>Since I haven't added a stop method, I need to figure out how to stop it
from Eclipse.
hmm, can you check the console view?

>BTW wouldn't it be worthwhile to add such a project to the tutorial. I
mean, code snippets are great, but it's good to have something working.
We'll think about it maybe in the FAQ.

best regards,
Thierry Boileau


On 9/27/07, Erik Vullings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Thierry,
>
> Thanks - I finally have that part working. I feel like an idiot that it
> was this simple. When running it as a Java Application, it complains about
> some project errors (but doesn't specify them), but starts anyways. Since I
> haven't added a stop method, I need to figure out how to stop it from
> Eclipse. BTW wouldn't it be worthwhile to add such a project to the
> tutorial. I mean, code snippets are great, but it's good to have something
> working.
>
> Thanks again,
> Erik
>
> On 9/26/07, Thierry Boileau <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > Erik,
> >
> > Assuming that your classpath contains the jars (and dependencies) of the
> > Jetty server connector, calling the "start" method on the server
> > instance (or component, see later in the tutorial) makes the server
> > start. Then the server is ready to listen to client requests using the
> > Jetty connector. Actually, there is no real "Jetty server".
> > If you want to stop the server, you can do it programmatically by
> > invoking the "stop" method on the the server instance (or component), or
> >
> > you can just stop the current thread in Eclipse.
> >
> > I hope this will help you.
> > Thierry Boileau
> >
> > > Thanks for both your help! I'm getting there, but not yet completely.
> > > So far, I've got your POM compiling well the tutorial files. But
> > > what's an easy way to start (and restart) jetty from Eclipse? I don't
> > > assume RESTlet allow for hot deployment ( i.e. any class that is
> > > changed is automatically picked up by the framework, without a need to
> >
> > > redeploy, as in Tapestry).
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Erik
> > >
> > > On 9/26/07, * Thierry Boileau* <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > > <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> > >
> > >     Hello Erik,
> > >
> > >     well, I think you're about to run your first Restlet server.
> > >
> > >     If your main method contains the lines of code indicated in
> > >     tutorial#3 (
> > >     http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.0/tutorial#part03) and if
> > >     your classpath contains at least :
> > >      - org.restlet.jar (restlet API)
> > >      - com.noelios.restlet.jar (the reference implementation of the
> > API)
> > >      - the jar of one server connector (see
> > >     http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.0/connectors as indicated
> > >     in the tutorial
> > >     http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.0/tutorial#part02
> > >     <http://www.restlet.org/documentation/1.0/tutorial#part02>).
> > >
> > >     it should work.
> > >
> > >     best regards,
> > >     Thierry Boileau
> > >
> > >
> > >     On 9/26/07, *Erik Vullings * <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >     <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> > >
> > >         Hi Thierry,
> > >
> > >         I'm a bit further now, and I could get a basic example to run.
> > >         However, I would still like to see a basic Hello World
> > >         (RESTlet as a server) application, with build.xml or pom.xml
> > >         files, and the correct directory hierarchy. Shouldn't this be
> > >         available from the website. Or a maven archetype to quickly
> > >         setup the basic structure. It has already taken me a day or
> > >         more to start, which is not really a recommendation for
> > >         RESTlet (it took me less time to get a basic struts(2) or
> > >         tapestry webapp project running, and RESTlet is supposed to be
> > >         simple...).
> > >
> > >         My current project looks like this (improvements???)
> > >         root
> > >           build
> > >             classes etc
> > >           lib
> > >             whole bunch of jar files
> > >           src
> > >             java
> > >               packagename
> > >                 Main.java
> > >
> > >         Thanks
> > >         Erik
> > >
> > >
> > >         On 9/24/07, *Thierry Boileau* < [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > >         <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:
> > >
> > >             Hello Erik,
> > >
> > >             this sample code must be run inside a servlet container
> > >             such as Tomcat,
> > >             Jboss, etc.
> > >             You can use one of the inner servlet containers provided
> > >             by Eclipse and
> > >             link it with the sample project (use Eclipse 3.3 e.g.) or
> > >             generate the
> > >             war of the project and deploy it in your prefered servlet
> > >             container
> > >             manually.
> > >
> > >             best regards,
> > >             Thierry Boileau
> > >             > Hi,
> > >             >
> > >             > I'm new to RESTlet, and liked the tutorial descriptions
> > >             on restlet.org <http://restlet.org >
> > >             > < http://restlet.org>. I've also had a look at the Wiki,
> > >             and did manage
> > >             > to find some examples (like Restlet-example) by Irfan
> > >             Jamadar.
> > >             > Unfortunately, it doesn't come with a tutorial how to
> > run
> > >             it...
> > >             >
> > >             > I'm using Eclipse, have read the developer FAQ#21 and
> > >             included the
> > >             > library directory from Restlet in my plugin directory. I
> > >             can open this
> > >             > particular example, and it doesn't show any errors
> > >             (anymore - that
> > >             > involved adding the manifest etc.), but my question is
> > >             how can I run
> > >             > it (it auto builds). Or if there are other useful
> > >             examples out there,
> > >             > I would be very grateful!
> > >             >
> > >             > Thanks,
> > >             > Erik
> > >             > .
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
>
>

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