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Kuali Rice Bootcamp: Hands-On Exercises Colorado State University, January 22 - 26, 2008

Kuali Rice Bootcamp: Hands-On Exercises Colorado State University, January 22 - 26, 2008 Aaron Godert - Cornell University Rice Development Manager. Environment Set Up. Eclipse Overview. Maven2 How we build - POMs Our standard project structure M2 repository Subervsion/CVS

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Kuali Rice Bootcamp: Hands-On Exercises Colorado State University, January 22 - 26, 2008

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  1. Kuali Rice Bootcamp: Hands-On Exercises Colorado State University, January 22 - 26, 2008 Aaron Godert - Cornell University Rice Development Manager

  2. Environment Set Up

  3. Eclipse Overview • Maven2 • How we build - POMs • Our standard project structure • M2 repository • Subervsion/CVS • Checking out code • Sync’ing • Standard practices before committing code

  4. Eclipse Overview Continued • Useful features and tools in Eclipse • Refactoring • Code completion • Ctrl+Shift+R • Ctrl+Shift+T • Organize imports • Adding Javadocs • Code generation - getters/setters, implements/overrides

  5. The Recipes Application • A simple system for maintaining recipes and categories that they fit into • Run the web application • STOP! Team Review

  6. The Data Model • Two Entities (Business Objects) • Recipe • Recipe Category • Two Tables (DB Tables) • RECIPES_T • RECIPES_CATEGORIES_T

  7. Exercise 1: Review the DB Tables • Open recipes_db_bootstrap.sql in Eclipse

  8. Exercise 2: Review the Business Objects • Open the Java files in package edu.sampleu.recipe.bo.*

  9. How These Link Together • We use an ORM (Object Relational Mapper) called Apache OJB • XML files combined with a set of Apache Java libraries that automatically persist data in our business objects to our DB • Soon to be replaced by JPA - a Java standard • No more XML, use annotations in Java code instead

  10. Exercise 3: An OJB Example • Open repository.xml in Eclipse and look at the mapping for RecipeCategory

  11. Exercise 4: What JPA Will Look Like @Entity @Table(name=“RECIPE_CATEGORY_T") public class RecipeCategory extends PersistableBusinessObjectBase { @Id private Long id; private String name; //note this annotation is not required if column name matches attribute name @Column(name=“DESCRIPTION”) private String description; … }

  12. Exercise 5: Recipe OJB Mapping • Open repository.xml • Open recipes_db_bootstrap.sql • Open Recipe.java

  13. Unit Testing • We use JUnit for unit and integration testing • We are starting to use HtmlUnit for web UI testing • Automated tests that are programmed • Run by our CI environment: Bamboo

  14. Exercise 6: Testing Your OJB Mapping • We can use JUnit to test our OJB mapping and the persistence of data between our Bos and DB tables • Open RecipeDaoTest class • Right click RecipeDaoTest class --> Run --> Run as JUnit Test • STOP! Team Coding Exercise • When ready, re-run the unit test

  15. Leveraging the KNS • We’ll use the KNS to provide search and detail information on categories and recipes • Search = Lookup • Detail Info = Inquiry • We’ll use the KNS to provide maintenance CRUD operations with workflow backing them • CRUD = Maintenance Documents

  16. Exercise 7: Review RecipeCategory DD • We use something called the Data Dictionary (DD) to construct our lookups, inquiries, and maintenance documents • Open RecipeCategory.xml - this is the business object DD file • Lookups • Inquiries • Open RecipeCategoryMaintenanceDocument.xml - this is the maintenance document XML • CRUD, Workflow, Authz • Run the web app to correlate DD to functionality

  17. Exercise 8: Create Recipe DD Files • Copy and rename RecipeCategory.xml to Recipe.xml • Copy and rename RecipeCategoryMaintenanceDocument.xml to RecipeMaintenanceDocument.xml • Open RecipesWorkflowBootstrap.xml • Open recipes_db_bootstrap.sql • STOP! Team Exercise • When ready, run the web application

  18. Exercise 9: Tweaking a Lookup • Open RecipeCategory.xml • Remove “id” from the lookup fields • Restart the application

  19. Exercise 10: Tweaking a Maint. Doc. • Open RecipeMaintenanceDocument.xml • Let’s only have one section, so move the content from the details section and put it into the info section • Remove the details section • Restart the application

  20. Exercise 11: Changing Initiation Authz • Open RecipeCategoryMaintenance.xml • Change the authorization workgroup from WorkflowAdmin to kualiUniversalGroup • Restart the application; note you can only create a Recipe Category if you are now an admin

  21. Exercise 12: Add Custom Rule Checks • Open the RecipeRules class • Open RecipeMaintenanceDocument.xml • We want to check to see if any of the ingredients is beef, then we need to make sure that the beef category is chosen • STOP! Team Exercise • When ready, run the web application

  22. Leveraging KEW • We use KEW for workflow functionality and configuration • Apply workflow rules to documents • Alter workflow processing chains • Call external services to make workflow decisions for us • Leverage workflow for limited business process orchestration

  23. Exercise 13: Adding a Group Approval • Make use of the NamedRuleSelector - template-less rules • Open RecipesWorkflowBootstrap.xml • Open RecipesUsersWorkgroupsBootstrap.xml • We want any Recipe Category changes to be approved by the “RecipeMasters” workgroup • STOP! Team Exercise • Restart application when changes have been made

  24. Exercise 14: Routing on Document Data • Make use of embedded Groovy scripting in routing rules • Look at document data and route to a new group “Chicken Recipe Masters” if any of the ingredients are chicken • Open RecipeUtils class • Open RecipesWorkflowBootstrap.xml • Open RecipesUsersWorkgroupsBootstrap.xml • STOP! Team Exercise • Restart application when changes have been made

  25. Leveraging KEN • We use KEN for notifications • Extension of KEW • Notification List = Action List • Can subscribe to notification channels

  26. Exercise 15: Creating a New Channel • Open recipes_db_bootstrap.sql • Review the SQL starting with “-- KEN sample data --” • This was already created for us when the DB was loaded, we’re just reviewing • Start the application, go to the Kuali Enterprise Notification link • STOP! Team Exercise

  27. Exercise 16: Sending a Notification • Manually via form - click the “Send Simple Notification” link • STOP! Team Exercise

  28. Exercise 17: Subscribing to a Channel • Click on the Channel Subscriptions link • STOP! Team Exercise

  29. Exercise 18: Programmatic Notifications • Send programmatically as an XML request, via the NotificationService, within the KEW Post-processor • Open RecipesPostProcessor class • Open RecipeMaintenanceDocument.xml • STOP! Team Exercise • Restart the application after changes have been made

  30. Leveraging KSB • Inter-application communications • Allows services to be invoked via several different protocols • Helps to create an SOA based system

  31. Exercise 19: Creating a Service • A new “Magazine System” manages magazines and needs to provide a service to show all managed magazines • If any of those magazines are used in a recipe, a workgroup approval will need to be made by the Magazine Managers group • Open MagazineService class • Open MagazineServiceImpl class • Open SpringBeans.xml • STOP! Team Exercise

  32. Exercise 20: Exposing a Service on KSB • Open SpringBeans.xml - go to Rice Configurer section • Open MagazineServiceTest class • STOP! Team Exercise

  33. Exercise 21: Invoking a Service in KEW • We’ll invoke the service we just created as SOAP over the bus, to base routing off of it • Open RecipesWorkflowBootstrap.xml • Open RecipeUtils class • Open RecipeUsersWorkgroupsBootstrap.xml • STOP! Team Exercise

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