Can you strip the example up to the point where we can have a look at it? It could be that the class that refuses to load needs something that is not available.

Greetings, Marcel

On May 22, 2008, at 11:14 , Saminda Abeyruwan wrote:

"." is present

Saminda

On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 2:33 PM, Marcel Offermans <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On May 22, 2008, at 10:09 , Saminda Abeyruwan wrote:

Bundle A exports some package "a.b". In addition to this, this bundle
embed
a foo.jar and manifest has Bundle-Classpath: foo.jar

Bundle B imports package "a.b". Say the activator of bundle B calls a
class
of this package. When this happen, I'm seen a class not found exception
from
a.b class, which is available in foo.jar. When bundle B's class loader delegates to bundle A's class loader, this shouldn't be a problem. Am I
doing something wrong ?


If my memory serves me well, you need to explicitly include "." in the
bundle classpath, so:

Bundle-Classpath: ., foo.jar

Greetings, Marcel




--
Saminda Abeyruwan

Senior Software Engineer
WSO2 Inc. - www.wso2.org

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