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The settings.xml file holds environmental information and properties about the Aspire installation as a whole.

Separation of Scope and Portability


The settings.xml file holds environmental information (server addresses, passwords, system properties, repository settings, etc.) for your Aspire installation.

What goes in the Settings File vs the Application XML configuration file?

Appropriate for the settings.xml Configuration File:

  • Server names
  • Port addresses
  • User names & passwords
  • App Bundle properties
  • Applications to launch on startup

Appropriate for the application.xml Configuration File:

  • Component configuration
  • Pipeline configuration
  • All document processing functionality

Many components in the system configuration file require server names, user names, etc. as configuration elements. To make your system configuration file portable over multiple installations, these configuration elements should be specified as properties in the settings.xml file.

Settings File Location


On startup, the Aspire application will automatically attempt to load the settings from the following locations:

  • The file whose name is given in the ASPIRE_SETTINGS_PROPERTY ("com.searchtechnologies.aspire.settings"). This can be set supplying the parameter -Dcom.searchtechnologies.aspire.settings=filename on the JVM command line.
  • The /config/settings.hostname.xml under the Aspire Home directory, set via the ASPIRE_HOME_PROPERTY ("com.searchtechnologies.aspire.home"). This can be set supplying the parameter -Dcom.searchtechnologies.aspire.home=directory on the JVM command line.
  • The /config/settings.xml under the Aspire Home directory.

Structure of settings.xml


The settings.xml file contains sections for automatically starting system configuration files, setting Aspire system properties, and setting Apache Felix system properties. The overall structure is as follows:

<settings>
  <!-- Specify system properties which are available to all Aspire system configuration files -->
  <properties>
    <property name="solrServer">http://localhost:8080</property>
    <property name="autoStart">false</property>
    .
    .
    .
  </properties>
 <!--Entitlements -->
 <entitlementsServer online="true">http://entitlements.searchtechnologies.com</entitlementsServer>

  <!-- Specify properties for the OSGI Configuration Administration server. These are specific
       properties required by individual components within Apache Felix. Many of these properties
       may be better configured in the "felix.properties" file -->
  <configAdmin>
    <properties pid="org.apache.felix.webconsole.internal.servlet.OsgiManager">
      <property name="username">admin</property>
      <property name="password">admin1</property>
      <property name="manager.root">/osgi</property>
    </properties>
  </configAdmin>

  <!-- Specify applications to automatically install on startup, and provide the system
       configuration file for each one -->
  <autoStart>
  <!-- Workflow manager is required for 2.0 UI -->
   <application config="com.searchtechnologies.aspire:app-workflow-manager" id="1">
     <properties>
       <property name="templateFile">${appbundle.home}/data/templates.xml</property>
       <property name="libraryPath">${aspire.config.dir}/workflow-libraries</property>
       <property name="planFile"/>
       <property name="disableInternalTemplates">false</property>
       <property name="allowCustomRule">true</property>
       <property name="debug">false</property>
     </properties>
   </application>
  </autoStart>


  <!-- Repositories specify where components can be found or downloaded -->
  <repositories>
    <repository type="distribution">
      <directory>bundles/aspire</directory>
    </repository>

    <repository type="maven">
      <defaultVersion>2.2.2</defaultVersion>
      <updatePolicy>always</updatePolicy>
      <remoteRepositories>
        <remoteRepository>
          <id>stPublic</id>
          <url>http://repository.searchtechnologies.com/artifactory/simple/community-public/</url>
          <user>YOUR-REGISTERED-USERNAME</user>
          <password>YOUR-REGISTERED-PASSWORD</password>
        </remoteRepository>
      </remoteRepositories>
    </repository>

  </repositories>
 <configAdministration>
   <zookeeper libraryFolder="config/workflow-libraries" root="/aspire">
     <clientPort>1112</clientPort>
     <dataDir>config</dataDir>
     <maxConnections>60</maxConnections>
     <tickTime>2000</tickTime>
   </zookeeper>
 </configAdministration>
 <authentication>
   <type>none</type> 
 </authentication>
 <ldapConfig>
   <config>
     <server>ldap://localhost:389</server>
     <authentication>simple</authentication>
     <searchBase>dc=localhost, dc=com</searchBase>
     <group>OU=Users,OU=Group</group>
   </config>
 </ldapConfig>
 
</settings>

Auto Start Section


The <autoStart> section will automatically load applications when Aspire is initialized. It contains a simple list of application files to load, for example:

