Re: Hello World!
> Christian Schneider : > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are quite a > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. Personally I don't understand why anyone would use something other than DS, but YMMV...:-)
Re: Hello World!
It makes sense, and I agree with you, sometime users are lost to find the right solution. Karaf examples show a "panel" of what you can do, in different ways. I would propose a full application, more "directive" in the approach used, a bit as we did in Decanter (adopting SCR everywhere, etc). A full stack application running in Karaf (as example) would be great, probably not as part of the Karaf examples, but more a karaf-tutorial or karaf-boot isolated repo (not necessary at Apache). Regards JB On 20/09/2019 09:55, Christian Schneider wrote: > Don't get me wrong. The karaf examples are great and do a good job in > showing all the features karaf has. > The big issue though is that the examples show a lot of ways of doing the > same thing. This is the right choice when it is about showing the features > of karaf. > It is not good as an introduction for how to create a streamlined > application as it offers too many choices. > > What I have in mind is a very opinionated and structured documentation that > concentrates on one solution for each of the parts of an application. It > also has to show how it all fits together. This is very different from the > goals of the karaf examples. > > I remember well the discussion we had about the karaf examples and about > how opinionated they should be. I think you were right about being not very > opinionated for karaf examples. It fits the idea of the platform. > > Christian > > > Am Do., 19. Sept. 2019 um 15:43 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > >> Thanks Christian, I will check out your stuff later on. Ideally I would >> love to have a book about karaf and some osgi basics and ds... But I guess >> that's a lot of work. >> >> So I think tutorials and examples are a good pragmatic compromise : ) >> ____ >> From: Jean-Baptiste Onofré >> Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2019 8:15:08 AM >> To: dev@karaf.apache.org >> Subject: Re: Hello World! >> >> Hi Christian, >> >> I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too >> simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). >> >> I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I >> discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. >> I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) >> >> Regards >> JB >> >> >> On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: >>> The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. >>> Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. >>> >>> Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are >> quite a >>> few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. >>> As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. >>> >>> Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are >> readily >>> available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the >>> system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into >>> OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained >>> examples. >>> >>> I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical >>> application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I >> never >>> really took on the task. >>> >>> You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. >>> Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build >>> an application but maybe the example helps a bit. >>> https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html >>> The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml >>> config. >>> The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very >>> interesting. >>> Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. >>> In the example there is a small application with an angular front end >> and a >>> jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. >>> >>> Christian >>> >>> >>> Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < >>> j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was >> rather >>>> OSGi. >>>> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots >>>> of it seemed strange and confusing like Ari
Re: Hello World!
Don't get me wrong. The karaf examples are great and do a good job in showing all the features karaf has. The big issue though is that the examples show a lot of ways of doing the same thing. This is the right choice when it is about showing the features of karaf. It is not good as an introduction for how to create a streamlined application as it offers too many choices. What I have in mind is a very opinionated and structured documentation that concentrates on one solution for each of the parts of an application. It also has to show how it all fits together. This is very different from the goals of the karaf examples. I remember well the discussion we had about the karaf examples and about how opinionated they should be. I think you were right about being not very opinionated for karaf examples. It fits the idea of the platform. Christian Am Do., 19. Sept. 2019 um 15:43 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > Thanks Christian, I will check out your stuff later on. Ideally I would > love to have a book about karaf and some osgi basics and ds... But I guess > that's a lot of work. > > So I think tutorials and examples are a good pragmatic compromise : ) > > From: Jean-Baptiste Onofré > Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2019 8:15:08 AM > To: dev@karaf.apache.org > Subject: Re: Hello World! > > Hi Christian, > > I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too > simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). > > I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I > discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. > I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) > > Regards > JB > > > On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: > > The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. > > Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. > > > > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are > quite a > > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. > > > > Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are > readily > > available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the > > system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into > > OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained > > examples. > > > > I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical > > application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I > never > > really took on the task. > > > > You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. > > Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build > > an application but maybe the example helps a bit. > > https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html > > The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml > > config. > > The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very > > interesting. > > Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. > > In the example there is a small application with an angular front end > and a > > jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. > > > > Christian > > > > > > Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was > rather > >> OSGi. > >> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots > >> of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, > ... . > >> Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all > >> clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and > lots > >> more. > >> So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi > >> world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a > >> small OSGi introduction or something. > >> > >> I hope that helps! > >> Julian > >> > >> Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > >> > >> By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard > for > >> you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe > >> message/website, example, whatever) in the project to chan
Re: Hello World!
