When running an application in production mode you can override any configuration. This section covers the more common use cases.
All these additional configurations are specified using Java System properties and can be used directly if you are using one of the start scripts generated by Play.
This can b usefull.
Specifying the HTTP server address and port
You can provide both HTTP port and address. The default is to listen on port 9000
at the 0.0.0.0
address (all addresses).
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dhttp.port=1234-Dhttp.address=127.0.0.1
Note that these configuration are only provided for the default embedded Netty server.
Specifying additional JVM arguments
You can specify any JVM arguments to the start
script. Otherwise the default JVM settings will be used:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-J-Xms128M-J-Xmx512m-J-server
As a convenience you can also set memory min, max, permgen and the reserved code cache size in one go; a formula is used to
determine these values given the supplied parameter (which represents maximum memory):
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-mem 512-J-server
Specifying alternative configuration file
The default is to load the application.conf
file from the classpath. You can specify an alternative configuration file if needed:
Using -Dconfig.resource
It will search for an alternative configuration file in the application classpath (you usually provide these alternative configuration files into your application conf/
directory before packaging). Play will look into conf/
so you don’t have to add conf/
.
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dconfig.resource=prod.conf
Using -Dconfig.file
You can also specify another local configuration file not packaged into the application artifacts:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dconfig.file=/opt/conf/prod.conf
Using -Dconfig.url
You can also specify a configuration file to be loaded from any URL:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dconfig.url=http://conf.mycompany.com/conf/prod.conf
Note that you can always reference the original configuration file in a new
prod.conf
file using theinclude
directive, such as:include "application.conf" key.to.override=blah
Overriding specific configuration keys
Sometimes you don’t want to specify another complete configuration file, but just override a bunch of specific keys. You can do that by specifying then as Java System properties:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dapplication.secret=verysecretkey -Ddb.default.password=toto
Using environment variables
You can also reference environment variables from your application.conf
file:
my.key = defaultvalue
my.key = ${?MY_KEY_ENV}
Here, the override field my.key = ${?MY_KEY_ENV}
simply vanishes if there’s no value for MY_KEY_ENV
, but if you set an environment variable MY_KEY_ENV
for example, it would be used.
Changing the logback configuration file
Bundling a custom logback configuration file with your application
Create an alternative logback config file called application-logger.xml
and copy that to
You can also specify another logback configuration file via a System property. Please note that if the configuration file is not specified then play will use the default logger.xml
that comes with play in the production mode. This means that any log level settings in application.conf file will be overridden. As a good practice always specify your application-logger.xml
.
Using -Dlogger.resource
Specify another logback configuration file to be loaded from the classpath:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dlogger.resource=conf/prod-logger.xml
Using -Dlogger.file
Specify another logback configuration file to be loaded from the file system:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dlogger.file=/opt/prod/prod-logger.xml
Using -Dlogger.url
Specify another logback configuration file to be loaded from an URL:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dlogger.url=http://conf.mycompany.com/logger.xml
Changing the path of RUNNING_PID
It is possible to change the path to the file that contains the process id of the started application. Normally this file is placed in the root directory of your play project, however it is advised that you put it somewhere where it will be automatically cleared on restart, such as /var/run
:
$ /path/to/bin/<project-name>-Dpidfile.path=/var/run/play.pid
Make sure that the directory exists and that the user that runs the Play application has write permission for it.
Using this file, you can stop your application using the kill
command, for example:
$ kill $(cat /var/run/play.pid)
Next: Setting up a front end HTTP server
From:http://www.playframework.com/documentation/2.2.0/ProductionConfiguration