Update - see here.
One of the more complicated aspects for a developer using BizTalk 2004 is the large
number of steps required during the edit/run/debug cycle. Since
your BizTalk artifacts can`t be run "in place" (that is, where they were compiled)
but must instead be deployed to a local (or remote) BizTalk server, life can get quite
complicated.
If you have done much BizTalk 2004 development, you know the routine quite well at
this point. If you have orchestrations, schemas, transforms, pipelines, and
(say) C# components all partitioned into separate assemblies - and you have a
number of orchestrations with "Call/Start Orchestration" shape dependencies that introduce
specific start/stop-ordering - you can spend a lot of
time doing the whole stop/unenlist/undeploy/redeploy/enlist/start/bounce BizTalk routine.
Worse, you might not get it right - which can lead to hours spent debugging problems
(over the course of your project) that don`t really exist.
To alleviate this problem, it can be quite helpful to use a tool like NAnt to
coordinate the "update my BizTalk server" process that must occur after each build. (NAnt
is a large topic - suffice to say it is an Xml-driven software build system.) As
long as your NAnt build file (and BizTalk bindings file) are kept up to date, the
whole process can be reduced to:
-
Comple your solution (which might have multiple orchestrations, schemas, transforms,
pipelines, and external components in separate assemblies)
-
Choose "Deploy to BizTalk" from your Tools menu.
-
Wait 60 seconds or so, enjoying the feeling that you have a consistent & reliable
deployment mechanism.
In addition, you can of course use NAnt to kick off full unattended builds for nightly
builds or continuous integration systems (like Cruise
Control). Since Visual Studio.NET
is the only
supported way to build BizTalk projects - despite that tempting XSharpP.exe file
sitting in your BizTalk installation directory - this part of your NAnt build file
must defer to calling devenv.exe in command-line fashion. (A
short "getting started" for NAnt & directions for using with a VS external tool
can be found here.)
So, how about a sample that shows using NAnt to coordinate a reasonably complex deployment
of inter-related BizTalk projects Available for
download is a zip of a BizTalk solution that contains the following projects:
-
BizTalkSample.Components
(a C# project, with a class called from orchestration)
-
BizTalkSample.Orchestrations
(that contains two orchestrations, one which calls the other via a Call Orchestration
shape)
-
BizTalkSample.Pipelines
(a send and receive pipeline, which are not needed but included to illustrate the
deployment aspects)
-
BizTalkSample.Schemas
(which includes two schemas)
-
BizTalkSample.Transforms
(which contains a single transform used by one of the orchestrations)
The item I hope you will find most interesting,
however, is a file called BizTalkSample.sln.build. This
is a NAnt build file that has a deployment
target which captures the following dependency tree (only partially blown out
here, for brevity - but this no doubt seems familiar to you if you`ve been using Biztalk
2004 for awhile…)
Deploy
Deploy Schemas
Undeploy Schemas
Undeploy Orchestrations
Unenlist Orchestrations
Stop Orchestration
Undeploy Transforms
Undeploy Orchestrations
Deploy Components
Deploy Pipelines
Undeploy Pipelines
Undeploy Orchestrations
Deploy Transforms
Undeploy Transforms
Undeploy Orchestrations
Deploy Orchestrations
Bounce BizTalk
Perhaps more illustrative is the output of the deployment itself - a sample of which
can be seen here. Note
that the NAnt script relies heavily on the EnlistOrch.vbs and StopOrch.vbs script
files that ship as samples with BizTalk 2004, as well as the BTSDeploy command line
utility.
The BizTalkSample.sln.build script included in the download should represent
a BizTalk project organization of sufficient complexity to act as a template for your
own projects. You will want to maintain
the list (and correct ordering!) of the names of your orchestrations within the build
targets for "deploy.orchestrations" and "unenlist.orchestrations" (this isn`t deriveable
automatically…)
Note that the build script relies on a set of naming conventions that will be evident
once you spend some time with it - namely, that directory names correspond to assembly
names. In addition, the standard "Development"
and "Deployment" configurations in BizTalk projects have been replaced with "Debug"
and "Release", in order to not create inconsistencies with standard .NET projects
(and allow for one "Configuration" property within the build script.) This
replacement was accomplished with a file-level search/replace.
There is probably room for more sophistication in this build file. It
takes a somewhat pessimistic view of what must happen for each edit/run/debug/deploy
cycle, but I`ve found that despite the 60 seconds spent executing the script, your
net productivity gain will be quite high given the time you won`t waste
trying to figure out what aspect of your deployment isn`t correct. Leave
comments with suggestions for improvements, if you like.