  <autoStart>
    <application config="config/application-common.xml"/>
    <application config="config/application-arc.xml"/>
    <application config="config/application-companydb.xml"/>
    <application config="config/application-rss-feeds.xml"/>
    <application config="config/application-single-pages.xml"/>
    <application config="com.searchtechnologies.appbundles:cs-rdbms-connector:1.0-SNAPSHOT">
      <properties>
        <property name="rdbmsHasDefaults">false</property>
        <property name="debug">true</property>
      </properties>
    </application>
    <!-- Workflow manager is required for 2.0 UI -->
     <application config="com.searchtechnologies.aspire:app-workflow-manager" id="1">
       <properties>
         <property name="templateFile">${appbundle.home}/data/templates.xml</property>
         <property name="libraryPath">${aspire.config.dir}/workflow-libraries</property>
         <property name="planFile"/>
         <property name="disableInternalTemplates">false</property>
         <property name="allowCustomRule">true</property>
         <property name="debug">false</property>
       </properties>
     </application>
  </autoStart>

Applications are loaded in the order specified. However, since Aspire has component-dependency checking built-in, the order of load is usually not that important.

Both Application XML Files and App Bundles

The <application> tag can launch an application either from an application XML file or an App Bundle.

  • For application XML files: The @config attribute should hold the file name of the Application XML file to load.
  • For App Bundles: The @config attribute should hold the Maven coordinates of the App Bundle to start.

Renaming Auto-Started Applications

In general, the name of the application will be taken as the "default name" as specified at the top of the application.xml file. See Configuration File Basics for more information.

However, you can specify other names for the configuration file using the @name attribute, as shown below:

   <application name="RDBConnector2" config="com.searchtechnologies.appbundles:cs-rdbms-connector:2.0>
     <properties>
       <property name="rdbmsHasDefaults">false</property>
       <property name="debug">true</property>
     </properties>
   </application>

This lets you install the same App Bundle multiple times, but with different top-level names.

Application Properties

Finally, as shown above, applications can have a nested <properties> tag which holds properties that are defined just for that application. These properties can then be used with the ${propName} substitution pattern within the application.xml file.

Repositories Section

The <repositories> tag identifies where to find component code to load into Aspire. There are two types of repositories: Distribution and Maven.

Distribution Repository

The Distribution Repository will load the component Jar files in a directory within your Aspire distribution, typically the "bundles/aspire" directory.

It is configured as follows:

   <repository type="distribution">
     <directory>bundles/aspire</directory>
   </repository>

The <directory> tag identifies the directory where the bundles can be located.

On startup, Aspire will scan through the entire directory looking for bundles to load. If at any time you add new bundles (or update bundles) in this directory, then click on "Check for Updates" on the Aspire application home page. This will cause Aspire to re-scan the directory so that the new files are available.

Maven Repository

The Maven Repository loads the component Jar files directly from Maven. The Maven Repository allows Aspire to share the same Jars as Eclipse and the Maven command-line program. Therefore, any newly 'install'ed or 'deploy'ed Jar file artifacts will be automatically available to Aspire.

It is configured as follows:

   <repository type="maven">
     <localRepository>~search/.m2/repository</localRepository>
     <defaultVersion>2.2.2</defaultVersion>
     <updatePolicy>always</updatePolicy>
     <offline>false</offline>
     <remoteRepositories>
       <remoteRepository>
         <id>stPublic</id>
         <url>http://repository.searchtechnologies.com/artifactory/simple/community-public/</url>
         <user>YOUR-REGISTERED-USERNAME</user>
         <password>YOUR-REGISTERED-PASSWORD</password>
       </remoteRepository>
     </remoteRepositories>
   </repository>

NOTE: Replace "YOUR-REGISTERED-USERNAME" and "YOUR-REGISTERED-PASSWORD" with the actual user name and password you used to register for Aspire.

The Maven Repository uses the standard APIs for accessing artifacts from Maven repositories (the same as used by the Maven program itself). It will download artifacts as necessary from any of the the remote repositories specified and store them in the local repository. It will then load the bundle Jar files directly from the local repository into Aspire.

