[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAY-1665?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
]
Andrus Adamchik updated CAY-1665:
---------------------------------
Description:
One of the final things we need in 3.1 is to take all possible property names
and DI collection names, with definitions scattered around various Java
classes, and define them in a single place as String constants that follow some
simple naming conventions. The naming convention that I am trying here is this:
cayenne.<tier_name_or_logical_module_name>.<undescore_separated_lowercase_property_description>[.optional_project_or_data_node_qualifier]
Here is the first cut (the current property names are in parenthesis) :
[DI Collections]
cayenne.server.properties
(org.apache.cayenne.configuration.DefaultRuntimeProperties.properties)
cayenne.server.adapter_detectors (
org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DefaultDbAdapterFactory.detectors)
cayenne.server.domain_filters
(org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.filters)
cayenne.server.config_locations (
org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.locations)
cayenne.server.default_ext_types
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.defaultExtendedTypes)
cayenne.server.user_ext_types
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.userExtendedTypes)
cayenne.server.ext_types_factories
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.extendedTypeFactories)
[JDBC Properties]
cayenne.jdbc.driver[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.url[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.username[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.password[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.min_connections[.domain_name.node_name]
(cayenne.jdbc.min.connections[.domain_name.node_name])
cayenne.jdbc.max_connections[.domain_name.node_name]
(cayenne.jdbc.min_connections[.domain_name.node_name])
[Cross-tier Properties]
cayenne.querycache.max_size (cayenne.MapQueryCacheFactory.cacheSize)
[Server properties]
cayenne.server.contexts_sync_strategy
(org.apache.cayenne.sync_contexts)
cayenne.server.object_retain_strategy
(org.apache.cayenne.context_object_retain_strategy)
cayenne.server.adapter[.domain_name.node_name]
(cayenne.adapter[.domain_name.node_name])
[ROP Properties]
cayenne.rop.service_url (cayenne.config.rop.service.url)
cayenne.rop.service_username (cayenne.config.rop.service.username)
cayenne.rop.service_password (cayenne.config.rop.service.password)
cayenne.rop.shared_session_name (cayenne.config.rop.service.shared_session)
cayenne.rop.channel_events (cayenne.config.rop.client.channel.events)
cayenne.rop.context_change_events
(cayenne.config.rop.client.context.change_events)
cayenne.rop.context_lifecycle_events
(cayenne.config.rop.client.context.lifecycle_events)
was:
One of the final things we need in 3.1 is to take all possible property names
and DI collection names, with definitions scattered around various Java
classes, and define them in a single place as String constants that follow some
simple naming conventions. The naming convention that I am trying here is this:
cayenne.<tier_name_or_logical_module_name>.<undescore_separated_lowercase_property_description>[.optional_project_or_data_node_qualifier]
Here is the first cut (the current property names are in parenthesis) :
[DI Collections]
cayenne.server.properties
(org.apache.cayenne.configuration.DefaultRuntimeProperties.properties)
cayenne.server.adapter_detectors (
org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DefaultDbAdapterFactory.detectors)
cayenne.server.domain_filters
(org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.filters)
cayenne.server.config_locations (
org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.locations)
cayenne.server.default_ext_types
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.defaultExtendedTypes)
cayenne.server.user_ext_types
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.userExtendedTypes)
cayenne.server.ext_types_factories
(org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.extendedTypeFactories)
[JDBC Properties]
cayenne.jdbc.driver[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.url[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.username[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.password[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.min.connections[.domain_name.node_name]
cayenne.jdbc.max.conections[.domain_name.node_name]
[Cross-tier Properties]
cayenne.querycache.max_size (cayenne.MapQueryCacheFactory.cacheSize)
[Server properties]
cayenne.server.contexts_sync_strategy
(org.apache.cayenne.sync_contexts)
cayenne.server.object_retain_strategy
(org.apache.cayenne.context_object_retain_strategy)
cayenne.server.adapter[.domain_name.node_name]
(cayenne.adapter[.domain_name.node_name])
[ROP Properties]
cayenne.rop.service_url (cayenne.config.rop.service.url)
cayenne.rop.service_username (cayenne.config.rop.service.username)
cayenne.rop.service_password (cayenne.config.rop.service.password)
cayenne.rop.shared_session_name (cayenne.config.rop.service.shared_session)
cayenne.rop.channel_events (cayenne.config.rop.client.channel.events)
cayenne.rop.context_change_events
(cayenne.config.rop.client.context.change_events)
cayenne.rop.context_lifecycle_events
(cayenne.config.rop.client.context.lifecycle_events)
> Consistent and concise property names aggregated in one place
> --------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: CAY-1665
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CAY-1665
> Project: Cayenne
> Issue Type: Improvement
> Components: Core Library
> Affects Versions: 3.1M3
> Reporter: Andrus Adamchik
> Assignee: Andrus Adamchik
>
> One of the final things we need in 3.1 is to take all possible property names
> and DI collection names, with definitions scattered around various Java
> classes, and define them in a single place as String constants that follow
> some simple naming conventions. The naming convention that I am trying here
> is this:
> cayenne.<tier_name_or_logical_module_name>.<undescore_separated_lowercase_property_description>[.optional_project_or_data_node_qualifier]
> Here is the first cut (the current property names are in parenthesis) :
> [DI Collections]
> cayenne.server.properties
> (org.apache.cayenne.configuration.DefaultRuntimeProperties.properties)
> cayenne.server.adapter_detectors (
> org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DefaultDbAdapterFactory.detectors)
> cayenne.server.domain_filters
> (org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.filters)
> cayenne.server.config_locations (
> org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.DataDomainProvider.locations)
> cayenne.server.default_ext_types
> (org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.defaultExtendedTypes)
> cayenne.server.user_ext_types
> (org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.userExtendedTypes)
> cayenne.server.ext_types_factories
> (org.apache.cayenne.dba.JdbcAdapter.extendedTypeFactories)
> [JDBC Properties]
> cayenne.jdbc.driver[.domain_name.node_name]
> cayenne.jdbc.url[.domain_name.node_name]
> cayenne.jdbc.username[.domain_name.node_name]
> cayenne.jdbc.password[.domain_name.node_name]
> cayenne.jdbc.min_connections[.domain_name.node_name]
> (cayenne.jdbc.min.connections[.domain_name.node_name])
> cayenne.jdbc.max_connections[.domain_name.node_name]
> (cayenne.jdbc.min_connections[.domain_name.node_name])
>
> [Cross-tier Properties]
> cayenne.querycache.max_size (cayenne.MapQueryCacheFactory.cacheSize)
> [Server properties]
> cayenne.server.contexts_sync_strategy
> (org.apache.cayenne.sync_contexts)
> cayenne.server.object_retain_strategy
> (org.apache.cayenne.context_object_retain_strategy)
> cayenne.server.adapter[.domain_name.node_name]
> (cayenne.adapter[.domain_name.node_name])
> [ROP Properties]
> cayenne.rop.service_url (cayenne.config.rop.service.url)
> cayenne.rop.service_username (cayenne.config.rop.service.username)
> cayenne.rop.service_password (cayenne.config.rop.service.password)
> cayenne.rop.shared_session_name (cayenne.config.rop.service.shared_session)
> cayenne.rop.channel_events (cayenne.config.rop.client.channel.events)
> cayenne.rop.context_change_events
> (cayenne.config.rop.client.context.change_events)
> cayenne.rop.context_lifecycle_events
> (cayenne.config.rop.client.context.lifecycle_events)
--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
If you think it was sent incorrectly, please contact your JIRA administrators:
https://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/ContactAdministrators!default.jspa
For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira