Thx for the replay Thomas. 

Yes ofcourse, that will help also. I dodnt understand at beginning that SDM 
dose a fully new compile on his side where all the web folder tree is 
generated...
Now makes sense why was not working. But in other, SDM compile is the same 
as normal. right? (ofcourse just doing one permutation and compile just 
changed files)
Or is there something plus...

- B

On Saturday, February 21, 2015 at 2:15:15 PM UTC+1, Thomas Broyer wrote:
>
> Just launch your Tomcat with -Dgwt.codeerver.port=9876 so that your RPC 
> servlets will load the *.rpc serialization policy files from the CodeServer 
> (SDM) rather than from disk.
> You shouldn't need to compile your app at any time.
>
> On Friday, February 20, 2015 at 7:59:51 PM UTC+1, Blaze wrote:
>>
>> Hi Jens,
>>
>> you wore right, this was the actual problem. 
>>
>> I run a Tomcat server inside Eclipse and dose the redeploy by autoscans, 
>> and i guess it also autoredeploy some of the real compiles cosing the 
>> problem.
>>
>> What i have found a bit not logical. If the SDM is started on a clean app 
>> for a very first time it dose not produces .rpc mappings, 
>> so like that deployed on a external server, app will not work. Which 
>> comes to the moment that we have to do a real compile every time a "new" 
>> object is used in rpc. 
>> Ofcourse if we do this real compiles then we can easy end in this kind of 
>> situations. For now I delete everything but the .rpc file and leave rest to 
>> be recreated then it works.
>>
>> Can you give me a bit more inside info on the SDM compile, what is else 
>> diff then the normal?
>>
>> Tnx,
>> B
>>
>> So it
>>
>> On Friday, February 20, 2015 at 5:01:41 PM UTC+1, Jens wrote:
>>>
>>> Are you sure you deploy the app.nocache.js file generated by SDM? If you 
>>> have done a production compile in the mean time then you might have 
>>> deployed a wrong one. Try to delete any existing ./war/<module name> folder 
>>> and restart SDM to give it a clean start. Once it is started you can deploy.
>>>
>>>  
>>>
>>>> setting -Dgwt.watchFileChanges=false, should force compile every time a 
>>>> reload is called, and then see if nothing change dont compile?
>>>>
>>>
>>> No it just changes the way file system changes are detected by SDM. It 
>>> forces SDM to scan all files on disk. The default behavior can be 
>>> unreliable on some OS.
>>>
>>>
>>> -- J.
>>>
>>>
>>>

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