Sanjaya Karunasena wrote:
On Tuesday 09 October 2007, Kaushalye Kapuruge wrote:
Deepal jayasinghe wrote:
Kaushalye Kapuruge wrote:
Samisa Abeysinghe wrote:
Hi All,
At the moment, we place all our stuff in the repo. Given the repo
location, one can find the axis2.xml, services and modules folders etc.
However, I think that this is quite limiting and inflexible at
times. Say you want to have two different deployments with different
configurations, but with the same services; or you want the same
modules but with different services, so you want to deploy different
servers. At the moment, if you have such a requirement, what you have
to do it to copy the repo to some other location and use it.
If we abstract out the concept of repo and include the service and
module locations in the axis2.xml file itself, then it would be much
more flexible. Then instead of depending a particular folder
structure to find services and modules, we can use the axis2.xml
entries. This way the configuration becomes much more flexible.
Thoughts please...
+1. With a small suggestion.
We can allow users to specify an optional attribute for the module
location.
Like this...
<module ref="module_name" location="/path/to/module">
Hmm , this breaks the similarity between Java and C implementations :)
I assume you are replying to the overall plan. Not just the module
location suggestion.
Yes... It can be. But breaking similarity for an improvement is not a
crime right? :)
Hmm... may be we can achieve the similarity and improvement at the same
time again with a small change in Axis2/Java... ;-)
-Kau
"similarity between Java and C implementations"
Not specific to the topic under discussion, but Java and C has differences
when it comes to implementations.
Following link consider C to be a third generation langauge while Java is
considered as a fouth generation language.
http://science.jrank.org/pages/1697/Computer-Languages.html.
If you want to explore the real power of C, you should do things in the C
way :-), including the design.
And what matters is the overall architecture, and not the implementation
details when it comes to Axis2/Java vs. Axis2/C.
As I mentioned in the other mail, the overall architecture would remain
intact. So nothing to worry. :)
Samisa...
/Sanjaya
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Samisa Abeysinghe : WSO2 WSF/PHP
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