Hey, thats an excellent idea. It might even be possible to share the content with us here so we take it as "donnation" to the ASF and care about the hosting and all other issues. Julian Am 19.09.19, 09:31 schrieb "Serge Huber" : When I was starting out with OSGi, there used to be a great OSGI Wiki available, but it got hacked and was never put back online :( Any chance this content could be put back online somewhere else ? Regards, Serge... On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 3:43 PM Julian Feinauer < j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de> wrote: > Thanks Christian, I will check out your stuff later on. Ideally I would > love to have a book about karaf and some osgi basics and ds... But I guess > that's a lot of work. > > So I think tutorials and examples are a good pragmatic compromise : ) > > From: Jean-Baptiste Onofré > Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2019 8:15:08 AM > To: dev@karaf.apache.org > Subject: Re: Hello World! > > Hi Christian, > > I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too > simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). > > I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I > discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. > I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) > > Regards > JB > > > On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: > > The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. > > Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. > > > > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are > quite a > > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. > > > > Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are > readily > > available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the > > system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into > > OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained > > examples. > > > > I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical > > application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I > never > > really took on the task. > > > > You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. > > Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build > > an application but maybe the example helps a bit. > > https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html > > The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml > > config. > > The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very > > interesting. > > Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. > > In the example there is a small application with an angular front end > and a > > jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. > > > > Christian > > > > > > Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was > rather > >> OSGi. > >> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots > >> of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, > ... . > >> Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all > >> clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and > lots > >> more. > >> So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi > >> world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a > >> small OSGi introduction or something. > >> > >> I hope that helps! > >> Julian > >> > >> Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > >> > >> By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard > for > >> you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe > >> message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change
Re: Hello World!
When I was starting out with OSGi, there used to be a great OSGI Wiki available, but it got hacked and was never put back online :( Any chance this content could be put back online somewhere else ? Regards, Serge... On Thu, Sep 19, 2019 at 3:43 PM Julian Feinauer < j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de> wrote: > Thanks Christian, I will check out your stuff later on. Ideally I would > love to have a book about karaf and some osgi basics and ds... But I guess > that's a lot of work. > > So I think tutorials and examples are a good pragmatic compromise : ) > > From: Jean-Baptiste Onofré > Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2019 8:15:08 AM > To: dev@karaf.apache.org > Subject: Re: Hello World! > > Hi Christian, > > I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too > simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). > > I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I > discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. > I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) > > Regards > JB > > > On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: > > The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. > > Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. > > > > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are > quite a > > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. > > > > Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are > readily > > available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the > > system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into > > OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained > > examples. > > > > I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical > > application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I > never > > really took on the task. > > > > You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. > > Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build > > an application but maybe the example helps a bit. > > https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html > > The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml > > config. > > The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very > > interesting. > > Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. > > In the example there is a small application with an angular front end > and a > > jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. > > > > Christian > > > > > > Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > > > >> Hi, > >> > >> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was > rather > >> OSGi. > >> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots > >> of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, > ... . > >> Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all > >> clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and > lots > >> more. > >> So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi > >> world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a > >> small OSGi introduction or something. > >> > >> I hope that helps! > >> Julian > >> > >> Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > >> > >> By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard > for > >> you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe > >> message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! > >> > >> Thanks ! > >> Regards > >> JB > >> > >> On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > >> > Hi everybody, > >> > > >> > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to > >> shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects > (PLC4X, > >> IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las > Vegas (I > >> was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > >> > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered > >> it to hard for us to adopt. > >> > > >> > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, > I > >> feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. > So, > >> expect some mails from me here or on user@. > >> > > >> > Best > >> > Julian > >> > > >> > >> -- > >> Jean-Baptiste Onofré > >> jbono...@apache.org > >> http://blog.nanthrax.net > >> Talend - http://www.talend.com > >> > >> > >> > > > > -- > Jean-Baptiste Onofré > jbono...@apache.org > http://blog.nanthrax.net > Talend - http://www.talend.com >
Re: Hello World!
