Author: buildbot
Date: Tue Apr 23 15:40:27 2013
New Revision: 859619
Log:
Staging update by buildbot for ace
Modified:
websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/ (props changed)
websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/dev-doc/getting-started.html
Propchange: websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--- cms:source-revision (original)
+++ cms:source-revision Tue Apr 23 15:40:27 2013
@@ -1 +1 @@
-1471009
+1471018
Modified: websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/dev-doc/getting-started.html
==============================================================================
--- websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/dev-doc/getting-started.html (original)
+++ websites/staging/ace/trunk/content/dev-doc/getting-started.html Tue Apr 23
15:40:27 2013
@@ -268,16 +268,18 @@
<h2 id="how-to">How to...</h2>
<h3 id="create-a-distributable-archive">...create a distributable archive</h3>
<p>The next step is to create an archive for the server, so we end up with
something we can actually run:</p>
-<div class="codehilite"><pre><span class="nv">$ </span>ant -f bin-build.xml
package
+<div class="codehilite"><pre><span class="nv">$ </span>ant package-bin
</pre></div>
-<p>Now, in the generated folder, two archives will have been created, and
there are also subfolders with the same names as the archives that you can go
into and run. You can start the server like this:</p>
-<div class="codehilite"><pre><span class="nv">$ </span><span class="nb">cd
</span>generated/ace-devserver
-<span class="nv">$ </span>sh run.sh
+<p>Now, in the generated folder, an archive will have been created. You can
unzip this archive, which should expose a couple of subfolders with the same
names as the runnable projects that you can go into and run. You can start the
"all in one" server like this:</p>
+<div class="codehilite"><pre><span class="nv">$ </span>unzip
apache-ace-1.0.0-bin.zip
+<span class="nv">$ </span><span class="nb">cd </span>server-allinone/
+<span class="nv">$ </span>java -jar server-allinone.jar
</pre></div>
+<p>For other projects, the steps are similar to this: just go into the correct
folder and launch the jar file.</p>
<h3 id="add-an-osgi-bundle">...add an OSGi bundle</h3>
<p>The easiest way to add an OSGi bundle, is to drag it onto the "Local
Repository" entry in the "Repositories" view, or to use the "Add files to
repository" toolbar icon. Bndtools will analyze the files you try to add and
show their metadata if they're indeed valid bundles.</p>
<p>The bundles will end up in the local repository inside the <tt>cnf</tt>
project.</p>