I have a large collection of different independent (stateless) web services written in Java and compiled as WAR files. I want to deploy them to a single web application server.
If the URIs handled by the services in each WAR file began with a prefix I could use as a web app name, then this would be easy. I could, for instance, have
SALES WAR FILE: contains code for the following:
GET http://example.com/sales/widgets
POST http://example.com/sales/widgets
GET http://example.com/sales/sky-hooksMARKETING WAR FILE: contains code for the following:
GET http://example.com/marketing/widgets
PUT http://example.com/marketing/sky-hooks
...in which case I would simply deploy two WAR files under the names "sales" and "marketing". However, I am not that fortunate. Instead, the URI paths handled by the components overlap. Something like this:
SALES WAR FILE: contains code for the following:
GET http://example.com/widgets/sales
POST http://example.com/widgets/sales
GET http://example.com/sky-hooks/salesMARKETING WAR FILE: contains code for the following:
GET http://example.com/widgets/marketing
PUT http://example.com/sky-hooks/marketing
My question is how (if at all) I can deploy these on a single web application server.
I am open to suggestions that require a significant amount of work. For instance, my best-so-far idea is to build services that expect a component-name prefix before the regular URI path, then pipe all incoming traffic through a different server that knows what component each URI pattern falls into and modifies the URI to add that prefix. The difficulty with this approach is that tools like Swagger that read my source code will have a mistaken idea of what the URIs look like.
Any ideas?