Ok. 



If I have 4 bundles that all use JMS, and they are named: 

myApp.bundle1 

myApp.bundle2 

myApp.bundle3 

myApp.bundle4 



Would I need 4 configuration files in etc: 

myApp.bundle1.cfg 

myApp.bundle2.cfg 

myApp.bundle3.cfg 

myApp.bundle4.cfg 



? 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Łukasz Dywicki [via Karaf]" 
<[email protected]> 
To: "Mike Van" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Thursday, December 9, 2010 3:58:32 PM 
Subject: RE: Placing properties files in the classpath 

It depends on the configuration admin. Karaf uses etc directory for these 
configurations - eg. If you persistence id is set to com.mycompany any 
changes in $KARAF_BASE/etc/com.mycompany.cfg will be visible for your 
components. It doesn't look classpath, it looks into etc directory. That's 
better than classpath because operations can do changes without JAR 
modification. Even more fantastic is fact that your component can be 
notified about configuration change.. 


Best regards, 
Lukasz 


-----Original Message----- 
From: Mike Van [mailto: [hidden email] ] 
Sent: Thursday, December 09, 2010 9:42 PM 
To: [hidden email] 
Subject: RE: Placing properties files in the classpath 


In those cases, where does OSGi look to find the properties? And, what are 
the property file names? 

Mike Van 
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