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Example Using the ModeShape WebDAV service with a custom configuration

What is it?

This is a self-contained and deployable Maven 3 project that shows how to use the ModeShape REST service with a custom repository configuration

System requirements

All you need to build this project is Java 8.0 (Java SDK 1.8) or better, Maven 3.0 or better. The application this project produces is designed to be run on Tomcat 7.x or greater.

Build and Deploy the Example

NOTE: The following build command assumes you have configured your Maven user settings. If you have not, you must use the settings.xml file from the root of this project. See this ModeShape community article for help on how to install and configure Maven 3.

This project is self-contained and can be built at the top level of your local clone of the Git repository, or by simply building this project using Maven 3.

  1. Type this command to build the archive:

     mvn clean package
    
  2. This will produce a WAR file named target/modeshape-webdav-example.war

  3. Copy the above WAR into your local %TOMCAT_HOME%/webapps folder

  4. Start the Tomcat server

Accessing the application

The application will be running by default at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/modeshape-webdav-example/. Open this URL in your browser and you should see and be able to navigate the configured repository.

The ModeShape project

ModeShape is an open source implementation of the JCR 2.0 (JSR-283) specification and standard API. To your applications, ModeShape looks and behaves like a regular JCR repository. Applications can search, query, navigate, change, version, listen for changes, etc. But ModeShape can store that content in a variety of back-end stores (including relational databases, Infinispan data grids, JBoss Cache, etc.), or it can access and update existing content from other kinds of systems (including file systems, SVN repositories, JDBC database metadata, and other JCR repositories). ModeShape's connector architecture means that you can write custom connectors to access any kind of system. And ModeShape can even federate multiple back-end systems into a single, unified virtual repository.

For more information on ModeShape, including getting started guides, reference guides, and downloadable binaries, visit the project's website at http://www.modeshape.org or follow us on our blog or on Twitter. Or hop into our IRC chat room and talk our community of contributors and users.

The official Git repository for the project is also on GitHub at http://github.com/ModeShape/modeshape.

Need help ?

ModeShape is open source software with a dedicated community. If you have any questions or problems, post a question in our user forum or hop into our IRC chat room and talk our community of contributors and users.