Re: [osgi-dev] OSGi book recommendations

2019-07-30 Thread Marc via osgi-dev
I've found "Modular Cloud Apps with OSGi" pretty good. The only drawback 
here is, that it is using Felix Dependency Manager instead of Declarative 
Services, but you can easily change that (the concepts are the same)

regards
Marc





Von:Tim Ward via osgi-dev 
An: Stephen Schaub , OSGi Developer Mail List 

Datum:  25.07.2019 16:56
Betreff:    Re: [osgi-dev] OSGi book recommendations
Gesendet von:   osgi-dev-boun...@mail.osgi.org



As far as English Language books go, I’m not aware of anything that fits 
the bill. Enterprise OSGi in Action is probably the most “up to date” of 
the books, but it uses Blueprint. OSGi in Depth mostly focuses on the 
low-level APIs (which I would definitely not recommend using), OSGi in 
Action uses Declarative Services, but pre-dates the annotations. 

The Spring-centric books are probably best avoided at this point as Spring 
DM server hasn’t existed for some time.

If you find anything useful then do let me know.

Tim


On 25 Jul 2019, at 14:38, Stephen Schaub via osgi-dev <
osgi-dev@mail.osgi.org> wrote:

I'm looking for a recent book on OSGi to recommend to new OSGi developers. 
Something that takes a Declarative Services annotation approach from the 
beginning, and uses current recommended tools and best practices.

Most of the books on the OSGi recommended books list seem to be several 
years old:

https://www.osgi.org/developer/resources/books/ 

I saw that Neil Bartlett was starting a new book titled Effective OSGi a 
few years ago, but don't see that it's out yet.

Any recommendations?

Stephen
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Re: [osgi-dev] OSGi book recommendations

2019-07-25 Thread Tim Ward via osgi-dev
As far as English Language books go, I’m not aware of anything that fits the 
bill. Enterprise OSGi in Action is probably the most “up to date” of the books, 
but it uses Blueprint. OSGi in Depth mostly focuses on the low-level APIs 
(which I would definitely not recommend using), OSGi in Action uses Declarative 
Services, but pre-dates the annotations. 

The Spring-centric books are probably best avoided at this point as Spring DM 
server hasn’t existed for some time.

If you find anything useful then do let me know.

Tim


> On 25 Jul 2019, at 14:38, Stephen Schaub via osgi-dev 
>  wrote:
> 
> I'm looking for a recent book on OSGi to recommend to new OSGi developers. 
> Something that takes a Declarative Services annotation approach from the 
> beginning, and uses current recommended tools and best practices.
> 
> Most of the books on the OSGi recommended books list seem to be several years 
> old:
> 
> https://www.osgi.org/developer/resources/books/ 
>  
> 
> I saw that Neil Bartlett was starting a new book titled Effective OSGi a few 
> years ago, but don't see that it's out yet.
> 
> Any recommendations?
> 
> Stephen
> ___
> OSGi Developer Mail List
> osgi-dev@mail.osgi.org
> https://mail.osgi.org/mailman/listinfo/osgi-dev

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[osgi-dev] OSGi book recommendations

2019-07-25 Thread Stephen Schaub via osgi-dev
I'm looking for a recent book on OSGi to recommend to new OSGi developers.
Something that takes a Declarative Services annotation approach from the
beginning, and uses current recommended tools and best practices.

Most of the books on the OSGi recommended books list seem to be several
years old:

https://www.osgi.org/developer/resources/books/

I saw that Neil Bartlett was starting a new book titled Effective OSGi a
few years ago, but don't see that it's out yet.

Any recommendations?

Stephen
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