In JBoss 4.x, the main advantage JSF has over other frameworks is that it is 
already installed and supported by JBoss support.  Also, JSF standard taglibs 
are cached and available globally.

In JBoss 5.x, the integration is deeper.  As part of JEE 5, JSF becomes the 
standard web framework.  JBoss 5 integrates everything in JBoss 4.x plus 
support for resource injection, JBoss Serialization, and automatic 
initialization.

See http://wiki.jboss.org/wiki/Wiki.jsp?page=JBossFaces for links to details.

Again, the ability to get support from JBoss for both the app server and JSF is 
often see as a big plus whereas you would need to find support for other 
frameworks from separate vendors.

As long as you are evaluating frameworks, you should also take a close look at 
JBoss Seam.  There is a lot of advanced stuff in there that complements and 
builds on JSF.  In many ways, Seam is the big answer to how we are making 
things easier for developers.  See http://www.jboss.com/products/seam.  I think 
you'll be duly impressed.

Everything you mention is addressed one way or another in either JSF, 
third-party JSF components, or Seam.  The possible exception is FB2 (I don't 
know what that is).  For the enum support you need JSF 1.2 which is in JBoss 5.

Stan

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