(It is a recursive acronym.)
It is a system for translating documents from one format to another, then transmitting them. It was designed to be used for medical billing and claim submission using XML files. It uses XSLT and XML, and is written in Java as a J2EE application.
This application should be able to be dropped into a Servlet container like Apache Tomcat and run with little to no configuration. The system property "remitt.properties" can point at a configuration file to override default config properties which are defined inside the war file.
(In Debian or Ubuntu packaged tomcat instances, you would add
-Dremitt.properties=/path/to/my/remitt.properties
to the options passed
to tomcat in /etc/defaults/tomcat
or /etc/defaults/tomcat7
, depending on
the version you're using.)
You can also run it from source using Maven with
mvn -Dorg.mortbay.jetty.Request.maxFormContentSize=6000000 jetty:run
, or
simply mvn jetty:run
if you're not going to be testing large documents
in the test harness.
The only prerequisite for installing this software is importing the
database definitions from sql/*.sql
into your working database server.
At the moment, MySQL is the supported / preferred database server. The
remitt user should probably have all privileges on the remitt database,
but also SELECT on mysql.proc (otherwise you'll need
noAccessToProcedureBodies=true
in the JDBC URL).
One caveat is that the autodetection of tomcat's base location will result in a log directory which is not writeable.
cd /usr/share/tomcat7 ; ln -s /var/lib/tomcat7/logs .
REST services are exposed at /remitt/services/rest/service/(functionname)
and SOAP services are available through the WSDL at
/remitt/services/interface?wsdl
Caveat: CXF does not support gzip compression in the current REMITT configuration, so please disable it in your client.
The primary author is Jeff Buchbinder, and the ownership of the code resides with the FreeMED Software Foundation.