## Running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example in Tomcat from IntelliJ Install Tomcat. Make sure you have Tomcat set up in IntelliJ. - File->Settings->Build, Execution, Deployment->Application Servers - Click + - Select "Tomcat Server" - Enter the path to your tomcat deployment for both Tomcat Home (IntelliJ will fill in base directory for you) Add a Run Configuration for running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example under Tomcat - Run->Edit Configurations - Click the green + - Select Tomcat Server, Local - Change the name to whatever you wish - Uncheck the "After launch" checkbox - On the "Deployment" tab, click the green + - Select "Artifact" - Select "hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example:war" - In "Application context" type /hapi Run the configuration. - You should now have an "Application Servers" in the list of windows at the bottom. - Click it. - Select your server, and click the green triangle (or the bug if you want to debug) - Wait for the console output to stop Point your browser (or fiddler, or what have you) to `http://localhost:8080/hapi/base/Patient` You should get an empty bundle back. ## Running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example in a Docker container Execute the `build-docker-image.sh` script to build the docker image. Use this command to start the container: `docker run -d --name hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example -p 8080:8080 hapi-fhir/hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example` Note: with this command data is persisted across container restarts, but not after removal of the container. Use a docker volume mapping on /var/lib/jetty/target to achieve this.