This site contains the documentation that is relevant to older WSO2 product versions and offerings.
For the latest WSO2 documentation, visit https://wso2.com/documentation/.

Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 3 Next »

WSO2 invites you to contribute by checking out the source from the Subversion (SVN) source control system using the following commands, building the product and making changes, and then committing your changes back to the source repository. For information on using Subversion, see http://svnbook.red-bean.com.

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 ESB and install it.

Checking out the source 

You can download the complete WSO2 Carbon platform, which is recommended if you intend to modify the source. You can check out the complete source anonymously from SVN with the following commands (replace x.x.x with the version of Carbon you want to build). The Carbon project comes in three sub projects: Orbit, Kernel, and Platform. Download and build them in that particular order.

Orbit:

$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/orbit/tags/x.x.x Orbit

Kernel:

$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/kernel/tags/x.x.x Kernel

Platform:

$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/carbon/platform/tags/x.x.x Platform 

Access through a firewall

If you are behind a corporate firewall that is blocking HTTP access to the Subversion repository, you can try the developer connection:

$ svn checkout https://svn.wso2.org/repos/wso2/trunk/carbon carbon

Access through a proxy

The Subversion client can be configured to access through a proxy. Specify the proxy to use in the "servers" configuration file in: 

  • "~/.subversion" directory for Linux/Unix
  • "%APPDATA%\Subversion" hidden directory for Windows. (Try "echo %APPDATA%")

The comments in the file explain what to do. If you don't have this file, get the latest Subversion client and run any command. It will create the configuration directory and template files.

For example, edit the 'servers' file and add something similar to the following:

[global]
http-proxy-host = your.proxy.name
http-proxy-port = 3128

Building the product 

Following are the commands you can run to create complete release artifacts of WSO2 ESB, including the binary and source distributions. If you only want to build the ESB, use the -Dproduct=esb option as shown. If you want to build the entire Carbon core project, omit the -Dproduct=esb option.

Before you build:

  • Install Maven and JDK. See Installation Prerequisites for compatible versions.
  • Set the environment variable MAVEN_OPTS=”-Xms768m -Xmx3072m -XX:MaxPermSize=1200m to avoid the Maven OutOfMemoryError.
  • Make sure the build server has an active Internet connection to download dependencies while building.
This command...Creates...
mvn clean install -Dproduct=esbThe binary and source distributions
mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true -Dproduct=esbThe binary and source distributions, without running any of the unit tests.
mvn clean install -Dmaven.test.skip=true -Dproduct=esb -oThe binary and source distributions, without running any of the unit tests, in offline mode. This can be done only if you've already built the source at least once.

Setting up your development environment

Before you edit the source code in your IDE, set up your development environment by running one of the following commands:

If you are using this IDE...Run this command...Additional information
Eclipsemvn eclipse:eclipsehttp://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-eclipse-plugin/
IntelliJ IDEAmvn idea:ideahttp://maven.apache.org/plugins/maven-idea-plugin/

Committing your changes 

If you are a committer, you can commit your changes using the following command (SVN will prompt you for your password):

$ svn commit --username your-username -m "A message"
  • No labels