WSO2 invites you to contribute by checking out downloading the source from the Subversion (SVN) code from the GitHub source control system, building the product and and making changes, and then then committing your changes back back to the source repository. (For more information on Subversion, refer http://svnbook.red-bean.com/.) The following sections describe this process:
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Building from source is optional. Users who do not want to make changes to the source code can simply download the binary distribution of WSO2 Business Rules Server the product and install it. |
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Downloading the
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source
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WSO2 products are built on top of WSO2 Carbon Kernel, which contains the Kernel libraries used by all products. When there are changes in the Carbon Kernel, they are bundled and released in a new WSO2 Carbon version new WSO2 Carbon version (for example, WSO2 Carbon 4.23.0).
A WSO2 platform release is a set of WSO2 products based on the same Carbon release. For example, Turing
is the platform release name for WSO2 Carbon 4.2.0 and the WSO2 products that are based on it. Usually, not all products in a platform get released at the same time, so they are released in chunks, each of which contains the Carbon release and a subset of products. For example, chunk 11 of the Turing
platform release contains Carbon 4.2.0 plus BRS 2.1.0 and other products.
Checking out the patches
Before checking out the product source, you need to checkout the patches related to the Carbon chunk using the following command.
$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/kernel/branches/4.2.0/ <local-platform-directory-1>
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Downloading the product source
For products based on WSO2 Carbon 4.2.0, use the below command to download the product source:
$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/platform/tags/turing-<release-chunk>/ <local-platform-directory-2>
Replace <release-chunk>
with the release chunk, on which the specific product version is based on. To find out the respective release chunk, see the Release Matrix.
BRS 2.1.0 is released in Turing
chunk 11, which you can download using the checkout command as shown below (replace <local-platform-directory>
with a meaningful name, such as wso2carbon-platform
):
$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/platform/tags/turing-chunk11 <local-platform-directory>
Setting up your development environment
Before you You can download the complete WSO2 Kernel release using the following repository: https://github.com/wso2/carbon4-kernel, which is recommended if you intend to modify the source. After downloading the source of the Carbon Kernel, execute the following command to download the source of the product: git clone https://github.com/wso2/product-brs
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After the source code is downloaded, you can start editing. However, it is recommended to run a build prior to changing the source code to ensure that the download is complete. |
After downloading the source of the Carbon Kernel, execute the following command to download the source of the product: git clone https://github.com/wso2/product-brs
Editing the source code
Now that you have downloaded the source code for the Carbon project from GitHub, you can prepare your development environment and do the required changes to the code.
To edit the source code in your IDE, set up your development environment by running one of the following commands:
IDE Command Additional information Eclipse mvn eclipse:eclipse
http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-eclipse-plugin
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IntelliJ IDEA mvn idea:idea
http://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-idea-plugin
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If you are using a later Eclipse version and if you get errors (library path etc.) when trying to import the source code using the Existing Projects into Workspace, follow the steps below to solve them by importing the source code as a Maven project.
- Build the source using the command:
mvn clean install
- Open Eclipse and click Import in the File menu and then click Existing Maven Projects as shown below:
- Add the required changes to the source code.
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Follow the instructions below to build the product after editing the source code:
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Ensure that the following prerequisites are in place before you build:
- Make sure the build server has an active Internet connection to download dependencies while building.
- Install Maven and JDK. See For compatible versions, see Installation Prerequisites for compatible versions.
- Set the environment variable variable
MAVEN_OPTS=
"”-
Xms768mXms1024m -
Xmx3072mXmx4096m -XX:MaxPermSize=
1200m"1024m
” to avoid the Maven MavenOutOfMemoryError.
Navigate to each folder representing the patches within the
<local-platform-directory-1>
and run the following Apache Maven commands to build the patches. For information on the patches, which are applicable for the respective Carbon chunk release, go to Release Matrix.This command... Creates...
Use the following Maven commands to build your product:
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mvn clean install | The binary and source distributions |
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mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true | The binary and source distributions, without running any of the unit tests. |
mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true -o | The binary and source distributions, without running any of the unit tests, in offline mode. This can be done only if you |
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have already built the source at least once. |
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To create complete release artifacts of the products released with this chunk version, including the binary and source distributions, go to <local-platform-directory-2>
/repos/wso2/carbon/platform/tags/<WSO2-Carbon-version>/products/ directory
and run the Apache Maven commands stated in the above step. To build only a selected product/s, open <local-platform-directory-2>/repos/wso2/carbon/platform/tags/<WSO2-Carbon-version>/products/pom.xml
file, and comment out the products you do not want to build and run the relevant Maven command.
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If you are a committer, you can commit your changes using the following command (SVN will prompt you for your password):
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Committing your changes
You can contribute to WSO2 products by committing your changes to GitHub. Whether you are a committer or a non-committer, you can contribute with your code as explained in the Get Involved section.