Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Jquery conflict in Liferay
For this i have done more 8-hours of investigation and finally got the solution.
I have written noConflict(); for my custom Jquery version and it start working.
Please add following line in {YOUR-THEME}/javascript/javascript.js
var $ = $.noConflict(true);
This solves my problem and both Jquery start working.......
Thursday, July 22, 2010
CAS Single Sign On (SSO) integration with Liferay
Open Command Prompt and type given below command
keytool -genkey -alias tomcat -keypass changeit -keyalg RSA
Enter keystore password: changeit
What is your first and last name?
[Unknown]: localhost
What is the name of your organizational unit?
[Unknown]: localhost
What is the name of your organization?
[Unknown]:
What is the name of your City or Locality?
[Unknown]:
What is the name of your State or Province?
[Unknown]:
What is the two-letter country code for this unit?
[Unknown]:
Is CN=localhost, OU=localhost, O=Unknown, L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown correct?
[no]: yes
keytool -export -alias tomcat -keypass changeit -file D:\liferay5.2.3\server.crt
Enter keystore password: changeit
Certificate stored in file D:\liferay5.2.3\server.crt
keytool -import -file D:\liferay5.2.3\server.crt -keypass changeit -keystore %JAVA_HOME%\jre\lib\security\cacerts
Enter keystore password: changeit
Owner: CN=localhost, OU=localhost, O=Unknown, L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown
Issuer: CN=localhost, OU=localhost, O=Unknown, L=Unknown, ST=Unknown, C=Unknown
Serial number: 462067d8
Valid from: Fri Apr 13 15:39:36 HST 2010 until: Thu Jul 12 15:39:36 HST 2010
Certificate fingerprints:
MD5: CC:3B:FB:FB:AE:12:AD:FB:3E:D 5:98:CB:2E:3B:0A:AD
SHA1: A1:16:80:68:39:C7:58:EA:2F:48:59:AA:1D:73:5F:56:78:CE:A4:CE
Trust this certificate? [no]: yes
Certificate was added to keystore
Steps for ApacheTomcat Server
Remove comments from server.xml file for HTTPS request which runs on port no 8443.
keystorePass="changeit" truststoreFile="C:/Program Files/Java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/security/cacerts" />
Setting up CAS server
1. Download the CAS Server and find the war file e.g. \cas-server-3.2.1\modules\cas-server-webapp-3.2.1.war
2. Start the Apache Tomcat server. Deploy the war file (cas-server-webapp-3.2.1.war) to the Tomcat’s webapps folder and rename it. e.g. C:\apache-tomcat-6.0.14\webapps\cas-web
3. Now that CAS is deployed you should have an unpacked directory in your webapps folder e.g. C:\apache-tomcat-6.0.14\webapps\cas-web
4. Restart tomcat and log in with the username and password at the url https://localhost:8443/cas-web/login
Setting up Liferay
1. Create system-ext.properties (webapps\ROOT\WEB_INF\classes)
2. Open system-ext.properties and enter and Save it.
com.liferay.filters.sso.cas.CASFilter=true
3. Open portal-ext.properties and enter and Save it.
auto.login.hooks=com.liferay.portal.security.auth.BasicAutoLogin
auto.login.hooks=com.liferay.portal.security.auth.BasicAutoLogin,com.liferay.portal.security.auth.CASAutoLogin
4. Login as administrator and go to control panel->settings->Authentication->CAS
5. Give Login URL: https://localhost:8443/cas-web/login
6. Give Logout URL: https://localhost:8443/cas-web/logout?http://localhost:8080/c/portal/login
7. Give Server Name: localhost:8080
8. Give Service URL: http://localhost:8080/c/portal/login
9. Give Validate URL: https://localhost:8443/cas-web/proxyValidate
10. Save it
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Performance Tuning in Liferay
Once you have your portal up and running, you may find a need to tune it for performance, especially if your site winds up generating more traffic than you'd anticipated. There are some definite steps you can take with regard to improving Liferay's performance.
Memory
Memory is one of the first things to look at when you want to optimize performance. If you have any disk swapping, that will have a serious impact on performance. Make sure that your server has an optimal amount of memory and that your JVM is tuned to use it. There are three basic JVM command switches that control the amount of memory in the Java heap.
