Setting variables for Liberty servers
You must set one or more WebSphere variables before you can use the job manager to remotely install and manage Liberty servers. You can set the variables in an administrative console, a wsadmin script, or the registerHost command. The variables specify the root directories to which to install Liberty resources and specify search paths for finding resources that are not yet registered with the job manager.
Before you begin
Liberty resources include projects, software development kits (Java runtime environments), Liberty runtimes, servers, and applications. For more information, see Liberty resources.
If you are using an administrative console, wsadmin, or the registerHost command to set values for Liberty server variables, start the job manager or the deployment manager.
About this task
You can specify values for WebSphere variables and built-in variables.
Before you can install Liberty resources using the job manager, you must set one or more WebSphere variables. The amount of configuration depends on the topology being deployed. You can set values for variables using the job manager console, deployment manager console, wsadmin, or registerHost command.
You can install Liberty resources to a working, non-shared location or to a shared location. Do not share resources that are installed to the working location.
Resources installed to a shared location can be used by Liberty servers that are installed to a working location. For example, you can configure working Liberty servers to use one or more of the following types of shared resources:- Liberty runtime
- Software development kit
- Application
During resource installation, unless there is a name conflict, the resources in the Liberty compressed file are extracted to the working root directory specified by WLP_WORKING_DIR or to the shared directory specified by WLP_SHARED_DIR.
Table 1. Liberty default variables. Specify a directory path for the nonshared working directory, at minimum. Default variables Description WLP_WORKING_DIR Specifies the installation or inventory search path for nonshared working Liberty resources. If a job submission does not specify that the installation or search directory be shared, then the job uses this variable. By default, Liberty resources are installed to the nonshared working directory that this variable defines. Specify an absolute path for this variable. Do not specify a relative path.
WLP_SHARED_DIR Specifies the installation or inventory search path for shared Liberty resources. If a job submission specifies that the installation or search directory be shared, then the job uses this variable. Specify an absolute path for this variable. Do not specify a relative path.
WLP_ADDITIONAL_DIRS (optional) Specifies additional paths to search for Liberty resources beyond the paths included in the WLP_SHARED_DIR and WLP_WORKING_DIR variables. You must configure the additional search paths for Liberty resources to:- Search for previously installed software development kits that are managed separately from the job manager.
- Search for any server resources that are not installed in the default working and shared directories. For example, you might define different installation locations relative to the home directories of several different users. For more information, see the descriptions of the HOME and USER variables.
Specify an absolute path for this variable. Do not specify a relative path.
When you use the job manager to remotely install and manage Liberty servers, you can set the following built-in variables to customize installation locations and Liberty configuration files based on operating system home directory, operating system user, host name, and project membership:
- HOME
- Contains the home directory of the operating system user name that is used to submit an
Install Liberty profile resources job. You can use the HOME variable to set
up a working directory that is relative to the home directory of the submitting user; for
example:
WLP_WORKING_DIR=${HOME}/working
- USER
- Contains the name of the operating system user that is used to submit an Install
Liberty profile resources job. You can use the USER variable to set up a working
directory for each user, relative to a global directory; for
example:
WLP_WORKING_DIR=/working/${USER}
When using the HOME variable or the USER variable to customize the installation location, you must configure the WLP_ADDITIONAL_DIRS variable with the specific directories for each user; for example:WLP_ADDITIONAL_DIRS=/usr/home/user1;/usr/home/user2
If you do not include the directories in the WLP_ADDITIONAL_DIRS variable, inventory jobs do not locate the associated Liberty resources on the target hosts.
- HOSTNAME
- Contains the configured host name of the target host where an Install Liberty profile
resources job is run. You can use the HOSTNAME variable in the server
bootstrap.properties file; for
example:
hostname=${HOSTNAME}
You can then use the hostname variable in the server configuration file, server.xml; for example:<httpEndpoint host="${hostname}" httpPort="9081" httpsPort="9444" id="defaultHttpEndpoint"/>
- CURRENT_PROJECT
- Contains the name of the project that is included in the Liberty resources compressed file.
Procedure
You can set WebSphere variables for all target hosts at a specified scope or set WebSphere variables at a target host level.
Results
After you save the changes, the changes are viewable in the list of variables on a console WebSphere variables page.

What to do next
You can now submit a job that installs resources from a Liberty resources compressed file, as well as an inventory job that searches for previously existing Liberty resources.
- You can choose to override the values of Liberty variables on individual hosts by changing the
target properties for each host. First, define the appropriate default WebSphere variables at a
higher-level scope, for
example:
WLP_SHARED_DIR=/shared WLP_WORKING_DIR=/working WLP_ADDITIONAL_DIRS=...
Then, override the values of these variables for each target that differs from the default value. For example, if most of your hosts are on AIX, HP-UX, Linux or Solaris operating systems, with some Windows hosts in your environment, after registering each Windows host, you can add the following host properties:WLP_SHARED_DIR=c:/shared WLP_WORKING_DIR=c:/working
- You can edit target host specific properties to substitute a user-defined variable for
individual targets. Substituting a user-defined variable is useful when you have multiple network
interfaces on each target, and you want to specify which one to use for each target. You can define
this variable in a server bootstrap.properties file; for example:
hostname=${hostname.interface1}
For each target, you must define the actual value of the user-defined variable in the target host specific properties of that host. For example, for host1, define the value of the interface as hostname.interface1=host1.xyz.com and define host2 as hostname.interface1=host2.xyz.com.