In fact I found such message before:
Configuring and looking up a simple String via JNDI in WebSphere
I want to do the “clean” way (http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/websphere/library/techarticles/0611_totapally/0611_totapally.html). Maybe I am simply too green on WebSphere, my mind is totally messed up by the article because it is showing a more complicated example.
Can someone give me a brief steps on how to configure WebSphere so that I can bind a String value in JNDI? Thanks so much
Well, assuming that what you want to store is a “configuration” element, I’d actually take the time and implement it using Resource Environment Providers as it’s a more flexible, and obviously more portable, approach.
In order to bind a String using JNDI, use “String Namespace Bindings”: http://pic.dhe.ibm.com/infocenter/wasinfo/v7r0/topic/com.ibm.websphere.nd.doc/info/ae/ae/unam_rstring_namespace.html
Edited (to add details about ResEnv):
The factory class is a class that you write, not IBM. Here’s an example for one:
(We’re assuming that
MyConfigis a simple class withget(String)andput(String, String)methods)Next, create a new Resource Environment Provider in WebSphere. For a Referenceable, put the fully-qualified class name of MyFactory as the “factory class” and the fully-qualified class name of MyConfig as the “class”.
Next, add a Resource Environment entry. Give it a JNDI name, say
myresources/test. Select the Referenceable from the dropdown box.Click “Custom Properties”, and add key-value pairs there.
Save the WebSphere configuration, restart your server and try again. Issue a JNDI lookup to
myresources/test, and you’ll get aMyConfiginstance with all the custom properties you placed there.Let us know how it went. Good luck!