On Feb 18, 2008, at 10:14 AM, Joseph Leong wrote:
Hi all,
I wanted to toss an idea out to the community and get some
feedback. A few other members of the community and myself are
interested in creating a diagnostic utility for AG. This
diagnostic utility would perform something similar to what one
would see when an application crashes and a prompter allows the end
user to send a report to the developers. However this idea has an
open source twist to it - rather than the developers exclusively
being able to view the issue or contribute a solution, any user
can. When an error or issue occurs in AG it'll generate a sort of
unique message key that will be used to automatically generate a
wiki type page somewhere. This wiki page will include vital
information that will help in debugging the issue. There any user/
developer can post solutions or thoughts. In addition, we'd try to
aim to create some sort of standardized way to generate these
message keys so if another user encounters the same error it will
redirect or build upon the existing wiki another user has already
opened. Ultimately... the hopes are that this tool can serve as a
convenient way for users to get help on their issues and expedite
that process by automating a process and presenting it in an
organized fashion.
I know theres plenty room for ideas and improvements to this.. so
please feel to comment anything!
I'm not sure I understand your proposal. I think that letting a
geronimo installation communicate with anything not specifically
configured by the system administrator, in particular communicating
with a wiki at apache, is not acceptable.
I'd be fine with the geronimo build having a profile that constructs
wiki pages for each error if they are not already present in the wiki
and having the error message include a key to the wiki page. I think
it might be good to have the key be human-readable, but I don't have
an idea on how to accomplish that.
thanks
david jencks
To start.. does anyone have a list of what they'd like to see in
the error reporting diagnostics?
Wishing you all the best,
Joseph Leong