Deploying to the Liferay Service
As with other services, deploying custom additions involves adding your configurations or files to the appropriate locations in your Git repository. However, deploying the Liferay service slightly differs from deploying other services.
The Liferay service makes use of a Liferay workspace to give you more options to add deployable files, source code, and more. These are easily included with a CI build, but if you are using the CLI tool, some extra steps are necessary specifically for the Liferay service.
Defining the Liferay DXP Docker Image
The Liferay service image (defined in the LCP.json
file, like other services) is not the same as the Liferay DXP Docker image. The Liferay DXP Docker image determines the exact version (including the fix pack) of Liferay that runs in your Liferay service. This is defined in your repository’s liferay/gradle.properties
file, with the liferay.workspace.docker.image.liferay
property.
Check the Liferay DXP Docker tags to find the right image for your version of DXP.
The major version number of DXP defined in the image
property of the Liferay service’s LCP.json
file must match the major version in the liferay.workspace.docker.image.liferay
property in liferay/gradle.properties
. The Liferay service may fail to start up after deployment if the two are different.
CLI Tool Deployment
To add deployable files, built source code, hotfixes, and licenses using the CLI tool, you must include them in a special Dockerfile
image that is generated before you deploy. These extra steps are not necessary if you deploy a build via the CI service.
If you deploy the Liferay service with the CLI normally (when deploying all services at once, or from the liferay/
directory), a default version of the Liferay DXP image (using the major version defined in LCP.json
) that does not contain your customizations is deployed. This happens because you must specifically build and deploy any customizations with the service for them to be included.
Follow these steps to deploy the Liferay service with your customizations:
-
From the command-line in the
liferay/
directory, run:./gradlew clean createDockerfile deploy
This builds all of your customizations, and arranges them into a
build/liferay/
subfolder. It also adds aDockerfile
specifically for a customized version of DXP. -
Copy the
LCP.json
file into the newly generatedbuild/docker/
subfolder. -
Run the
lcp deploy
command as usual from this subfolder.
This deploys the customized service instead of a default version.
Deploying Themes, Portlets, and OSGi Modules
To install themes, portlets, or OSGi modules, include a WAR or JAR file into a configs/[ENV]/deploy/
folder in your Liferay DXP service directory.
For example, to deploy a custom JAR file to your development environment (using the dev/
environment folder), your Liferay DXP service directory could look like this:
liferay
├── LCP.json
└── configs
└── dev
├── deploy
│ └── com.liferay.apio.samples.portlet-1.0.0.jar
├── osgi
├── patching
├── scripts
└── portal-ext.properties
Once deployed, any files within the configs/[ENV]/deploy/
directory are copied to the $LIFERAY_HOME/deploy/
folder in your Liferay service’s container.
Certain files and configurations are forced to be present when an image is deployed, and they may override your added files. Look for the message DXPCloud Liferay Overrides
in your service’s logs to identify when your files are overridden.
Building and Deploying Source Code
The source code for new additions can also be included in a CI build. When the build starts, it compiles the source code automatically.
CI builds compile source code within these folders:
- The
liferay/modules
folder for new modules - The
liferay/themes
folder for custom themes - The
liferay/wars
folder for exploded WARs
Once deployed, the deployable .jar
or .war
files are copied to the $LIFERAY_HOME/deploy/
folder in your Liferay service’s container. This occurs whether the build in CI compiles your code, or you generate it yourself using the available Gradle command before deployment.
Deploying Hotfixes
To apply a hotfix, add the hotfix ZIP file to a configs/[ENV]/patching/
folder within the Liferay DXP service directory. When you deploy this change, the hotfix is applied to the Liferay DXP instance.
See Updating Your DXP Instance to a New Minor Version to update to a new minor version of Liferay DXP instead (such as a new service pack).
For example, you can deploy a hotfix to your development environment with a structure like the following:
liferay
├── LCP.json
└── configs
└── dev
├── deploy
├── osgi
├── patching
│ └── liferay-hotfix-2-7110.zip
└── scripts
Note that the hotfix must be re-applied each time the server starts up. For this reason, updating to the latest Fix Pack or Service pack of the Liferay DXP Docker image in your gradle.properties
file is better than adding a hotfix into this folder for the long term; you can update the Docker version by updating the liferay.workspace.docker.image.liferay
property in this file (in the liferay/
directory).
Patching via Environment Variable
You can also install hotfixes as part of the CI build process instead of directly committing them to your Git repository. This approach is ideal for large hotfixes so you can avoid keeping large files in your repository.
Add a hotfix to the LCP_CI_LIFERAY_DXP_HOTFIXES_[ENV]
environment variable (either through the Environment Variables
tab in the Liferay Cloud console, or in the ci
service’s LCP.json
file) for the CI service to apply it automatically during the build process. If you need multiple bug fixes, ask support to package them into a single hotfix.
If you add this environment variable to the LCP.json
for your ci
service, you must deploy the ci
service to your infra environment to complete the update.
See the following example of defining hotfixes in the LCP.json
file:
"env": {
"LCP_CI_LIFERAY_DXP_HOTFIXES_COMMON": "liferay-hotfix-17-7210",
"LCP_CI_LIFERAY_DXP_HOTFIXES_DEV": "liferay-hotfix-33-7210"
}
Deploying Licenses
You can add your own license by putting it into a configs/[ENV]/deploy/
folder within the Liferay DXP service directory.
For example, you can add licenses to your development environment with a structure like this in your Liferay DXP service directory:
liferay
├── LCP.json
└── configs
└── dev
├── deploy
│ ├── license.xml
│ └── license.aatf
├── osgi
├── patching
└── scripts
Behind the scenes, XML licenses are copied to $LIFERAY_HOME/deploy
, and AATF licenses are copied to $LIFERAY_HOME/data
.