Appreciate the help, found it at http://www.drools.org/Loading+and+managing+rules+dynamically+from+a+database
includes a web interface too. Very nice! thanks i.ishak -----Original Message----- From: Michael Neale [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2006 1:13 PM To: user@drools.codehaus.org Subject: Re: [drools-user] Storing rules in a database They should be in the articles section at www.drools.org (along with downloads - Sujits implementation works with the python semantics). On 3/30/06, Ishafizan Ishak <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Hi, > > " I found an example of storing rules in a database using hibernate > > technology " > " I think you may be referring to the article I submitted " > > Can u share me the links to these examples/articles pls? > > Thank u very much > i.ishak > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Susan G Lee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Thursday, March 30, 2006 5:11 AM > To: user@drools.codehaus.org > Subject: Re: [drools-user] Storing rules in a database > > Hi Sujit, > > Thank you so much for your input. You have veen very helpful. > > > Thanks, > Susan G. Lee > > > > > > Sujit Pal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > 03/29/2006 03:58 PM > Please respond to > user@drools.codehaus.org > > > To > user@drools.codehaus.org > cc > > Subject > Re: [drools-user] Storing rules in a database > > > > > > > Hi Susan, > > I think you may be referring to the article I submitted. An approach > using stored procedures should be similar, all the hibernate code does > is to persist and retrieve the object mapping to and from the database, > so if you had stored procedures to do the same mappings, then that would > work too. The only thing to note is that not all databases support > stored procedures, and for those that do, stored procedure dialects are > different enough so the solution would be tied to a single database. So > a solution with stored procedures would not be a generic one. > > Michael Neale has written a repository api for Drools3 which allows you > to plug in your repository implementation. The database implementation > is based on hibernate, but it should be easy enough to replace the > mappings with stored procedures, if you really wanted to go that route. > > HTH > -sujit > > On Wed, 2006-03-29 at 11:46, Susan G Lee wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I found an example of storing rules in a database using hibernate > > technology. Is there another example of using it w/ stored procedures > > calling the database to generate the rules? or is hibernate the only > way? > > > > > > > > Thanks, > > Susan G. Lee > > > > >