Update a JBoss Installation from 7.1 to 7.2
The following steps describe how to update the Camunda artifacts on a JBoss AS 7 server in a shared process engine setting. For the entire migration procedure, refer to the migration guide. If not already done, make sure to download the Camunda 7.2 JBoss distribution.
The update procedure takes the following steps:
- Update the Camunda 7 modules
- Configure process engines
- Configure optional Camunda 7 extensions (optional)
- Update Camunda web applications
Whenever the instructions are to replace a module, make sure to delete the previous version of the module first to avoid orphan jars.
1. Update the Camunda 7 Modules
Replace the following modules from the folder $JBOSS_HOME/modules/
with their new versions from the folder $JBOSS_DISTRIBUTION/modules/
:
org/camunda/bpm/camunda-engine
org/camunda/bpm/jboss/camunda-jboss-subsystem
org/camunda/bpm/model/camunda-bpmn-model
org/camunda/bpm/model/camunda-xml-model
org/mybatis/mybatis
If present, also replace the following optional module:
org/camunda/bpm/identity/camunda-identity-ldap
Add the following modules from the folder $JBOSS_DISTRIBUTION/modules/
to the folder $JBOSS_HOME/modules/
:
org/camunda/bpm/model/camunda-cmmn-model
org/camunda/commons/camunda-commons-logging
org/camunda/commons/camunda-commons-utils
org/camunda/connect/camunda-connect-core
org/camunda/connect/camunda-connect-http-client
org/camunda/connect/camunda-connect-soap-http-client
org/camunda/bpm/camunda-engine-plugin-connect
org/apache/httpcomponents/httpclient
org/apache/httpcomponents/httpcore
commons-codec/commons-codec
commons-logging/commons-logging
org/camunda/spin/camunda-spin-core
org/camunda/spin/camunda-spin-dataformat-json-jackson
org/camunda/spin/camunda-spin-dataformat-xml-dom
org/camunda/bpm/camunda-engine-plugin-spin
com/fasterxml/jackson/core/jackson-core
com/fasterxml/jackson/core/jackson-databind
com/fasterxml/jackson/core/jackson-annotations
com/jayway/jsonpath/json-path
org/codehaus/groovy/groovy-all
org/camunda/template-engines/camunda-template-engines-freemarker
org/freemarker/freemarker
2. Configure Process Engines
Script Variable Storing
As of 7.2, the default behavior of script variables has changed. Script variables are set in e.g., a BPMN Script Task that uses a language such as JavaScript or Groovy. In previous versions, the process engine automatically stored all script variables as process variables. Starting with 7.2, this behavior has changed and the process engine does not automatically store script variables any longer. You can re-enable the legacy behavior by setting the boolean property autoStoreScriptVariables
to true
for any process engine in the standalone.xml
:
<subsystem xmlns="urn:org.camunda.bpm.jboss:1.1">
...
<process-engines>
<process-engine name="default" default="true">
...
<properties>
... existing properties ...
<property name="autoStoreScriptVariables">true</property>
</properties>
...
</process-engine>
</process-engines>
...
</subsystem>
As an alternative, process application developers can migrate script code by replacing all implicit declarations of process variables in their scripts with an explicit call to execution.setVariable('varName', 'value')
.
3. Configure Optional Camunda 7 Modules
In addition, there are modules for Camunda Connect, Camunda Spin, the Freemarker template language and Groovy scripting that extend the Camunda 7 functionality. Since all these artifacts add new functionality, the following steps are not required for migration.
Camunda Connect
In order to activate Camunda Connect functionality for a process engine, a process engine plugin has to be registered in $JBOSS_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
as follows:
<subsystem xmlns="urn:org.camunda.bpm.jboss:1.1">
...
<process-engines>
<process-engine name="default" default="true">
...
<plugins>
... existing plugins ...
<plugin>
<class>org.camunda.connect.plugin.impl.ConnectProcessEnginePlugin</class>
</plugin>
</plugins>
...
</process-engine>
</process-engines>
...
</subsystem>
Camunda Spin
In order to activate Camunda Spin functionality for a process engine, a process engine plugin has to be registered in $JBOSS_HOME/standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
as follows:
<subsystem xmlns="urn:org.camunda.bpm.jboss:1.1">
...
<process-engines>
<process-engine name="default" default="true">
...
<plugins>
... existing plugins ...
<plugin>
<class>org.camunda.spin.plugin.impl.SpinProcessEnginePlugin</class>
</plugin>
</plugins>
...
</process-engine>
</process-engines>
...
</subsystem>
4. Update Camunda Web Applications
Update Camunda REST API
The following steps are required to update the camunda REST API on a JBoss instance:
- Undeploy an existing web application with a name like
camunda-engine-rest
- Download the REST API web application archive from our Maven Nexus Server. Or switch to the private repository for the enterprise version (User and password from license required). Choose the correct version named
$PLATFORM_VERSION/camunda-engine-rest-$PLATFORM_VERSION.war
. - Deploy the web application archive to your JBoss instance.
Update Camunda Cockpit, Tasklist, and Admin
The following steps are required to update the Camunda web applications Cockpit, Tasklist, and Admin on a JBoss instance:
- Undeploy an existing web application with a name like
camunda-webapp
- Download the Camunda web application archive from our Maven Nexus Server. Or switch to the private repository for the enterprise version (User and password from license required). Choose the correct version named
$PLATFORM_VERSION/camunda-webapp-jboss-$PLATFORM_VERSION.war
. - Deploy the web application archive to your JBoss instance.
LDAP Entity Caching
With 7.2, it is possible to enable entity caching for Hypertext Application Language (HAL) requests that the camunda web applications make. This can be especially useful when you use camunda in combination with LDAP. To activate caching, the camunda webapp artifact has to be modified and the pre-built application cannot be used as is. See the REST Api Documentation for details.