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Managing projects in Decision Central

Red Hat Decision Manager 7.1

Red Hat Customer Content Services

Abstract

This document describes how to manage new, sample, or imported projects in Decision Central, and how to utilize multiple branches for project modifications.

Preface

As a process administrator, you can use Decision Central in Red Hat Decision Manager to manage new, sample, and imported projects on a single or multiple branches.

Prerequisites

Chapter 1. Red Hat Decision Manager projects

Red Hat Decision Manager projects contain the business assets that you develop in Red Hat Decision Manager and are assigned to a space (for example, MyProject within MySpace). Projects also contain configuration files such as a Maven project object model file (pom.xml), which contains build, environment, and other information about the project, and a KIE module descriptor file (kmodule.xml), which contains the KIE Base and KIE Session configurations for the assets in the project.

Chapter 2. Modifying existing projects in Decision Central

Decision Central includes a number of sample projects that you can use to get familiar with the product and its features. The sample projects have been designed and created to demonstrate a variety of business scenarios. You can modify the sample projects to meet your specific business needs. For example, Red Hat Decision Manager 7.1 contains the Mortgages sample project, which consists of predefined data objects, guided decision tables, guided rules, forms, and a business process. You can edit the sample to refine your business process.

If none of the existing Decision Central project samples align with your requirements, you can create a new project or import one from a Git repository. See Chapter 4, Importing projects from Git repositories. You can import any other project from Git. For example, a project that was developed in another Decision Central instance.

Chapter 3. Creating a project

A project can contain data models, business processes, business rules, and forms that are specific to your project’s requirements. When you create a project in Decision Central it is added to the Git repository that is connected to your Red Hat Decision Manager installation.

Procedure

  1. Log in to Decision Central and click MenuDesignProjects.
  2. Click Add Project.
  3. Type anyName in the Name field of the Add Project window and click Add. Where anyName is any name that you want to name the new project.

    Figure 3.1. Add the anyName project

    Adding the `anyName` project window

The Assets view of the project opens when you successfully create the project.

3.1. Modifying the Mortgages sample project

The Mortgages sample project consists of predefined data objects, guided decision tables, guided rules, forms, and a business process. Using the sample project provides a quick way to get acclimated with Red Hat Decision Manager. In a real business scenario, you would create all of the assets by providing data that is specific to your business requirements.

Procedure

Navigate to the Mortgages sample project to view the predefined assets.

  1. Log in to Decision Central and click MenuDesignProjects.
  2. Click dots in the upper-right corner of the screen and select Try Samples.
  3. Select Mortgages and click Ok. The Assets view of the project opens.
  4. Click on an asset that you want to modify. All of the assets can be edited to meet your project requirements.

Chapter 4. Importing projects from Git repositories

Git is a distributed version control system. It implements revisions as commit objects. When you save your changes to a repository, a new commit object in the Git repository is created.

Decision Central uses Git to store project data, including assets such as rules and processes. When you create a project in Decision Central, it is added to a Git repository that is connected to Decision Central. If you have projects in Git repositories, you can import those projects into the Decision Central Git repository through Decision Central spaces.

Prerequisites

  • Red Hat Decision Manager projects exist in an external Git repository.
  • Credentials required for read access to that external Git repository are available.

Procedure

  1. In Decision Central, click MenuDesignProjects.
  2. Select or create the space into which you want to import the projects. The default space is mySpace.
  3. Click dots on the right side of the screen and select Import Project.
  4. In the Import Project window, enter the URL and credentials for the Git repository that contains the project that you want to import and click Import. The project is added to the Decision Central Git repository and is available in the created or default space.

Chapter 5. Revising project versions

You can revise the version number of a project in Red Hat Decision Manager before you build and deploy a new instance of the project. Creating a new version of a project preserves the old version in case there is a problem with the new one and you need to revert back.

Prerequisites

The Decision Server is deployed and connected to the Decision Central.

Procedure

  1. Log in to Decision Central and click MenuDesignProjects.
  2. Click on the project you want to deploy, for example Mortgages.
  3. Click Deploy.

    • If there is no container with the project name, a container with default values is automatically created.
    • If an older version of the project is already deployed, go to the project settings and change the project version. When finished, save the change and click Deploy. This will deploy a new version of the same project with the latest changes in place, alongside the older version(s).
  4. To verify the deployment, click MenuManageProcess Definitions, and click btn refresh .
  5. Click dots in the Actions column and select Start to start a new instance of the process.

Chapter 6. Multiple branches in Decision Central

Multiple branch support in Decision Central provides the ability to create a new branch based on an existing one, including all of its assets. All new, imported, and sample projects open in the default master branch. You can create as many branches as you need and can work on multiple branches interchangeably without impacting the original project on the master branch.

Red Hat Decision Manager 7.1 includes support for persisting branches, which means that Decision Central remembers the last branch used and will open in that branch when you log back in.

6.1. Creating branches

You can create new branches in Decision Central and name them whatever you like. Initially, you will only have the default master branch. When you create a new branch for a project, you are making a copy of the selected branch and all of its assets. You can make changes to the project on the new branch without impacting the original master branch version.

Procedure

  1. Log in to Decision Central and click MenuDesignProjects.
  2. Click on the project to create the new branch, for example the Mortgages sample project.
  3. Click masterAdd Branch.

    Figure 6.1. Create the new branch menu

    Creating the new branch menu
  4. Type testBranch1 in the Name field and select master in the From field of the Add Branch window. Where testBranch1 is any name that you want to name the new branch.
  5. Select the branch that will be the base for the new branch from the From pull-down menu. This can be any existing branch.
  6. Click Add.

    Figure 6.2. Add the new branch window

    Adding the new branch testBranch1

After adding the new branch, you will be redirected to it, and it will contain all of the assets that you had in your project in the master branch.

6.2. Selecting branches

You can switch between branches to make modifications to project assets and test the revised functionality.

Procedure

  1. Click on the current branch name menu and select the desired project branch.

    Figure 6.3. Select a branch menu

    Selecting a branch menu

After selecting the branch, you are redirected to that branch containing the project and all of the assets that you had defined.

6.3. Deleting branches

You can delete any branch except for the master branch. Decision Central does not allow you to delete the master branch to avoid corrupting your environment. You must be in any branch other than master for the following procedure to work.

Procedure

  1. Click dots in the upper-right corner of the screen and select Delete Branch.

    Figure 6.4. Deleting a branch menu

    Delete a branch menu
  2. Input the branch name to be deleted in the Delete Branch window and click Delete Branch.

6.4. Building and deploying projects

After your project is developed, you can build the project from the specified branch in Decision Central and deploy it to the configured Decision Server.

Procedure

  1. In Decision Central, go to MenuDesignProjects and click the project name.
  2. In the upper-right corner, click Build and then Deploy to build the project and deploy it to Decision Server. If the build fails, address any problems described in the Alerts panel at the bottom of the screen. For more information about deploying projects, see Packaging and deploying a Red Hat Decision Manager project.

Appendix A. Versioning information

Documentation last updated on Wednesday, March 27, 2019.

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