-Xms
-Xmx
-XX:MaxPermSize
These three settings control the amount of memory available to the JVM initially, the maximum amount of memory into which the JVM can grow, and the separate area of the heap called Permanent Generation space. The first two settings should be set to the same value. This prevents the JVM from having to reallocate memory if the application needs more. Setting them to the same value causes the JVM to be created up front with the maximum amount of memory you want to give it.
-Xms1024m -Xmx1024m -XX:MaxPermSize=128m
This is perfectly reasonable for a moderately sized machine or a developer machine. These settings give the JVM 1024MB for its regular heap size and have a Perm-Gen space of 128MB. If, however, you have Liferay on a server with 4GB of RAM and you are having performance problems, the first thing you might want to look at is increasing the memory available to the JVM. You will be able to tell if memory is a problem by running a profiler (such as Jprobe, YourKit, or the NetBeans profiler) on the server. If you see Garbage Collection (GC) running frequently, you will definitely wantto increase the amount of memory available to the JVM.
Note that there is a law of diminishing returns on memory, especially with 64 bit systems. These systems allow you to create very large JVMs, but the larger the JVM, the more time it takes for garbage collection to take place. For this reason, you probably won't want to create JVMs of more than 2 GB in size. To take advantage of higher amounts of memory on a single system, run multiple JVMs of Liferay instead. Issues with PermGen space can also affect performance. PermGen space contains long-lived classes, anonymous classes and interned Strings. Hibernate, in particular—which Liferay uses extensively—has been known to make use of PermGen space. If you increase the amount of memory available to the JVM, you may want to increase the amount of PermGen space accordingly.
Garbage Collection
As the system runs, various Java objects are created. Some of these objects are long-lived, and some are not. The ones that are not become de-referenced, which means that the JVM no longer has a link to them because they have ceased to be useful. These may be variables that were used for methods which have already returned their values, objects retrieved from the database for a user that is no longer logged on, or a host of other things. These objects sit in memory and fill up the heap space until the JVM decides it's time to clean them up. Normally, when garbage collection (GC) runs, it stops all processing in the JVM while it goes through the heap looking for dead objects. Once it finds them, it frees up the memory they were taking up, and then processing can continue. If this happens in a server environment, it can slow down the processing of requests, as all processing comes to a halt while GC is happening.
There are some JVM switches that you can enable which can reduce the of time processing is halted while garbage collecting happens. These can improve the performance of your Liferay installation if applied properly. As always, you will need to use a profiler to monitor garbage collection during a load test to tune the numbers properly for your server hardware, operating system, and application server. The Java heap is divided into sections for the young generation, the old generation, and the permanent generation. The young generation is further divided into three sections: Eden, which is where new objects are created, and two “survivor spaces,” which we can call the From and To spaces. Garbage collection occurs in stages. Generally, it is more frequently done in the young generation, less frequently done in the old generation, and even less frequently done in the permanent generation, where long-lived objects reside. When garbage collection runs in the young generation, Eden is swept for objects which are no longer referenced. Those that are still around are moved to the “To” survivor space, and the “From” space is then swept. Any other objects in that space which still have references to them are moved to the “To” space, and the “From” space is then cleared out altogether. After this, the “From” and the “To” spaces swap roles, and processing is freed up again until the next time the JVM determines that garbage collection needs to run.
After a predetermined number of “generations” of garbage collection, surviving objects may be moved to the old generation. Similarly, after a predetermined number of “generations” of garbage collection in the old generation, surviving objects may be moved to the permanent generation.
By default, the JDK uses a serial garbage collector to achieve this. This works very well for a short-lived desktop Java application, but is not necessarily the best performer for a server-based application like Liferay. For this reason, you may wish to switch to the Concurrent Mark-Sweep (CMS) collector.
Rather than halting application processing altogether, this garbage collector makes one short pause in application execution to mark objects directly reachable from the application code. Then it allows the application to run while it marks all objects which are reachable from the set it marked. Finally, it adds another phase the remark phase which finalizes marking by revisiting any objects modified while the application was running. It then sweeps through and garbage collects. This has the effect of greatly reducing the amount of time that execution needs to be halted in order to clean out dead objects. Just about every aspect of the way memory management works in Java can be tuned. In your profiling, you may want to experiment with some of the following settings to see if any of them can increase your performance.
