On 31/03/2020 09:24, Glenn TheMan wrote:
Hi Andy
The Jetty included in Spring Boot runs on 8080 by default, so there shouldn't
be ant conflict.
I'm afraid the computer does not agree with you :-)
>> java.io.IOException: Failed to bind to 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0:3330
>> java.net.BindException: Address already in use
It may be a complete different process on the same machine (same port
space if containers).
You can configure this with the property in application.properties for Spring:
server.port=8081
I've fix the conflict so the both the RESTful and html/javascript are served on
this port now.
When trying to access the Fuseki endpoint:
http://localhost:3330/ds/<http://localhost:3330/ds/query>
I get a HTTP error code 404 and a something that look like a Turtle result
wrapped in curly brackets. Is that what is called a named graph
Weird : 404 is not found and if Fuseki returns it, it means the dataset
or graph isn't found at all which means no response body.
If you GET a dataset then you get back the dataset quads, here in TriG,
with a 200.
<http://clearbyte.org/> {
<http://clearbyte.org/paintingTechnique>
a <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#Property> .
<http://clearbyte.org/guernica>
a <http://clearbyte.org/Painting> ;
<http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label>
"Guernica" ;
<http://clearbyte.org/paintingTechnique>
<http://clearbyte.org/oil> .
I've added a config.ttl and shiro.ini file which is now included in the spring
JAR file in the root directory main/resources/.
Question:
1. Does the creation of Fuseki server = FusekiServer.create().add("/ds",
dataset).build(); override the configuration file fuseki:name "ds". Which one take
precedent?
The config file has to be loaded: .parseConfigFile("....");
2. Is the curly brackets response (using /ds/get or /ds/data) what is
called a named graph?
Yes.
3. I guess I now have two instances of Jetty running on different ports,
which is fine for the moment. Referring to your replay, since the Fuseki-main
implementation is a Servlet filter it would be possible to inject it into a
Spring MVC servlet since Spring boot uses the DispatcherServlet pattern?
Probably (= "yes, I don't see why not but I haven't tried").
Getting to it isn't easy - you'll have to look a the code of
FusekiServer.Builder.
How it will interact with DispatcherServlet, I don't know.
Andy
Greetings.
________________________________
Från: Andy Seaborne <[email protected]>
Skickat: den 30 mars 2020 19:38
Till: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Ämne: Re: Sv: Embed Fuseki in Spring Boot (Jetty 9.4)
Hi Glenn,
The error means that something else is already using port.
Have you configured the Spring Boot Jetty server to use port 3330?
FusekiServer...build() will create a new Jetty server but maybe that's
OK if nothing else is not already listening on the port.
What's hard if you want other application code along side Fuseki on the
same port. Spring Boot probable wants to be in charge but you can add
arbitrary servlets to Fuseki itself.
1. Can I configure Fuseki to run inside a Spring container which already
uses a Jetty 9.4. Or do I need to runt to separate Jetty instances. Please
provide code pattern?
Only in theory. the core of Fuseki is server neutral (it's a servlet
Filter), it is the packaging that choose to use Jetty.
Fuseki-main is Jetty specific. It does not have a means to use an
external jetty server. I don't use Spring Boot - how does an
application get a the Jetty server? Maybe injecting a jetty server could
be done (in a future re;lease of Fuseki).
It is also available as a WAR file which is portable across web
application servers.
Can you run the war file?
2. Where am I suppose to place the configure file (config.ttl). The static
web files in Spring Boot is placed under main/resources/static?
It's opened as a file so the "current directory" applies.
Andy
On 30/03/2020 14:07, Glenn TheMan wrote:
I use jena version 3.14.0.
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.jena</groupId>
<artifactId>apache-jena-libs</artifactId>
<type>pom</type>
<version>3.14.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.jena</groupId>
<artifactId>jena-fuseki-main</artifactId>
<version>3.14.0</version>
</dependency>
________________________________
Från: Glenn Eriksson <[email protected]>
Skickat: den 30 mars 2020 14:49
Till: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Ämne: Embed Fuseki in Spring Boot (Jetty 9.4)
Hi, in my use-case use the Spring Boot container for handling repository
connections (Spring Data), RESTful web services et cetera. I also want to use
a embedded Fuseki Servers to provide a SPARQL endpoint.
When The Fuseki Servers start it throws a exception saying that the
address/port already in use.
java.io.IOException: Failed to bind to 0.0.0.0/0.0.0.0:3330
java.net.BindException: Address already in use
My Spring bean fuseki service:
@Service
public class FusekiService {
...
public void initModel() {
model = ModelFactory.createDefaultModel();
InputStream in1 = FileManager.get().open(ARTIST_MODEL_FILE);
model.read(in1, BASE_URL, "TURTLE");
LOGGER.debug("Statements read from file: {}", model.size());
}
@PostConstruct
public void initService() {
initModel();
Dataset dataset = DatasetFactory.createTxnMem();
You could read it straight into the Dataset, making the model unnecessary.
RDFDataMgr.read(dataset.getNamedModel(BASE_URL),
ARTIST_MODEL_FILE,
BASE_URL,
Lang.Turtle);
dataset.addNamedModel(BASE_URL, model);
server = FusekiServer.create().add("/data",
dataset).verbose(true).build();
server.start();
LOGGER.debug("Fuseki service started.");
}
Questions:
1. Can I configure Fuseki to run inside a Spring container which already
uses a Jetty 9.4. Or do I need to runt to separate Jetty instances. Please
provide code pattern?
2. Where am I suppose to place the configure file (config.ttl). The static
web files in Spring Boot is placed under main/resources/static?
Best regards.