On Sat, Oct 4, 2008 at 5:41 PM, Luciano Resende <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:
> I have finalized the migration of the photo gallery to J2EE web > application. > Although I'm still having issues to run with jetty:run, I have tested > the application in Apache Tomcat 6.0.14 and works fine. > > Please let me know if you guys can deploy and run the application > successfully. Yep, it's working for me on Tomcat 6.0.18. Cool! -- Martin Cooper On Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 3:08 PM, Luciano Resende <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > Sorry, I haven't finished the webapp migration yet. I'll try to finish > > over the weekend (nights) :) > > > > On Sat, Sep 27, 2008 at 12:32 PM, Martin Cooper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > >> Hi Luciano, > >> > >> I finally got time to try this, but it doesn't work for me. I did a 'mvn > >> clean install' from photark/trunk, and then followed your instructions > >> below. I get a bunch of exceptions when Jetty is starting up, because > it's > >> unable to find the TuscanyServletFilter class. Trying to access the app > >> after that gives me a 503 (which isn't surprising). Any ideas? > >> > >> -- > >> Martin Cooper > >> > >> > >> On Wed, Sep 24, 2008 at 11:02 PM, Luciano Resende <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > >wrote: > >> > >>> I have started the migrating the photo-gallery application to a J2EE > >>> webapplication. > >>> Things are not all working yet, but the user experience is much more > easy > >>> now : > >>> > >>> 1.Add the following to your maven settings file (C:\Documents and > >>> Settings\lresende\.m2\settings.xml > >>> > >>> <pluginGroups> > >>> <pluginGroup>org.mortbay.jetty</pluginGroup> > >>> </pluginGroups> > >>> > >>> 2.in photo-gallery-webapp, start the web application > >>> > >>> mvn jetty:run > >>> > >>> 3.access the photo-gallery in the browser > >>> > >>> http://localhost:8080/photo-gallery-webapp/ > >>> > >>> I'll try to get the same functionality we had in the web 2.0 > >>> application available in the J2EE application in the next couple > >>> days... > >>> > >>> Please let me know if you have questions. > >>> > >>> On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 4:27 PM, Luciano Resende <[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > > >>> wrote: > >>> > On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 1:06 PM, Angela Cymbalak < > [EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >>> wrote: > >>> >> I think that I have determined that the problem is a bug somewhere > in > >>> either > >>> >> maven or eclipse because when I use my Linux machine with Eclipse > 3.2 it > >>> >> imports fine. However, you do ask a good question about how the > >>> application > >>> >> is going to be run by an end user. > >>> >> > >>> >> I was originally thinking the application would be an ear file that > >>> would be > >>> >> deployed on an app server. Any other thoughts on it? > >>> > > >>> > +1 Either a EAR or a WAR. > >>> > > >>> >> > >>> >> Angie > >>> >> > >>> >> At 11:59 AM 9/23/2008, Martin Cooper wrote: > >>> >>> > >>> >>> On Tue, Sep 23, 2008 at 8:30 AM, Angela Cymbalak > >>> >>> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote: > >>> >>> > >>> >>> > Hi All, > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > I've run into a problem between Eclipse and Maven, I suspect. I > have > >>> >>> > followed Luciano's directions a few times in order to get the > project > >>> >>> > downloaded. > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > Maven fetches everything appropriately and the build appears to > be > >>> >>> > successful. I have what look to be correct .project and > .classpath > >>> >>> > files. > >>> >>> > My problem is on the import. When I do a straight import of the > >>> >>> > project > >>> >>> > (File > Import > Existing Projects Into Workspace) the project is > >>> >>> > imported > >>> >>> > but not as a Java project as it should be. Because it isn't > imported > >>> as > >>> >>> > a > >>> >>> > Java project I lose the ability to run the application as needed. > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > After several days of googling and reading I haven't been able to > >>> find a > >>> >>> > way to force Eclipse to recognize that this *is* a java project. > I > >>> am > >>> >>> > using > >>> >>> > Eclipse 3.3 on Vista (ick) for my development. Can anyone point > me > >>> in > >>> >>> > the > >>> >>> > correct direction? > >>> >>> > >>> >>> > >>> >>> You got further than I did. ;-) I'm not an Eclipse user, and wasn't > >>> >>> planning > >>> >>> on becoming one any time soon. I followed the instructions to the > point > >>> of > >>> >>> generating the Eclipse files, thinking that I could then take the > >>> >>> classpath > >>> >>> from that and run the app without Eclipse. However, my jaw dropped > when > >>> I > >>> >>> discovered that the classpath has over 100 jar files in it, and at > that > >>> >>> point I gave up. (Yes, I know that's wimpy, but I didn't have a lot > of > >>> >>> time, > >>> >>> at that point, to spend on setting up a 100+ entry classpath to try > >>> >>> running > >>> >>> it some other way.) > >>> >>> > >>> >>> How would an app like this normally get run, e.g. post-development? > I'm > >>> >>> not > >>> >>> used to massive classpaths (outside an app server, at least). > >>> >>> > >>> >>> -- > >>> >>> Martin Cooper > >>> >>> > >>> >>> > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > Thanks, > >>> >>> > Angie > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > > >>> >>> > > >>> >> > >>> >> > >>> >> > >>> > > >>> > > >>> > > >>> > -- > >>> > Luciano Resende > >>> > Apache Tuscany, Apache PhotArk > >>> > http://people.apache.org/~lresende<http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende> > <http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende> > >>> > http://lresende.blogspot.com/ > >>> > > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> -- > >>> Luciano Resende > >>> Apache Tuscany, Apache PhotArk > >>> http://people.apache.org/~lresende<http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende>< > http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende> > >>> http://lresende.blogspot.com/ > >>> > >> > > > > > > > > -- > > Luciano Resende > > Apache Tuscany, Apache PhotArk > > http://people.apache.org/~lresende<http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende> > > http://lresende.blogspot.com/ > > > > > > -- > Luciano Resende > Apache Tuscany, Apache PhotArk > http://people.apache.org/~lresende <http://people.apache.org/%7Elresende> > http://lresende.blogspot.com/ > >
