Preparing your services for ConductR
Once you have a decent understanding of what ConductR can do and how you can interact with it via the CLI, it's time to start getting you code ready to deploy into a ConductR. There's not a ton of code changes you will need to make to build out ConductR bundles. You will only need to make a couple of additions to a regular sbt project and you are in business. I'll detail these changes over the next few sections and then we can dive into getting the bookstore application up and running on ConductR.
Bundling your components for deployment
If you want to deploy your application components into ConductR, then you will need to produce a bundle for them. One of the requirements for all bundles is that they contain a bundle.conf
file. This file is essentially a manifest for your bundle, informing ConductR of the deployment requirements, such as memory, CPUs, and so on, as well as what services this bundle publishes.
When it comes to creating this necessary file...