NewSize, MaxNewSize: The initial size and the maximum size of the New or Young Generation.
+UseParNewGC: Causes garbage collection to happen in parallel, using multiple CPUs. This decreases garbage collection overhead and increases application throughput.
+UseConcMarkSweepGC: Use the Concurrent Mark-Sweep Garbage Collector. This uses shorter garbage collection pauses, and is good for applications that have a relatively large set of long-lived data, and that run on machines with two or more processors, such as web servers.
+CMSParallelRemarkEnabled: For the CMS GC, enables the garbage collector to use multiple threads during the CMS remark phase. This decreases the pauses during this phase.
ServivorRatio: Controls the size of the two survivor spaces. It's a ratio between the survivor space size and Eden. The default is 25. There's not much bang for the buck here, but it may need to be adjusted.
ParallelGCThreads: The number of threads to use for parallel garbage collection. Should be equal to the number of CPU cores in your server. A sample configuration using the above parameters might look something like this:
JAVA_OPTS="$JAVA_OPTS -XX:NewSize=700m -XX:MaxNewSize=700m -Xms2048m
-Xmx2048m -XX:MaxPermSize=128m -XX:+UseParNewGC -XX:+UseConcMarkSweepGC -XX:
+CMSParallelRemarkEnabled -XX:SurvivorRatio=20 -XX:ParallelGCThreads=8"
Properties File Changes
There are also some changes you can make to your portal-ext.properties file once you are in a production environment. Set the following to false to disable checking the last modified date on server side
CSS and JavaScript.
last.modified.check=false
Set this property to true to load the theme's merged CSS files for faster loading for production. By default it is set to false for easier debugging for development. You can also disable fast loading by setting the URL parameter css_fast_load to 0.
theme.css.fast.load=true
Set this property to true to load the combined JavaScript files from the property javascript.files into one compacted file for faster loading for production. By default it is set to false for easier debugging for development. You can also disable fast loading by setting the URL parameter js_fast_load to 0.
javascript.fast.load=true
Servlet Filters
Liferay comes by default with 17 servlet filters enabled and running. It is likely that for your installation, you don't need them all. To disable a servlet filter, simply comment it out of your web.xml file. If there is a feature supported by a servlet filter that you know you are not using, you can comment it out as well to achieve some performance gains. For example, if you are not using CAS for single sign-on, comment out the CAS Filter. If you are not using NTLM for single sign-ons, comment out the Ntlm Filter. If you are not using the Virtual Hosting for Communities feature, comment out the Virtual Host Filter. The fewer servlet filters you are running, the less processing power is needed for each request.
Portlets
Liferay comes pre-bundled with many portlets which contain a lot of functionality, but not every web site that is running on Liferay needs to use them all. In portlet. xml and liferay-portlet.xml, comment out the ones you are not using. While having a loan calculator, analog clock, or game of hangman available for your users to add to pages is nice, those portlets may be taking up resources that are needed by custom portlets you have written for your site. If you are having performance problems, commenting out some of the unused portlets may give you the performance boost you need.
Read-Writer Database Configuration
Liferay 5.2.x allows you to use two different data sources for reading and writing. This enables you to split your database infrastructure into two sets: one that is optimized for reading and one that is optimized for writing. Since all major databases support replication in one form or another, you can then use your database vendor's replication mechanism to keep the databases in sync in a much faster manner than if you had a single data source which handled everything. Enabling a read-writer database is simple. In your portal-ext.properties file, configuretwo different data sources for Liferay to use, one for reading, and one for writing:
jdbc.read.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.read.url=jdbc:mysql://dbread.com/lportal?useUnicode=true& \characterEncoding=UTF-8&useFastDateParsing=false
jdbc.read.username=
jdbc.read.password=
jdbc.write.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.
