§Creating a standalone version of your application
§Using the dist task
The simplest way to deploy a Play 2.0 application is to retrieve the source (typically via a git workflow) on the server and to use either play start
or play stage
to start it in place.
However, you sometimes need to build a binary version of your application and deploy it to the server without any dependencies on Play itself. You can do this with the dist
task.
In the Play console, simply type dist
:
[My first application] $ dist
one can easily use an external application.conf by using a special system property called
conf.file
, so assuming your productionapplication.conf
is stored under your home directory, the following command should create a play distribution using the customapplication.conf
:_$ play -Dconfig.file=/home/peter/prod/application.conf dist
This produces a ZIP file containing all JAR files needed to run your application in the target
folder of your application, the ZIP file’s contents are organized as:
my-first-application-1.0
└ lib
└ *.jar
└ start
You can use the generated start
script to run your application.
Alternatively you can run play dist
directly from your OS shell prompt, which does the same thing:
$ play dist
§Publishing to a Maven (or Ivy) repository
You can also publish your application to a Maven repository. This publishes both the JAR file containing your application and the corresponding POM file.
You have to configure the repository you want to publish to, in the project/Build.scala
file:
val main = PlayProject(appName, appVersion, appDependencies).settings(
publishTo := Some(
"My resolver" at "http://mycompany.com/repo"
)
credentials += Credentials(
"Repo", "http://mycompany.com/repo", "admin", "admin123"
)
)
Then in the Play console, use the publish
task:
[My first application] $ publish
Check the sbt documentation to get more information about the resolvers and credentials definition.