On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 20:33:10 -0700, Dick Applebaum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I tried the JRun  code example you mentioned in your blog -- seemed
> straight-forward, enough, but Java couldn't find the javax.jms class

Because it's in the JRun library jrun.jar...

> Jrun docs didn't mention this.  so I went to the Sun site.

...why? JRun has jrun.jar in {jrun.home}/lib/jrun.jar

> Finally, dloaded & installed the latest JBoss on my plain OS X & was
> able to compile their examples by putting their jar in the classpath.

Boy, you sure like making work for yourself Dick! :)

> So, I realized that the location of the jms classes is dependent on the
> implementor of jms & not part of the standard Java package. -- Seems
> odd to a Java newbie.

Oh. Hmm. I guess I can see why that might seem odd but that's why
folks talk about "JRun supporting JMS" etc...

> I planned to revisit JRun's built-in jms provider, but I still didn't
> know where to look for JRun's  jms classes.

See above.

> With the info you provided, it should work & I would prefer using JRun,
> because it is already there.

OK, let me know how you get on and feel free to contact me off-list
for help (since it's pretty OT for CF-talk!). As you know, I'm on
AIM/iChat/Adium pretty much 24x7 :)

> OpenJMS has much better examples & docs, though.

Depending on how well they're written, you should be able to use the
same examples & docs with JRun...
--
Sean A Corfield -- http://www.corfield.org/blog/

"If you're not annoying somebody, you're not really alive."
-- Margaret Atwood
[Todays Threads] [This Message] [Subscription] [Fast Unsubscribe] [User Settings] [Donations and Support]

Reply via email to