The following options are available for the maven repository:

ElementTypeDefaultDescription
localRepositorystring(user home directory)/.m2/repository(optional) Specifies the location of the Maven local repository, where Jars will reside locally once they are downloaded from the remote repository. This is also the location where Maven "install" will install new or updated artifacts.
defaultVersionstringLATEST(Strongly Recommended) Specifies the default version for all artifacts for which no version is specified. Note that this defaults to a version of "LATEST" - but unfortunately this has some odd behavior between the local and remote repositories (it only checks the local repository if the version is available on the remote repository, and the remote repository has been "scanned").
offlinebooleanfalse(optional) Specifies if the system is "offline" - in which case the Maven repository will only ever look to the local repository for artifacts, and never the remote repositories.
remoteRepository/idstringnone(required for all remote repositories) The server identifier for the remote repository. This identifier should be the same as the identifier used for the repository as specified in the Eclipse or maven command-line Maven settings file. This is usually "stPublic".
remoteRepository/urlstringnone(required for all remote repositories) The URL where the remote repository is located
userstringnone(optional) The user name for logging into the remote repository.
passwordstringnone(optional) The password for logging into the remote repository. You can encrypt it following the instructions here.

Using Specific Versions of Bundle

If required, you can force the Maven repository to give you a specific version of a bundle if you don't specify it in the factoryName in application.xml files or in the config attribute in the autoStart section of the settings file.

Normally in Aspire, if references to Maven artifacts to not give the version, then the defaultVersion (see above) is used. However, you may add a bundleVersions section to the settings file to give more precise control over the versions of bundles loaded. The parameters are shown below:

ElementTypeDefaultDescription
bundleVersions\bundle\@groupIdStringcom.searchtechnologiesThe (optional) group id for the bundle to version
bundleVersions\bundle\@artifactIdString MANDATORY: The artifact id for the bundle to version
bundleVersions\bundle\@versionString MANDATORY: The version of the bundle to request from Maven

NOTE: If a requested bundle is not configured in the bundleVersions section, then the defaultVersion (as configured above) of that bundle will be requested.

NOTE: If the version specified is not located in Maven, an error will occur.

Example:

The following snippet will load all requested bundles at version 1.0, except the three specified, which will be loaded at the requested version

  <repository type="maven">
   <defaultVersion>1.0</defaultVersion>
   <bundleVersions>
     <bundle artifactId="aspire-tools" version="1.1"/>
     <bundle groupId="com.myCustomer" artifactId="myCustomerArtifact" version="0.1-SNAPSHOT"/>
     <bundle groupId="com.searchtechnologies" artifactId="aspire-business-rules" version="2.0"/>
   </bundleVersions>
   <remoteRepository>
     <id>stPublic</id>
     <url>http://repository.searchtechnologies.com/artifactory/simple/community-public/</url>
     <user>YOUR-REGISTERED-USERNAME</user>
     <password>YOUR-REGISTERED-PASSWORD</password>
   </remoteRepository>
 <repository>

Proxy Settings

You can configure Maven remote repositories to use a HTTP proxy for outgoing communications. This is useful when your Aspire server has restricted access to the Internet, and you want to be able to fetch bundles as normal from the configured repository. To do this add a <proxy> section to your remote repository and set the following properties:

ElementTypeDefaultDescription
hoststringnull(optional) Proxy server hostname or IP address.
portstring0(optional) Proxy server port number.
userstringnull(optional) User required for authentication against the proxy server.
passwordstringnull(optional) Password for authenticating against the proxy server. You can encrypt it following the instructions here.


Example:

     <remoteRepository>
          <id>stPublic</id>
          <url>{{RepositoryUrl}}</url>
          <user>YOUR-REGISTERED-USERNAME</user>
          <password>YOUR-REGISTERED-PASSWORD</password>
          <proxy>
              <host>127.0.0.1</host>
              <port>8888</port>
              <user>PROXY-USER</user>
              <password>PROXY-PASSWORD</password>
          </proxy>
    </remoteRepository>

Default

If no <repositories> tag is specified, a single "distribution" repository with "bundles/aspire" as the directory will be automatically specified.

Properties

Properties are specified as name/value pairs. For example:

   <properties>
    <property name="solrServer">http://localhost:8080</property>
    <property name="autoStart">false</property>
    <property name="crawlDataBase">data/crawler</property>
    <property name="ccdBase">data</property>
  </properties>

Once specified in the settings.xml file, these properties become available for use in Application XML files. Careful use of such properties will make your system configuration files portable to multiple Aspire installations without modification.

For example, you might use "http://localhost:8080" as your SOLR server on your personal laptop, but then use "http://customer.searchtechnologies.com:8983" for the production site. Using a property will allow the exact same system configuration file to be tested on one machine and then installed on another machine without modification.

