Thanks Adrian for sending through the details.
We are now also looking at Apache Geronimo that has some interesting
features for plugins.
Thanks all,
Sam.
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 17:26:03 +0200, Adrian Wiesmann wrote:
> Ping me offline for details since this is very much non-Wicket stuff.
>
> C
Hi Sam
> I'm probably revealing my inexperience with J2EE environments in asking
> this, but how do Wicket programmers typically handle application "add-
> ons" (or "plug-ins" or "modules").
What I (we) did was to imitate what Eclipse does. Defining hooks and
having plugins attach to these hooks
I think maven 3 is supposed to allow using OSGi bundles for versioning etc..
On Mon, Jul 20, 2009 at 8:12 AM, Sam Stainsby <
s...@sustainablesoftware.com.au> wrote:
> Thanks Olger, that gives me some ideas. I wonder if a maven could somehow
> be coerced to do the dependency/downloading part, perh
Thanks Olger, that gives me some ideas. I wonder if a maven could somehow
be coerced to do the dependency/downloading part, perhaps with some new
plugin.
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 13:39:10 +0200, Olger Warnier wrote:
> Hi Sam,
>
> How we do it with that service:
>
> We have a file listener class t
Hi Sam,
How we do it with that service:
We have a file listener class that checks if OSGI based jar files are
put in a directory.
If so, these are automatically deployed to the OSGI runtime by the
BundleDeployer class.
We miss a download / version updates part, but you could add that by
d
OK, so I am an sys admin running some sort of OSGI-based application and
now I want to add your questionnaire service and any other modules that
it depends on. I also want to occasionally check for version updates. I
want these updates and dependencies to be downloaded and put in the
correct pl
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 10:25:17 +0200, Linda van der Pal wrote:
> Seeing how it looks like you want to create your own CMS, you might want
> to have a look at Hippo CMS. They've built it in Wicket AFAIK.
I've seen Hippo, but my main aim is not to create a CMS. One of my goal
applications is more to
Hi Sam,
It could well be more than web-tier, but I thought if anyone has done
this is would be a Wicket user :-) I looked at OSGi before I started
my
framework. I didn't see anything about deployment of add-ons/plug-
ins. I
already have a framework that incorporates IoC as a fundamental
fea
Seeing how it looks like you want to create your own CMS, you might want
to have a look at Hippo CMS. They've built it in Wicket AFAIK.
Regards,
Linda
Sam Stainsby wrote:
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 09:10:57 +0200, Per Lundholm wrote:
Well, plug-ins, are they compile-time or run-time? Sounds lik
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 09:10:57 +0200, Per Lundholm wrote:
> Well, plug-ins, are they compile-time or run-time? Sounds like
> compile-time from your description.
Runtime I think if I understand you correctly. Suppose a sys admin has
already deployed the war file for the core application and wants
Yes, different because I'm not talking about a collection of components
per se, but how add-on components are deployed to an already running
application by systems administrators, not developers, as per my initial
post.
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 09:08:38 +0300, Martin Makundi wrote:
> Different form
Well, plug-ins, are they compile-time or run-time? Sounds like compile-time
from your description.
Also, from your description, it sounds that it is more than web-tier.
Remember Wicket is web-tier only.
There are solutions for the server tier for plug-ins. Look att OSGi
http://www.osgi.org and E
Different form wicket-stuff?
http://wicketstuff.org/confluence/display/STUFFWEB/Home
**
Martin
2009/7/20 Sam Stainsby :
> Providing modules for others. And also providing an environment for third-
> party modules. See for example:
>
> https://svn.plone.org/svn/collective/
>
> On Mon, 20 Jul 2009
Providing modules for others. And also providing an environment for third-
party modules. See for example:
https://svn.plone.org/svn/collective/
On Mon, 20 Jul 2009 08:29:51 +0300, Martin Makundi wrote:
> What are you aiming at? Providing modules to others or building software
> to your client/o
What are you aiming at? Providing modules to others or building
software to your client/own company?
In my opinnion modules are good for the public but not for internal /
sophisticated (=educated) use.
**
Martin
2009/7/20 Sam Stainsby :
> I'm probably revealing my inexperience with J2EE environm
I'm probably revealing my inexperience with J2EE environments in asking
this, but how do Wicket programmers typically handle application "add-
ons" (or "plug-ins" or "modules").
I'm interested in emulating what happens in the Zope/Plone world (which
is where I've come from). In the case of Zope,
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