Hi Philipp, thanks for your comments.  I think any feedback/findings
you have would be very valuable input.  I think the the Distributed
OSGi angle is interesting from the perspective of implementation.osgi.

Regards, Graham.

2008/4/29 Konradi, Philipp (CT) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi,
>
>
>  > I'd like to get people's thoughts on whether the idea of 'promoting'
>  > OSGi is a good one,
>  IMHO support of OSGi is very important and I glad to see increasing interest 
> of the community here.
>
>
>  > and get ideas on how best to proceed.
>  I personally have currently not a very deep insight into implementation 
> details yet, but we are currently prototyping and have there also OSGi 
> services.
>  What I could offer today is only to feed our findings about limitations and 
> rooms for improvement back.
>  Another important thing which I see on the horizon, is the ongoing 
> standardization of Distributed OSGi (RFC119) and the benefit to support that 
> standard in Tuscany's OSGi bits. So from mid-term perspective I suggest to 
> keep an eye on that as well.
>
>  Regards,
>  Philipp
>
>  -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
>  Von: Graham Charters [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>  Gesendet: Montag, 28. April 2008 09:48
>  An: tuscany-dev@ws.apache.org
>  Betreff: Improving support for running in OSGi
>
>
>
>  Hi All,
>
>  I'd like to get more involved in the OSGi support in Tuscany (both the
>  modularity work (itest/osgi-tuscany) and the implementation.osgi).  I
>  recently started looking at the work to run Tuscany in OSGi, embodied
>  in itest/osgi-tuscany and described in the thread entitled
>  "Classloading in Tuscany".  I've noticed a couple of others on the
>  list also interested in Tuscany running in OSGi and wondered if it
>  might be worth considering making this a "first-class" option.  At the
>  moment the five bundles are only built by folks who want the OSGi
>  support and go into the itest/osgi-tuscany directory to create it.
>  This can result in any problems being discovered late, but also could
>  create the impression that OSGi is considered a second-class
>  environment (which I don't believe is the case).
>
>  Aside from the obvious benefits to OSGi users in doing this, I think
>  there's a potential for Tuscany to use the OSGi build as a test-bed
>  for highlighting and working through modularity issues, which would
>  also benefit Tuscany in general, not just in an OSGi runtime.
>
>  I'd like to get people's thoughts on whether the idea of 'promoting'
>  OSGi is a good one, and get ideas on how best to proceed.  We could
>  then start discussing what some of the issues might be (e.g. size of
>  builds, time to build, etc...).
>
>  Regards,
>
>  Graham.
>

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