Using Properties & Environment variables in Application XML Files

Properties declared in the settings.xml file can be used in application XML files with the ${propertyName} syntax. As an example:

   <component name="feed2Solr" subType="default" factoryName="aspire-post-xml">
    <postXsl>config/aspire2solr.xsl</solrXsl>
    <postUrl>${solrServer}/solr/update</postUrl>
  </component>

In the above example, the "solrServer" property was defined in the settings.xml file and then referenced with ${solrServer} in the application XML file.

This property value substitution occurs automatically on the component configurations by the Component Manager. It does not require any further intervention or programming on the part of any individual component.

The ${XXX} syntax can also be used for substitution of environment variables and Java system properties (i.e., those defined on the command line with -Dxxx=yyy). Substitution prefers properties defined in the settings.xml file. If the property is not found in the settings.xml file, the system properties are checked and if still not found, the system environment is checked. Also, in these versions, properties may be defined from other properties:

 <property name="baseDir">/home/user/aspire</property>
 <property name="configDir">${baseDir}/cfg</property> 

NOTE: Property references for properties that are not in the settings.xml file will be left as-is. This allows for other configurations that use the same syntax (specifically, the Groovy Scripting component) to continue to operate properly.

XML Property Expansion

You can also use properties to add entire XML structures to a component configuration. To achieve this, define a property containing XML in a <![CDATA[..]]> section. Then, when expanding this property, you prefix the property name with xml: and the contents of the property will be interpreted as XML and added to the structure.

For example:

 <settings>
   <properties>
     <property name="expanders"><![CDATA[<expanders><expander>${prop1}</expander><expander>two</expander></expanders>]]></property>
     <property name="prop1">Lincoln</property>
     <property name="testProp">testVal</property>
     <property name="testDoc"><![CDATA[<doc><title/></doc>]]></property>
     <property name="testDoc1"><![CDATA[<doc1><title1/></doc1>]]></property>
   </properties>
 </settings>

and

  <config>
   ${xml:expanders}
   XXX
   ${xml:testDoc}
   <expanders2>${xml:expanders}</expanders2>
   <expanders_text>${expanders}</expanders_text>
   <test>${testProp}</test>
   ${xml:testDoc1}
   YYY
 </config>

expands to

  <config>XXX<expanders2>
     <expanders>
       <expander>Lincoln</expander>
       <expander>two</expander>
     </expanders>
   </expanders2>
   <expanders_text><expanders><expander>Lincoln</expander><expander>two</expander></expanders></expanders_text>
   <test>testVal</test>YYY<expanders>
     <expander>Lincoln</expander>
     <expander>two</expander>
   </expanders>
   <doc>
     <title/>
   </doc>
   <doc1>
     <title1/>
   </doc1>
 </config>

Property Escaping (for Groovy Scripts)

If you need to insert a property into a Groovy script, assigning it to a String that contains the \ character (such as ${aspire.home} would), will cause Groovy to raise an error as it sees invalid escaped characters. To avoid this, you can prefix the property name with escape: and any \ characters in the contents of the property will be replaced with \\.

For example:

 
 <settings>
   <properties>
     <property name="file">c:\top-directory\directory\file.html</property>
   </properties>
 </settings>

and

 
 <config>
   <file>${file}</file>
   <escapefile>${escape:file}</escapefile>
   <fileattr attr="${file}">somevalue</fileattr>
   <escapefileattr escapeattr="${escape:file}">somevalue</escapefileattr>
   <cdata>
     <![CDATA[
        def a = "${file}";
     ]]>
   </cdata>
   <escapecdata>
     <![CDATA[
        def a = "${escape:file}";
     ]]>
   </escapecdata>
 </config>

expands to

 
 <config>
   <file>c:\top-directory\directory\file.html</file>
   <escapefile>c:\\top-directory\\directory\\file.html</escapefile>
   <fileattr attr="c:\top-directory\directory\file.html">somevalue</fileattr>
   <escapefileattr escapeattr="c:\\top-directory\\directory\\file.html">somevalue</escapefileattr>
   <cdata>
     <![CDATA[
       def a = "c:\top-directory\directory\file.html";                <<<< THIS LINE WOULD ERROR IN A GROOVY SCRIPT
     ]]>
   </cdata>
   <escapecdata>
     <![CDATA[
       def a = "c:\\top-directory\\directory\\file.html";
     ]]>
   </escapecdata>
 </config>

 

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