Thanks Christian, I will check out your stuff later on. Ideally I would love to have a book about karaf and some osgi basics and ds... But I guess that's a lot of work. So I think tutorials and examples are a good pragmatic compromise : ) From: Jean-Baptiste Onofré Sent: Thursday, September 19, 2019 8:15:08 AM To: dev@karaf.apache.org Subject: Re: Hello World! Hi Christian, I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) Regards JB On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: > The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. > Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. > > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are quite a > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. > > Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are readily > available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the > system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into > OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained > examples. > > I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical > application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I never > really took on the task. > > You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. > Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build > an application but maybe the example helps a bit. > https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html > The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml > config. > The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very > interesting. > Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. > In the example there is a small application with an angular front end and a > jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. > > Christian > > > Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > >> Hi, >> >> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather >> OSGi. >> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots >> of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . >> Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all >> clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots >> more. >> So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi >> world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a >> small OSGi introduction or something. >> >> I hope that helps! >> Julian >> >> Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : >> >> By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for >> you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe >> message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! >> >> Thanks ! >> Regards >> JB >> >> On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: >> > Hi everybody, >> > >> > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to >> shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, >> IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I >> was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). >> > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered >> it to hard for us to adopt. >> > >> > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I >> feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, >> expect some mails from me here or on user@. >> > >> > Best >> > Julian >> > >> >> -- >> Jean-Baptiste Onofré >> jbono...@apache.org >> http://blog.nanthrax.net >> Talend - http://www.talend.com >> >> >> > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Hi Christian, I think Karaf examples are good enough to start. They are maybe too simple but provide "classic" use cases (rest, service, jpa, etc). I agree we can do more, and we are working on it. It's something I discuss with some guys at ApacheCon last week. I will come with concrete proposal soon ;) Regards JB On 19/09/2019 15:02, Christian Schneider wrote: > The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. > Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. > > Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are quite a > few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. > As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. > > Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are readily > available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the > system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into > OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained > examples. > > I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical > application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I never > really took on the task. > > You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. > Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build > an application but maybe the example helps a bit. > https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html > The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml > config. > The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very > interesting. > Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. > In the example there is a small application with an angular front end and a > jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. > > Christian > > > Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < > j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > >> Hi, >> >> it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather >> OSGi. >> We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots >> of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . >> Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all >> clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots >> more. >> So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi >> world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a >> small OSGi introduction or something. >> >> I hope that helps! >> Julian >> >> Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : >> >> By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for >> you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe >> message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! >> >> Thanks ! >> Regards >> JB >> >> On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: >> > Hi everybody, >> > >> > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to >> shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, >> IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I >> was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). >> > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered >> it to hard for us to adopt. >> > >> > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I >> feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, >> expect some mails from me here or on user@. >> > >> > Best >> > Julian >> > >> >> -- >> Jean-Baptiste Onofré >> jbono...@apache.org >> http://blog.nanthrax.net >> Talend - http://www.talend.com >> >> >> > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
The problem with OSGi docs is that most of the material is quite old. Much of it does not apply to modern OSGi development anymore. Another issue is that especially for dependency injection there are quite a few alternatives. Every of these come with their own pros and cons. As a beginner it is difficult to understand and decide how to start. Karaf is a great way to start playing with OSGi as many things are readily available and the shell and webconsole allow some nice insight into the system. What karaf does not provide though is a good introduction into OSGi. I tried to do so with my tutorials but they are more like explained examples. I planned to do a longer introduction around how to build a typical application based on best practices .. but it is a lot of work and I never really took on the task. You might be interested in my recent talk about OSGi best practices. Unfortunately in 30 minutes I was not able to really explain how to build an application but maybe the example helps a bit. https://adapt.to/2019/en/schedule/osgi-best-practices.html The most interesting part there is maybe how to build bundles without xml config. The new annotations that combine requirements and configs are also very interesting. Both of these are not yet covered by much material on the web. In the example there is a small application with an angular front end and a jax-rs backend that can be easily installed in karaf. Christian Am Mi., 18. Sept. 2019 um 06:45 Uhr schrieb Julian Feinauer < j.feina...@pragmaticminds.de>: > Hi, > > it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather > OSGi. > We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots > of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . > Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all > clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots > more. > So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi > world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a > small OSGi introduction or something. > > I hope that helps! > Julian > > Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > > By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for > you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe > message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! > > Thanks ! > Regards > JB > > On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > > Hi everybody, > > > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to > shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, > IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I > was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered > it to hard for us to adopt. > > > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I > feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, > expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > > > Best > > Julian > > > > -- > Jean-Baptiste Onofré > jbono...@apache.org > http://blog.nanthrax.net > Talend - http://www.talend.com > > > -- -- Christian Schneider http://www.liquid-reality.de Computer Scientist http://www.adobe.com
Re: Hello World!
Hi Julian, It's nice to meet you here :) Willem Jiang Twitter: willemjiang Weibo: 姜宁willem On Tue, Sep 17, 2019 at 12:21 AM Julian Feinauer wrote: > > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly > introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, > Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the > guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard > for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like > we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some > mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian
Re: Hello World!
