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Blade CLI

Build Status

The Blade CLI is a command line java tool that can be used to help bootstrap Liferay 7 module development. It is installed using a java package manager called jpm4j.

Install

In order to install blade cli tool, jpm4j much first be installed.

Using JPM

$ (sudo) jpm install com.liferay.blade.cli

OR Install from newly built jar if you build from source.

$ (sudo) jpm install -fl com.liferay.blade.cli/generated/com.liferay.blade.cli.jar

(Mac, Linux) Install Blade

For Mac, Linux you can install both jpm and blade executables with a single command:

$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/liferay/liferay-blade-cli/master/installers/global | sudo sh

Feel free to view the source of that script so you know what it is doing before you pass it to sudo :)

Once this script finishes you will have the blade command in your path.

(Windows) Install JPM then install blade

For Windows you must use the separate windows installer for jpm4j first and then install blade.

Visit the JPM4J [Windows installation](https://www.jpm4j.org/#!/md/windows) setup guide.

next install blade

$ jpm install com.liferay.blade.cli

How to Build Blade CLI Jar from Sources

Clone this repo, and then from the command line execute following command:

$ ./gradlew clean build -x check

Usage

Once you have the blade cli installed you can see the list of commands just type

$ blade

Or java -jar com.liferay.blade.cli.jar if not using JPM.

Current available commands

Create

The create command allows you to create new Liferay 7 module projects based on gradle.

$ blade create -t mvcportlet helloworld 

This will create a new helloworld portlet module project that contains an OSGi component built by a gradle script. To see all the options of the create command just run $blade create -h for all options.

Deploy

First, start Liferay 7 Portal, once it is running you can build your Liferay 7 module and deploy it

$ blade deploy build/libs/helloworld-1.0.jar

Gradle Wrapper

In Liferay 7, Gradle is now the standard build tool for many of our projects. It can be tedious to invoke the gradle wrapper if you have many nested subprojects. The gw command allows you to invoke the gradle wrapper from any directory easily.

$ blade gw deploy 

Help

Get help on a specific command

$ blade help create 

Init

Initializes a new Liferay workspace.

$ blade init my-workspace
$ cd my-workspace

Install

Installs a bundle into Liferay module framework.

$ blade install  

Migrate Theme

Migrate a plugins sdk theme to new workspace theme project

$ blade migrateTheme my-theme 

Open

Opens or imports a file or project in Liferay IDE.

$ blade open 

Samples

Liferay Blade Samples contains examples of some of the most common integration points in Liferay 7.

You can use blade to grab any of the samples easily.

This will give you the list of samples available.

$ blade samples 

This will get you the friendly url sample.

$ blade samples blade.friendlyurl 

Server

Start or stop server defined by your Liferay project

Shell

Liferay 7 has a built-in gogo shell that can be accessed with telnet client on port 11311. However, many times you just wish to be able to run a gogo command remotely from the cmdline and return the results directly to the console. Use the blade sh to do just that.

$ blade sh <gogo-command>

Some examples:

List all bundles running in the framework.

$ blade sh lb

Search for all services that provide javax.portlet.Portlet

$ blade sh services | grep javax.portlet.Portlet

Update

This command updates blade to latest version

$ blade update

Version

This command shows the current version of blade

$ blade version

Release

Blade Tools is continuously built and released on CloudBees.

Built on DEV@cloud

License

All source to this project is available under Apache 2.0 License