Yep, absolutely right.
> On Jul 5, 2015, at 8:27 PM, Joe Baldwin <jfbald...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>
> Andrus,
>
> in the interim, I did some hacking and found out that I needed
> cayenne-di-4.0.M2.jar
> as well
> cayenne-server-4.0.M2.jar
>
> The error, without the the di jar was that Modules were missing. So, if I
> haven’t missed anything, you need server, di, and all the 3rd party jars at a
> minimum. Does this sound correct?
>
> Joe
>
>
>
>> On Jul 5, 2015, at 8:20 PM, Andrus Adamchik <and...@objectstyle.org> wrote:
>>
>> Yes. Alternatively you can use ServerRuntimeBuilder (especially if you have
>> various customizations), but ServerRuntime constructor works just as well.
>>
>> Andrus
>>
>>
>>> On Jul 4, 2015, at 1:30 PM, Joe Baldwin <jfbald...@earthlink.net> wrote:
>>>
>>> Is this example from
>>> (https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.0/tutorial/ch05.html
>>> <https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.0/tutorial/ch05.html>) still considered
>>> correct? (Specifically the ServerRuntime instantiation):
>>>
>>>
>>> package org.example.cayenne;
>>> import org.apache.cayenne.ObjectContext;
>>> import org.apache.cayenne.configuration.server.ServerRuntime;
>>>
>>> public class Main {
>>> public static void main(String[] args) {
>>> ServerRuntime cayenneRuntime = new ServerRuntime("cayenne-project.xml");
>>> ObjectContext context = cayenneRuntime.newContext();
>>> }
>>> }
>>
>
>