Hey, let me reply with private message ;) Cheers, JB On 18/09/2019 16:36, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hey JB, > > very welcome. > Since I played around I like Karaf more and more and can really imagine us > building / moving our stack to Karaf (I already discussed it a bit with > Serge). > Probably it would make sense to setup a call or an online meetup to discuss > this, if you like. > You are located in Paris, or? > > Julian > > Am 18.09.19, 02:17 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > > Thanks for details, I see your point and I agree. > > As said to some guys during ApacheCon, you have to do much better about > tooling in Karaf. > Even if Karaf is OSGi powered, the dev can or not use OSGi, and it could > be just a implementation detail if the tooling is good enough. > > We have some work around this (karaf-boot, winegrowers, ...) on which we > have to move forward. > > Thanks again Julian for your feedback. > > Regards > JB > > Le 18 sept. 2019 06:45, Julian Feinauer a > écrit : > > Hi, > > it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was > rather OSGi. > We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material > lots of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, > enRoute, ... . > Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting > all clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS > stuff and lots more. > So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the > OSGi world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could > help is a small OSGi introduction or something. > > I hope that helps! > Julian > > Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : > > By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf > "hard for > you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe > message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that > ! > > Thanks ! > Regards > JB > > On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > > Hi everybody, > > > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted > to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache > projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the > ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB > and Serge). > > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always > considered it to hard for us to adopt. > > > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction > yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and > see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > > > Best > > Julian > > > > -- > Jean-Baptiste Onofré > jbono...@apache.org > http://blog.nanthrax.net > Talend - http://www.talend.com > > > > > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Hey JB, very welcome. Since I played around I like Karaf more and more and can really imagine us building / moving our stack to Karaf (I already discussed it a bit with Serge). Probably it would make sense to setup a call or an online meetup to discuss this, if you like. You are located in Paris, or? Julian Am 18.09.19, 02:17 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : Thanks for details, I see your point and I agree. As said to some guys during ApacheCon, you have to do much better about tooling in Karaf. Even if Karaf is OSGi powered, the dev can or not use OSGi, and it could be just a implementation detail if the tooling is good enough. We have some work around this (karaf-boot, winegrowers, ...) on which we have to move forward. Thanks again Julian for your feedback. Regards JB Le 18 sept. 2019 06:45, Julian Feinauer a écrit : Hi, it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather OSGi. We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots more. So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a small OSGi introduction or something. I hope that helps! Julian Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! Thanks ! Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Thanks for details, I see your point and I agree. As said to some guys during ApacheCon, you have to do much better about tooling in Karaf. Even if Karaf is OSGi powered, the dev can or not use OSGi, and it could be just a implementation detail if the tooling is good enough. We have some work around this (karaf-boot, winegrowers, ...) on which we have to move forward. Thanks again Julian for your feedback. Regards JB Le 18 sept. 2019 06:45, Julian Feinauer a écrit : Hi, it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather OSGi. We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots more. So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a small OSGi introduction or something. I hope that helps! Julian Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! Thanks ! Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Hi, it was not so much karaf (I kind of liked it from the start) it was rather OSGi. We come from spring and when I looked through all the osgi material lots of it seemed strange and confusing like Aries, Blueprint, DS, enRoute, ... . Serge helped me a lot with sorting the things in my head and getting all clear (also with bundle vs. feature vs. feature-repo) and DS stuff and lots more. So I think Karaf is already doing an excellent job its rather the OSGi world that is damn confusing and one thing that probably could help is a small OSGi introduction or something. I hope that helps! Julian Am 16.09.19, 11:47 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! Thanks ! Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Hi JB, thanks for the warm welcome! It was not so improvised, I mean, we were really productive and I really learned a lot from Serge! Since then I'm playing around with it and will for sure be active on the list (or in Slack probably) : ) Julian Am 16.09.19, 11:29 schrieb "Jean-Baptiste Onofré" : Hi Julian, Awesome ! It was great to meet you and Serge talked with me about your "improvised" workshop (about Vaadim Flows, etc ;)). Ready to help, and don't hesitate to ping me on Slack. Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
By the way, Julian, I'm curious. Why did you consider Karaf "hard for you to adopt" ? It's to understand what we can improve (maybe message/website, example, whatever) in the project to change that ! Thanks ! Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly > introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, > Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the > guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard > for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like > we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some > mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Re: Hello World!
Hi Julian, Awesome ! It was great to meet you and Serge talked with me about your "improvised" workshop (about Vaadim Flows, etc ;)). Ready to help, and don't hesitate to ping me on Slack. Regards JB On 16/09/2019 18:21, Julian Feinauer wrote: > Hi everybody, > > my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly > introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, > Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the > guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). > I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard > for us to adopt. > > But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like > we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some > mails from me here or on user@. > > Best > Julian > -- Jean-Baptiste Onofré jbono...@apache.org http://blog.nanthrax.net Talend - http://www.talend.com
Hello World!
Hi everybody, my name is Julian and as I’m new on this list, I just wanted to shortly introduce myself. I’m a contributor to some Apache projects (PLC4X, IoTDB, Calcite) and I met some karaf folks at the ApacheCon in Las Vegas (I was the guy hanging around introducing JB and Serge). I have Karaf on my radar for quite some time but always considered it to hard for us to adopt. But, as Serge gave me an awesome hands on introduction yesterday, I feel like we should really start to work with it and see how it goes. So, expect some mails from me here or on user@. Best Julian