You can can deploy your own web service by adding a WAR file (except a LiveView WAR
file) as a Maven dependency in your application or fragment project's pom.xml
file, such as eventflow-engine
, java-engine
and liveview-engine
, and so on. For example:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>com.user.webservice</groupId> <artifactId>wsapp</artifactId> <version>1.0.0</versions> <type>war</type> </dependency> </dependencies>
When the web server starts (which occurs by default when the node is started), it
automatically scans the class path and deploys the WAR files in it as web service.
The address of that web service will be http://<host-address>:<host-name>/<artifactId>
.
For example: http://localhost:8008/wsapp
.
For the web services that you create, best practice is to put the API documentation into WEB-INF/classes/apidoc/ directory. Once the web server starts, it automatically scans that directory and displays the found interactive API documentation in the server-integrated Swagger-UI.
You can specify an optional binding between a web service name and authentication
realm name, including web services that you created. The binding provides a means to
override the default node administration authentication realm (which is default-realm
) for a specified web service. See Web Server and Web Services
Configuration.