Can you give an example of an identity from the Scheduler? What do they look like? Where are they being created in the source code?
In the perfect world the FileES should of course handle the case itself transparently without affecting others - but figuring out a 2-way-mapping from identity to filename might prove too difficult. /Kent Den 07-07-2015 kl. 10:23 skrev Niclas Hedhman: > But not with Scheduler on Windows... > https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZEST-41 > > There are three ways this can be fixed; > > a. Do character replacements in the identity, per filesystem, to create > valid files. Downside; One can't move the store to another OS and remain > compatible. > > b. Do character replacement in the identity, same on all filesystem, to > create portable filenames. Downside; Existing stores will break. > > c. Introduce a IdentityConstraint in the FileEntityStore, which must be > applied to all entities in the application if one use this ES. Downside; > Scheduler (others?) will required to be changed and introduces an > incompatibility from previous version. > > > Not sure which is most reasonable. > > On Tue, Jul 7, 2015 at 11:13 AM, Paul Merlin <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Niclas Hedhman a écrit : >>> As for "test grade"; Personally I am getting fond of the FileES for >> smaller >>> apps (which I am doing now), since it simplifies the testing quite a bit, >>> and is good enough for my performance requirements. >> I've been using it in small production apps for years and it works great. >> Simple and effective, really easy testing/debugging/"hacking". >> Small is beautiful :) >> >> >
