This question already has an answer here:
I'm looking for an entry point in an EJB deployed on JBoss.
Servlets have the load-on-startup
tag to use in its web.xml
.
I'm searching for similar init()
functionality for an EJB.
This question already has an answer here:
I'm looking for an entry point in an EJB deployed on JBoss.
Servlets have the load-on-startup
tag to use in its web.xml
.
I'm searching for similar init()
functionality for an EJB.
That didn't exist for EJB until 3.1. With EJB 3.1 you can use a singleton bean to simulate that:
From Application Startup / Shutdown Callbacks:
Otherwise, you will need to rely on the good old trick to use a
ServletContextInitializer
.There are some application-specific extension, e.g. lifecycle listener for Glassfish. Maybe there's such a thing for JBoss.
But if I were you I would try to rely on standard features as much as possible. The problem with non-standard extension is that you never know exactly what can be done or not, e.g. can you start transaction or not, etc.
You should be able to add the following line to the top of the method you want to run at startup:
If you're targeting JBoss AS 5.1, and you don't mind using the JBoss EJB 3.0 Extensions, you can build a service bean to bootstrap your EJB. If your service implements an interface annotated with the
@Management
annotation and declares a method with the signaturepublic void start() throws Exception
, JBoss will call this method when it starts the service. You can then call a dedicatedinit()
method on the EJB you want to initialize:More information on this, including additional life-cycle events, can be found here.
Managed Beans can be used to do some process at JBoss startup, you have to add entry of that managed bean in configuration file.
This article describes seven different ways of invoking functionality at server startup. Not all will work with JBoss though.
Seven ways to get things started. Java EE Startup Classes with GlassFish and WebLogic