$schemamarkup = get_post_meta(get_the_ID(), 'schemamarkup', true); if(!empty($schemamarkup)) { echo $schemamarkup; }

How to Install JBoss 7+ on Debian Jessie 8 Linux Easy Guide

April 19, 2014 | By the+gnu+linux+evangelist.

How to Install JBoss 7 on Debian Linux

The Tutorial shows you How to Install and Getting-Started with the Latest JBoss 7.1+ Brontes Application Server for Debian Jessie 8 GNOME/Kde/Xfce/Lxde i386/Amd64 Linux Desktop.

Links to Installing Oracle Official Java JDK 7 and to Getting-Started with the JBoss 7 JEE 6 App Server on Debian Linux.

To Make the Entire Install JBoss on Debian Linux Easy to Understand and Visualize the Post Includes the Basic Screen-shots of All GUI Steps involved.

The Contents and Details are Expressly Essentials to Give Focus Only to the Essentials Instructions and Commands and Make the Tut Easier to Understand ;)

Install JBoss on Debian Linux - Featured
  1. Download Latest JBoss 7 JEE App Server

    Red-Hat JBoss 71.1 Final tar.gz
  2. Open a Terminal Window
    (Press “Enter” to Execute Commands)

    Install JBoss on Debian Linux GNOME 3 Open Terminal

    In case first see: Terminal QuickStart Guide.

  3. Double-Click on Archive to Decompress

    Extract Into: /tmp

    Install JBoss on Debian Linux GNOME Extraction
    Or from Shell:

    tar xvfz jboss-as-7*.tar.gz -C /tmp/
  4. Relocate JBoss

    1. Login as SuperUser

      su 

      If Got “User is Not in Sudoers file” then see: How to Enable sudo

    2. Relocate JBoss

      sudo chown -R root:root /tmp/jboss*
      mv /tmp/jboss* /opt/jboss-as-7/jboss-as-7
  5. How to Install Required Oracle Java JDK on Debian Linux.

    Install Oracle JDK for Debian
  6. Set User’s Env Variable and Path.

    1. Logout from SuperUser

      exit
    2. Edit User .bashrc File Settings

      nano ~/.bashrc

      Append:

      export JBOSS_HOME=/opt/jboss-as-7; export PATH=$JBOSS_HOME/bin:$PATH
    3. Load New Environment Set-Up

      bash
  7. Guide for Getting-Started with JBoss 7 App Server

    JBoss7 Quick Start on Linux