> 
>>>> *SMC
>>>> 
>>>> Steven Castano | [email protected]
>>>> Secure PGP Key: www.stevenmcastano.com/pgpkey
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>>> On Jun 14, 2019, at 6:38 PM, Denis Magda <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi Steven,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Please check out a series of screencast "Ignite Web Console - Automatic 
>>>>> RDBMS Integration" that shows how to use to complete this process:
>>>>> https://ignite.apache.org/screencasts.html
>>>>> 
>>>>> It might be the case that with docker you need to pass the settings 
>>>>> differently. Please, check docker configuration settings:
>>>>> https://apacheignite.readme.io/docs/docker-deployment
>>>>> 
>>>>> -
>>>>> Denis
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Thu, Jun 13, 2019 at 1:44 PM Steven Castano 
>>>>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>> So I was able to get a 2 node cluster started, v2.7.5 and got the 
>>>>>> web-console running through a docker container. I’m even able to load 
>>>>>> the MariaDB JDBC driver and connect to my database.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> The problem I’m having is that when I’m done configuring things and I 
>>>>>> save and download the .zip file for the cluster configuration… I don’t 
>>>>>> know where to put it. No matter where I store it on my server I keep 
>>>>>> getting a “file not found” type error when looking for the properties 
>>>>>> file.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Even when creating a cluster with all the defaults not even connected to 
>>>>>> another database with no persistence, I still can’t get the downloaded 
>>>>>> project files working. Is there something I’m missing, or maybe a good 
>>>>>> tutorial online I can follow??
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> *SMC
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Steven Castano | [email protected]
>>>>>> Secure PGP Key: www.stevenmcastano.com/pgpkey
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>> 
>> 

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