The place to vote for issue fix is our JIRA
http://216.121.112.228/browse/NH-2263

Thanks.

Here we can discuss about some "long" implementation details.

On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 8:03 AM, David Pfeffer <[email protected]> wrote:

> I personally find the client profile support extremely important -- once
> its available, I'll immediately begin using it. NHibernate is my only
> dependency forcing me not to use the client profile.
>
> On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 7:01 AM, Craig van Nieuwkerk <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> I think client profile will become much more important in the future.
>> It is only just becoming used frequently with .NET 4 and I suspect
>> most desktop applications will soon prefer it. If the work required
>> doesn't require major rewriting I would say go for it, especially if
>> Patrick is happy to do most of the leg work.
>>
>> Craig.
>>
>> On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 8:56 PM, Fabio Maulo <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Patrick,
>> > Are you sure that the client-profile-support is so fundamental ?
>> > So far you are the only one talking about it.
>> > Before begin a big work in NH-3 I would be sure about how much important
>> is
>> > the client-profile-support for NH future.
>> >
>> > On Mon, Aug 2, 2010 at 6:34 AM, Patrick Earl <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> For myself, I'm not particularly opinionated in any direction other
>> >> than the direction that will allow for client profile support.  If
>> >> this happens through a custom pluggable logging layer, common.logging,
>> >> or some other way, I'm happy.  It seems like the common.logging
>> >> library is a good fit, but it's not already on the trunk so I'd be
>> >> curious to know why.
>> >>
>> >> The last log4net release was in 2006 and the mailing list is pretty
>> >> quiet in terms of "getting it done" type traffic.  It also seems like
>> >> over time there has been not insignificant demand for the ability to
>> >> use a different logging framework.  Using something like
>> >> Common.Logging seems like a good way to solve the problems with the
>> >> client profile dependencies and the different logging framework
>> >> support.
>> >>
>> >> I don't think that replacing log4net with Common.Logging is like
>> >> trading one "evil" for another.  Common.Logging has a much smaller
>> >> footprint than the actual logging frameworks and was designed to solve
>> >> the pluggable logger problem.  If this is what is desired for
>> >> NHibernate, why not utilize the work of others?  On top of this, there
>> >> is already a patch to implement this change in NHibernate.
>> >>
>> >> I'd very much like to have this issue pushed to completion.  If it
>> >> involves additional development, testing, or documentation time, I
>> >> would be happy to volunteer my time.  I just need to know where to put
>> >> my energy.
>> >>
>> >>        Patrick Earl
>> >
>> >
>> > --
>> > Fabio Maulo
>> >
>> >
>>
>
>


-- 
Fabio Maulo

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