Thanks for the update Brad !

I'm looking forward some feedbacks from you about karaf-boot ;)

Regards
JB

On 04/29/2016 05:09 PM, Brad Johnson wrote:
Well done.  Loving the profiles and static compilation mechanics.

After pulling in Camel/CXF, my bundles and a karaf 4.0.5 through the
profiles I ended up with a nice zip file of 40MB. It runs and works
perfectly.  This is going to open a whole new world.  New EIPs.  I was
thinking of how nice this would be for isolating a legacy database, for
example.  Set up a gateway with security and web services in an
appliance and then decompose the individual service calls into separate
applications that run locally on local ports or JMS or whatever. If a
particular query or set of queries was nasty and might benefit from
caching, a new appliance could be created for it.  The gateway might
send 80% of calls to the old appliance and 20% of calls to the new
appliance during an initial phase for comparison purposes.  If the new
one didn't work properly, just change the gateway configuration and
switch all traffic back or if it worked great, switch all the traffic to
the new one.  Each service appliance could be tweaked for its own
individual performance needs.  I can SSH into each one if I want and
look at what's going on.

Felix/Karaf or Equinox/Karaf are perfect little containers for that sort
of approach.

Ironically part of the beauty of that isn't about the technology itself
but about organizations.  If you touch the code in production you
trigger all kinds of procedures and paperwork.  Configuration less so.
And new code can be even less problematic for highly constrained problems.

It really is what I've been wanting.

One thing I'd like to discover or suggest is how to run tests with the
assembled code before zipping or after zipping but from an unzipped
copy.  So I run the profiles and create my appliance and now I want to
fire it up from the build.  Personally I have a couple of fluent
builders I put together for JAXWS and JAXRS client that I run from
CamelBlueprintTestSupport.  But if I could run the profiles to
completion, fork the container, and then fire up web service tests
against it that would be ideal.  Plain ol' JUnit would be best.  I'm not
really testing Camel at that point.  All the Camel routes and transforms
and logic are tucked neatly inside the black box of the appliance.

Great work guys!

Brad

--
Jean-Baptiste Onofré
[email protected]
http://blog.nanthrax.net
Talend - http://www.talend.com
  • Bravo! Woohoo! Brad Johnson
    • Re: Bravo! Woohoo! Jean-Baptiste Onofré

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