On 11/01/2011 06:05 AM, Ioannis Canellos wrote:
Let's not confuse blueprint with spring. Blueprint is
a declarative way to work with OSGi services and Spring is a framework
for creating applications.
I don't think that Aries has the same focus with Spring but with SpringDM.
You can always
You can use OSGi services for that. OSGi services can be exported and
imported irrespective of the underlying technology used.
On Tue, Nov 1, 2011 at 13:35, Raman Gupta rocketra...@gmail.com wrote:
On 11/01/2011 06:05 AM, Ioannis Canellos wrote:
Let's not confuse blueprint with spring.
My point wasn't the technology across bundles -- rather, I'm talking
about interop with the DI framework used *within* a bundle.
For example, I may want to use Guice for DI within my bundle, but use
Blueprint to expose/consume OSGi services. As it stands, developers
have to learn each DI
Guillaume,
Consider the following use-case:
1) A bundle is activated by Aries Blueprint, and Blueprint consumes a
osgi service that provides a jms connection. (configured in an
OSGI-INF/blueprint directory)
2) The bundle uses spring-web to create a restful endpoint (configured in a
In this example, how would the three contexts work together? In my work,
I've seen coding like this where Spring is desired, and where Aries blueprint
doesn't provide the functionality Spring provides. In that environment,
there is a movement towards Eclipse Gemini because it is written
I think you are reading this wrong.
Table 5.1. XML Configuration Differences
On Nov 1, 2011, at 8:15 AM, Raman Gupta wrote:
In this example, how would the three contexts work together? In my work,
I've seen coding like this where Spring is desired, and where Aries
blueprint doesn't
If you use osgi services you can accomplish this.
On Nov 1, 2011, at 8:06 AM, mikevan wrote:
Guillaume,
Consider the following use-case:
1) A bundle is activated by Aries Blueprint, and Blueprint consumes a osgi
service that provides a jms connection. (configured in an
Johan,
Then, the three contexts can work inside of the same bundle?
- Original Message -
From: Johan Edstrom-2 [via Karaf] ml-node+s922171n3470819...@n3.nabble.com
To: mikevan mvangeert...@comcast.net
Sent: Tuesday, November 1, 2011 10:29:38 AM
Subject: Re: Aries and Spring
On 11/01/2011 10:27 AM, Johan Edstrom wrote:
I think you are reading this wrong.
Table 5.1. XML Configuration Differences
No. Scroll down to the end of that section.
As mentioned before, in Spring DM one can mix and match the namespaces:
[...snip...]
The example above, uses the Spring
On 11/01/2011 10:30 AM, mikevan wrote:
Why can't Gemini work in Karaf?
You're right. I don't know if it will work. I should have said it
doesn't work out of the box. If you decide to try it and get it
working I'd be interested in your features.xml.
I too have used Virgo extensively but have
Raman,
Can you describe the technical reason why you couldn't use camel, aries, and
gemini contexts in the same bundle? To my knowledge, aries and gemini both
leverage the osgi interfaces for osgi stuff. So, as long as the service is
consumed by the same context used by camel, shouldn't
Gotcha, that still would be an effect of the authors of Spring DM2 having the
legacy schemas,
I don;t really personally see why aries should support spring syntax if the
standards agreed on
one schema.
Just my 0.2 though.
/je
On Nov 1, 2011, at 8:33 AM, Raman Gupta wrote:
On 11/01/2011
I'm not at all a spring expert but I think people are being unclear about
exactly what they are trying to do. There are a lot of capabilities in spring
products and being very specific about exactly what you want might help clear
things up.
-- you can only use one blueprint implementation
David,
When I read the early-release of the OSGi Service Platform Spec that contained
the Subsystem Specification, I gotta admin, I got pretty excited.
I like the ability to group a set of bundles into a subsystem , and then to
control the visibility of packages both within the
On Nov 1, 2011, at 9:58 AM, mikevan wrote:
David,
When I read the early-release of the OSGi Service Platform Spec that
contained the Subsystem Specification, I gotta admin, I got pretty excited.
I like the ability to group a set of bundles into a subsystem , and then to
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