Jayesh,

In Geode cluster, you can organize the members/nodes as different
group...And configure/create your regions to be part of specific
group...Gfsh allows you to do that without re-starting the cluster (gfsh
create region has group option).

Also, you can push your class/jar to the running cluster, using deploy jar
command.
>>  POC-1.0.0.jar release
I am assuming you have all the application class files as part of this
jar...There is no specific recommendation on how to manage the application
jars; its up to the app developers to manage their classes...

I am not that familiar about spring boot; i will let the experts to chime
on this.

-Anil.





On Tue, Sep 5, 2017 at 10:14 AM, Jayesh Thacker <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hello folks,
>
> Could some one guide me for this?
>
> Thanks,
> Jayesh
>
> On Wednesday, August 30, 2017, Jayesh Thacker <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Hi John,
>>
>> I am bit new to apache geode community. I have few questions related to
>> bootstrapping cache server using spring data geode. I could start something
>> running though.
>>
>> Thanks for the geode examples!
>>
>> Currently I have a requirement for 3 DISTRIBUTED regions with pdx
>> serialization organized under 1 logical group called say "group1".
>>
>> I have 2 servers running in my machine with same code base connected to
>> standalone locator started via gfsh.
>>
>> 1. How can I create a new region in group "GROUP1" with domain class
>> definition without restarting my servers now?
>>
>> 2. Assuming that my first deployment of project was POC-1.0.0.jar
>> release, how I should organize code for next release with only few new
>> regions?
>>
>> I found that we can deploy some jars to server using gfsh deploy, but i
>> am not sure about folder structure it should follow.
>>
>> Also if that would also be spring boot project with <gfe:region..> tags
>> only without Spring Boot Main?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Jayesh
>>
>

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