hapi-fhir/hapi-fhir-cli/hapi-fhir-cli-jpaserver
James Agnew 970a9884f0
Avoid tag definition constraint (#2620)
* Avoid tag definition constraint failure

* Version bumps

* Add changelog

* Avoid guava issue

* Test fix

* Test fix

* Bump pom
2021-05-01 17:16:15 -04:00
..
src Search Parameter Infrastructure Cleanup (#2522) 2021-04-05 17:40:10 -04:00
.gitignore Add eclipse files 2016-08-06 15:48:29 -04:00
pom.xml Avoid tag definition constraint (#2620) 2021-05-01 17:16:15 -04:00
readme.intellij.txt Move CLI App 2016-01-28 11:36:59 -05:00

readme.intellij.txt

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.