This topic explains how to deploy application JAR files to Tanzu GemFire members.
You can dynamically deploy your application JAR files to specific members or to all members in your cluster. Tanzu GemFire automatically keeps track of JAR file versions; autoloads the deployed JAR files to the CLASSPATH; and auto-registers any functions that the JAR contains.
To deploy and undeploy application JAR files in VMware Tanzu GemFire, use the gfsh
deploy
or undeploy
command.
Note: When deploying a JAR, the name of the JAR cannot contain any of the following characters: *
, !
, #
, @
, ?
.
You can deploy a single JAR or multiple JARs (by specifying either the JAR filenames or a directory that contains the JAR files), and you can also target the deployment to a member group or multiple member group. For example, after connecting to the cluster where you want to deploy the JAR files, you could type at the gfsh
prompt:
gfsh> deploy --jars=group1_functions.jar
This command deploys the group1_functions.jar
file to all members in the cluster.
To deploy the JAR file to a subset of members, use the --groups
argument. For example:
gfsh> deploy --jars=group1_functions.jar --groups=MemberGroup1
In the example it is assumed that you have already defined the member group that you want to use when starting up your members. See Configuring and Running a Cluster for more information on how to define member groups and add a member to a group.
To deploy all the JAR files that are located in a specific directory to all members:
gfsh> deploy --dir=libs/group1-libs
You can either provide a JAR file name or a directory of JARs for deployment, but you cannot specify both at once.
To undeploy all previously deployed JAR files throughout the cluster:
gfsh> undeploy
To undeploy a specific JAR file:
gfsh> undeploy --jars=group1_functions.jar
To target a specific member group when undeploying all JAR files:
gfsh> undeploy --groups=MemberGroup1
Only JAR files that have been previously deployed on members in the MemberGroup1 group will be undeployed.
To see a list of all deployed JAR files in your cluster:
gfsh> list deployed
To see a list of all deployed JARs in a specific member group:
gfsh> list deployed --groups=MemberGroup1
Sample output:
Member | Deployed JAR | JAR Location
--------- | -------------------- | -------------------------------------------------
datanode1 | group1_functions.jar | /usr/local/gemfire/deploy/group1_functions.v1.jar
datanode2 | group1_functions.jar | /usr/local/gemfire/deploy/group1_functions.v1.jar
For more information on gfsh
usage, see gfsh.
The system location where JAR files are written on each member is determined by the deploy-working-dir
Tanzu GemFire property configured for that member. For example, you could have the following configured in the gemfire.properties
file for your member:
#gemfire.properties
deploy-working-dir=/usr/local/gemfire/deploy
This deployment location can be local or a shared network resource (such as a mount location) used by multiple members in order to reduce disk space usage. If you use a shared directory, you still need to deploy the JAR file on every member that you want to have access to the application, because deployment updates the CLASSPATH and auto-registers functions.
By default, the cluster configuration service distributes deployed JAR files to all locators in the cluster. When you start a new server using gfsh
, the locator supplies configuration files and deployed jar files to the member and writes them to the server’s directory.
See Overview of the Cluster Configuration Service.
When you deploy JAR files to a cluster or member group, the JAR file is modified to indicate version information in its name. Each JAR filename contains a version number inserted just before the .jar
suffix. For example, if you deploy MyClasses.jar
five times, the filename is displayed as MyClasses.v5.jar
when you list all deployed jars.
When you deploy a new JAR file, the member receiving the deployment checks whether the JAR file is a duplicate, either because the JAR file has already been deployed on that member or because the JAR file has already been deployed to a shared deployment working directory that other members are also using. If another member has already deployed this JAR file to the shared directory (determined by doing a byte-for-byte compare to the latest version in its directory), the member receiving the latest deployment does not write the file to disk. Instead, the member updates the ClassPathLoader to use the already deployed JAR file. If a newer version of the JAR file is detected on disk and is already in use, the deployment is canceled.
When a member begins using a JAR file, the member obtains a shared lock on the file. If the member receives a newer version by deployment, the member releases the shared lock and tries to delete the existing JAR file in favor of the newer version. If no other member has a shared lock on the existing JAR, the existing, older version JAR is deleted.
When a cache is started, the new cache requests that the latest versions of each JAR file in the current working directory be added to the ClassPathLoader. If a JAR file has already been deployed to the ClassPathLoader, the ClassPathLoader updates its loaded version if a newer version is found; otherwise, there is no change. If detected, older versions of the JAR files are deleted if no other member has a shared lock on them.
Undeploying a JAR file does not automatically unload the classes that were loaded during deployment. You need to restart your members to unload those classes.
When a cache is closed it requests that all currently deployed JAR files be removed from the ClassPathLoader.
If you are using a shared deployment working directory, all members sharing the directory should belong to the same member group. Upon restart, all members that share the same deployment working directory will deploy and autoload their CLASSPATH with any JARs found in the current working directory. This means that some members may load the JARs even though they are not part of the member group that received the original deployment.
When you deploy a JAR file that contains a function (in other words, contains a class that implements the Function interface), the function is automatically registered through the FunctionService.registerFunction
method. If another JAR file is deployed (either with the same JAR filename or another filename) with the same function, the new implementation of the function is registered, overwriting the old one. If a JAR file is undeployed, any functions that were auto-registered at the time of deployment are unregistered. Because deploying a JAR file that has the same name multiple times results in the JAR being un-deployed and re-deployed, functions in the JAR are unregistered and re-registered each time this occurs. If a function with the same ID is registered from multiple differently named JAR files, the function is unregistered if any of those JAR files are re-deployed or un-deployed.
During cache.xml
load, the parameters for any declarables are saved. If functions found in a JAR file are also declarable, and have the same class name as the declarables whose parameters were saved after loading cache.xml, then function instances are created using those Parameters and are also registered. Therefore, if the same function is declared multiple times in the cache.xml
with different sets of parameters, when the JAR is deployed a function is instantiated for each set of parameters. If any functions are registered using parameters from a cache.xml
load, the default, no-argument function is not registered.