Google Code offered in: English - Español - 日本語 - 한국어 - Português - Pусский - 中文(简体) - 中文(繁體)
The App Engine Java SDK includes a development web server for testing your application on your computer. The development web server simulates the App Engine Java runtime environment and all of its services, including the datastore. The Google Plugin for Eclipse can run the server in the Eclipse debugger. You can also run the development server from the command line.
If you are using Eclipse and the Google Plugin, you can run the development web server in the Eclipse debugger. To run the server with the default configuration, select the Run menu, Debug As > Web Application. For more control over how the server is started, such as which port the server uses, create a new debug configuration using the configuration type "Web Application". For more information, see Google Eclipse Plugin.
Note: When you start the development server from within Eclipse using the Google Plugin for Eclipse (discussed later), the server uses the port 8888
by default. When you start the server using the dev_appserver
command described below, it uses the port 8080
by default. You can change the port number used by the dev_appserver
command by providing the --port=...
argument.
You can also run the development web server from a command prompt. The command to run is in the SDK's appengine-java-sdk/bin/
directory.
If you are using Windows, the command is as follows:
appengine-java-sdk\bin\dev_appserver.cmd [options] war-location
If you are using Mac OS X or Linux, the command is as follows:
appengine-java-sdk/bin/dev_appserver.sh [options] war-location
The command takes the location of your application's WAR directory as an argument.
To stop the web server, press Control-C (on Windows, Mac or Linux).
These commands are OS-specific wrapper scripts that run the Java class com.google.appengine.tools.KickStart
in appengine-java-sdk/lib/appengine-tools-api.jar
.
The development web server simulates the App Engine datastore using a file on your computer. The file is named local_db.bin
, and it is created in your application's WAR directory, in the WEB-INF/appengine-generated/
directory. (It is not uploaded with your application.)
This file persists between invocations of the web server, so data you store will still be available the next time you run the web server. To clear the contents of the datastore, shut down the server, then delete this file.
As described in Datastore Index Configuration, the development server can generate configuration for datastore indexes needed by your application, determined from the queries it performs while you are testing it. This generates a file named datastore-indexes-auto.xml
in the directory WEB-INF/appengine-generated/
in the WAR. To disable automatic index configuration, create or edit the datastore-indexes.xml
file in the WEB-INF/
directory, using the attribute autoGenerate="false"
for the <datastore-indexes>
element. See Datastore Index Configuration for more information.
You can configure the local datastore to simulate the consistency model of the High Replication Datastore. This will give you a good idea how an application configured to use the High Replication Datastore will operate in production.
To enable the High Replication consistency model, set the datastore.default_high_rep_job_policy_unapplied_job_pct
system property with a value corresponding to the amount of eventual consistency you want your application to see.
-Ddatastore.default_high_rep_job_policy_unapplied_job_pct=20
If you're using the Google Plugin for Eclipse, the default setting for new projects is to use the High Replication consistency model. To adjust this setting, select Run > Run Configurations. Select your app under Web Application. Select the App Engine tab. Then make changes to Local Datastore Settings:
If you're using Ant you can pass this flag as an argument to the dev_appserver macro.
<target name="dev_appserver"> <dev_appserver war="${war.dir}" port="${http.port}"> <options> <arg value="--jvm_flag=-Ddatastore.default_high_rep_job_policy_unapplied_job_pct=20"/> </options> </dev_appserver> </target>
The development web server simulates Google Accounts with its own sign-in and sign-out pages. While running under the development web server, the methods that generate sign-in and sign-out URLs return URLs for /_ah/login
and /_ah/logout
on the local server.
The development sign-in page includes a form where you can enter an email address. Your session uses whatever email address you enter as the active user.
To have the application believe that the logged-in user is an administrator, check the "Sign in as Administrator" checkbox on the form.
When your application uses the URL fetch API to make an HTTP request, the development web server makes the request directly from your computer. The behavior may differ from when your application runs on App Engine if you use a proxy server for accessing websites.
The development web server includes a console web application. With the console you can browse the local datastore.
To access the console, visit the URL /_ah/admin
on your server: http://localhost:8080/_ah/admin
The development server command supports the following command-line arguments:
--port=...
The port number to use for the server. Default is 8080
.
--address=...
The host address to use for the server. You may need to set this to be able to access the development server from another computer on your network. An address of 0.0.0.0
allows both localhost access and hostname access. Default is localhost
.
--sdk_root=...
A path to the App Engine Java SDK, if different from the location of the tool.
--disable_update_check
If given, the development server will not contact App Engine to check for the availability of a new release of the SDK. By default, the server checks for a new version on start-up, and prints a message if a new version is available.
--help
Prints a helpful message then quits.