jdbc.write.url=jdbc:mysql://dbwrite.com/lportal?useUnicode=true& \characterEncoding=UTF-8&useFastDateParsing=false
jdbc.write.username=
jdbc.write.password=
Of course, specify the user name and password to your database in the above configuration. After this, enable the read-writer database configuration by uncommenting the Spring configuration file which enables it in your spring.configs property (line to uncomment is in bold:
spring.configs=\
META-INF/base-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/hibernate-spring.xml,\
META-INF/infrastructure-spring.xml,\
META-INF/management-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/util-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/editor-spring.xml,\
META-INF/jcr-spring.xml,\
META-INF/messaging-spring.xml,\
META-INF/scheduler-spring.xml,\
META-INF/search-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/counter-spring.xml,\
META-INF/document-library-spring.xml,\
META-INF/lock-spring.xml,\
META-INF/mail-spring.xml,\
META-INF/portal-spring.xml,\
META-INF/portlet-container-spring.xml,\
META-INF/wsrp-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/mirage-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/dynamic-data-source-spring.xml,\
#META-INF/shard-data-source-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/ext-spring.xml
The next time you restart Liferay, it will now use the two data sources you have defined. Be sure to make sure that you have correctly set up your two databases for replication before starting Liferay.
Database Sharding
Liferay starting with version 5.2.3 supports database sharding for different portal instances. Sharding is a term used to describe an extremely high scalability configuration for systems with massive amounts of users. In diagrams, a database is normally pictured as a cylinder. Instead, picture it as a glass bottle full of data. Now take that bottle and smash it onto a concrete sidewalk. There will be shards of glass everywhere. If that bottle were a database, each shard now is a database, with a subset of the data in each shard. This allows you to split up your database by various types of data that might be in it. For example, some implementations of sharding a database split up the users: those with last names beginning with A to D go in one database; E to I go in another;etc. When users log in, they are directed to the instance of the application that is connected to the database that corresponds to their last names. In this manner, processing is split up evenly, and the amount of data the application needs to sort through is reduced.
By default, Liferay allows you to support sharding through different portal instances, using the round robin shard selector. This is a class which serves as the default algorithm for sharding in Liferay. Using this algorithm, Liferay will select from several different portal instances and evenly distribute the data across them. Of course, if you wish to have your developers implement your own sharding algorithm, you can do that. You can select which algorithm is active via the portal-ext.-properties file:
shard.selector=com.liferay.portal.dao.shard.RoundRobinShardSelector
#shard.selector=com.liferay.portal.dao.shard.ManualShardSelector
#shard.selector=[your implementation here]
Enabling sharding is easy. You will need to make sure you are using Liferay's data source implementation instead of your application server's. Set your various database shards in your portal-ext.properties file this way:
jdbc.default.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.default.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/lportal?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF-8&useFastDateParsing=false
jdbc.default.username=
jdbc.default.password=
jdbc.one.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.one.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/lportal1?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF-8&useFastDateParsing=false
jdbc.one.username=
jdbc.one.password=
jdbc.two.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.two.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/lportal2?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF-8&useFastDateParsing=false
jdbc.two.username=
jdbc.two.password=
shard.available.names=default,one,two
Once you do this, you can set up your DNS so that several domain names point to your Liferay installation (e.g., abc1.com, abc2.com, abc3.com). Next, go to the Control Panel and click Portal Instances in the Server category. Create two to three instances bound to the DNS names you have configured.
If you are using the RoundRobinShardSelector class, Liferay will automatically enter data into each instance one by one, automatically. If you are using the Manu-alShardSelector class, you will have to specify a shard for each instance using the UI.
The last thing you will need to do is modify the spring.configs section of your portal-ext.properties file to enable the sharding configuration, which by default is commented out. To do this, your spring.configs should look like this (modified section is in bold):
spring.configs=\
META-INF/base-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/hibernate-spring.xml,\
META-INF/infrastructure-spring.xml,\
META-INF/management-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/util-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/editor-spring.xml,\
META-INF/jcr-spring.xml,\
META-INF/messaging-spring.xml,\
META-INF/scheduler-spring.xml,\
META-INF/search-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/counter-spring.xml,\
META-INF/document-library-spring.xml,\
META-INF/lock-spring.xml,\
META-INF/mail-spring.xml,\
META-INF/portal-spring.xml,\
META-INF/portlet-container-spring.xml,\
META-INF/wsrp-spring.xml,\
\
META-INF/mirage-spring.xml,\
\
#META-INF/dynamic-data-source-spring.xml,\
META-INF/shard-data-source-spring.xml,\
\
That's all there is to it. Your system is now set up for sharding.