Hi,
some time ago I had a look at Brix (wicket-cms) and stumbled over
Jackrabbit and JCR. I had not much time till last weekend and decided
then to fight my way through the Jackrabbit-Docs and wiki.
I think I understood much of it, however versioning as well as the right
usage in production is
Hi,
some time ago I had a look at Brix (wicket-cms) and stumbled over
Jackrabbit and JCR. I had not much time till last weekend and decided
then to fight my way through the Jackrabbit-Docs and wiki.
I think I understood much of it, however versioning as well as the right
usage in production
Hi Alexander,
thank you for your response!
Alexander Klimetschek schrieb:
On Wed, Feb 25, 2009 at 7:53 PM, Korbinian Bachl - privat
korbinian.ba...@whiskyworld.de wrote:
- Why do I have to do soo much work for just saving a file? Did I miss
an easier approach?
Why do you think this is soo
Hi,
has anyone been able to deploy a Jackrabbit repo within google AppEngine
for Java? - if yes, I would be interested in how to overcome the no
file messing allowed limitation.
Best,
Korbinian
well, even if one would be able to deploy JR, it would be a real joke,
as googles hard limitations (maybe they soften these later on) would
make files over 1MB each impossible - this and the maximum 10MB response
limit kills nearly all java apps that are somewhat file related...
Currently, im
of the Amazon services and it
might be an advantage that Google has: in lots of places developers make the
tech decisions and if Google allows you to try things out for free you're
more likely to take a look at it.
Cheers,
-Tako
On Mon, Apr 13, 2009 at 11:10, Korbinian Bachl - privat
korbinian.ba
Hi James,
IMHO this construct is not what Jackrabbit should do or can do well. You
can save the data that way or others, however to query it later (usually
for display on a website etc.) you might want to have a look at SOLR
(http://lucene.apache.org/solr/). An example for facting is under