DOWNLOAD MEDREC WEBLOGIC
You are commenting using your Twitter account. It has a reference to. If your browser fails to launch, point your browser to the following URL: Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in: You have just pulled down the oraclelinux: Open a browser and point to https:
Uploader: | Tukazahn |
Date Added: | 20 March 2018 |
File Size: | 34.29 Mb |
Operating Systems: | Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/2003/7/8/10 MacOS 10/X |
Downloads: | 40527 |
Price: | Free* [*Free Regsitration Required] |
Then open a terminal window and copy down the Oracle Docker project repository from git hub into your local environment by using git clone.
Medrec application weblogic download
Now you have to admit that was pretty easy. Jython scans all the weblkgic files it can find at first startup. In a terminal window change directory to the dockerfiles directory under OracleWebLogic. Notify me of new posts via email.
It would be great if Oracle offered a private Docker registry capability like this as a cloud service in the future. Notify me of new comments via email.
Open a browser and point to medrwc You are commenting using your Twitter account. All server side log events will be written to this file.

To find the required file, simply point a browser to http: It has a reference to. You are commenting using your Facebook account.
The other flags available are detailed in medrex buildDockerImage. The pre-built image can then be pulled into your local docker environment from the Oracle registry.
This blog is meant to simply narrow down exactly what I did to get this going in my environment. Depending on the system, this process may take a few minutes to complete, and WLST may not return a prompt right away. While in the same directory execute the following command in order to see what options are available for the build. Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in: I plan to blog leveraging this OCCS based approach to achieve the same end result soon.
Building a Docker Image for WebLogic 12.2.1.2 MedRec app
Now execute the following to view the images you have in your local docker repository. When you login you accept the terms and conditions once and it is valid for around 8 hours.
After the server has booted, your browser should automatically launch and point to the Avitek Medical Records Sample Application Introduction Page. As per my cut and paste of the output of the more command below, the -v argument is where I specified the specific version of WebLogic Server I wanted.

With the image now built, in order to run the MedRec application, simply point a browser to http: The real drawback is that Qeblogic have to download the WebLogic and JRE software to drop it into my environment, accepting the Terms and Conditions for each download. One downside of this approach is that the images can be quite large so you really need to think about having a private registry on your premises.
Checking if required packages are present and valid…. You will see that the git clone will have docker build files for weblogic, glassfishtuxedo webligic. Now point a browser to http: Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Checking if this platform requires a bit JVM. Next we need to install weblogic mfdrec Is there a better way I hear you ask? I was using Ubuntu
Comments
Post a Comment