hapi-fhir/example-projects/hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic
James Agnew 50a8c66bf5 Version bump to 4.0.0-SNAPSHOT 2019-05-30 17:13:03 -04:00
..
src Two more build failures 2019-04-24 22:00:18 -04:00
var/lucenefiles Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
.README.md.html Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
.gitignore Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
Dockerfile Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
Dockerfile.tomcat Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
README.md Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
build-docker-image.sh Moving example project to examples directory 2018-03-23 06:36:12 -04:00
pom.xml Version bump to 4.0.0-SNAPSHOT 2019-05-30 17:13:03 -04:00

README.md

Description

This project has been built with hapi-fhir-jpaserver-example as a base. It has been made more dynamic by replacing web.xml with ca.uhn.fhir.jpa.demo.WebInitializer class which extends Spring org.springframework.web.WebApplicationInitializer class and loads application contexts in a dynamic manner, so that based on environment and/or property variables it can be started either as dstu2 or dstu3 version of HAPI-FHIR JPA Server. Some of the classes have been also refactored to make them more generic.

Environment variables

There are number of environment variables that will control the behavior of the application at run time (such as start as dstu2 or dstu3 version, whether database schema gets recreated or no, database url, etc..). They can also be defined in Property files, see section below. These are environment variables that can be set before application starts:

  • DB_URL - database url in a standard jdbc url format, specific to a database of your choosing. For example for Postgres it will be: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/<databaseName>?user=<username>&password=<password>. So far support has been added for MySQL, derby and Postgres databases.

  • DATABASE_URL - if you deploy your server to HEROKU and create a Postgres database, its URL will be exposed through DATABASE_URL environment variable set by HEROKU. If DATABASE_URL is present it will overwrite DB_URL and its value will be used as jdbc url. This implementations assumes that Heroku will be setup with Postgres database, so current implementation handles postgres DATABASE_URL that gets set in this format: postgres://<username>:<password>@<hostname>:5432/<databaseName>. We convert it into standard jdbc format: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/<databaseName>?user=<username>&password=<password>

  • SCHEMA_NAME - used only if DATABASE_URL is set, which is expected to be Postgres database url set by HEROKU. If it's set currentSchema parameter will be added to the jdbc url, e.g.:
    jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/<databaseName>?user=<username>&password=<password>&currentScema=<schemaName>. Note that schema has to be created beforehand and user should have the right permissions to create tables.

  • STU_VERSION - can be set to dstu2 or dstu3. If not set by default dstu3 will be used. Corresponding classes will get dynamically loaded at a server startup.

  • ENV - environment this server will run in, and based on which corresponding property files will be loaded.

    It can be one of those values: local, dev, stg, prod. Based on the value one of the property files will be loaded: resources/config/<STU_VERSION>/app_<ENV>.properties.

    So for example if ENV=local and STU_VERSION=dstu3 this file will be loaded:

    resources/config/dstu3/app_local.properties

  • HIBERNATE_CREATE - can be set to true or false. If set to true database schema will be dropped and recreated again upon application startup. If set to false hibernate will run with validate as a schema setting.

Property files

There are number of property files created for different environments: local, dev, stg, prod. So if ENV environment variable is set to one of those values corresponding property file will be loaded at a run time, by default local files will be loaded. Property files are located at: src/main/resources/config/dstu2 and src/main/resources/config/dstu3s directories. These are the files:

   app_local.properties
   app_dev.properties
   app_stg.properties
   app_prod.properties
   immutable.properties - DO NOT modify any of the properties defined in that file.

Any of the Environment variables can be defined in one of the app_<ENV>.properties property files. If a property is also defined as Environment variable it will overwrite value defined in property file. Properties defined in immutable.properties should not be changed, those are servlet/Spring mappings and names of classes that will be loaded at a run time and are specific to dstu version being used.

Running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic with a webapp-runner

You can run the web application with webapp-runner and pass environment variables to it.

Here is a sample command to run the webapp runner which will start dynamic HAPI-FHIR server with version dstu3, postgres database and hibernate schema being dropped and re-created.

Note optional command to unset DATABASE_URL, so that only DB_URL is used locally. Also make sure to replace placeholder parameters <databasename>, <username> and <password> with actual values.

mvn clean install

unset DATABASE_URL

java $JAVA_OPTS -DSTU_VERSION=dstu3 -DHIBERNATE_CREATE=true -DDB_URL='jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/<databaseName>?user=<username>&password=<password>' -DENV=local -jar target/dependency/webapp-runner.jar target/*.war

You should be able to access HAPI_FHIR server at: http://localhost:8080/ .

If you'd like to open a debugging port run this command and attach remote debugger in IDE of your choice to port 5000. Again make sure to replace placeholder parameters with actual values before you run the command.

java $JAVA_OPTS -Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,address=5000,suspend=n -DSTU_VERSION=dstu3 -DHIBERNATE_CREATE=false -DDB_URL='jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/<databaseName>?user=<username>&password=<password>' -DENV=local -jar target/dependency/webapp-runner.jar target/*.war

Running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic 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-dynamic 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-dynamic: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/fhir/base/Patient

You should get an empty bundle back.

Running hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic 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-dynamic -p 8080:8080 hapi-fhir/hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic

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.

There is also Dockerfile.tomcat which contains docker commands to run hapi-fhir-jpaserver-dynamic within tomcat. Rename Dockerfile.tomcat to Dockerfile if you would rather use tomcat as your application container.