Hi Christian, Thanks for the reply, will incorporate some of your techniques, especially the part about updating changed code( could save a lot of time) .
On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 8:51 AM, Christian Schneider < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi Karabo, > > I am using eclipse to work with Karaf but I do not use any special karaf > plugins. So my aproach may work for you too. > > I use the maven bundle plugin to create my bundles in the maven build. So > you need a maven integration that works with this. In this > regard Intellij is probably even better than eclipse. > > The next thing is debugging. I use the karaf remote debugging with the env > variable KARAF_DEBUG=true. Then I simply use the eclipse remote debugging. > This works very well. > The last piece you may be missing is good support for updating changed > code during a debug session. Karaf supports this using the "dev:watch *" > command. > When this is active you simply need to run mvn install on the bundle you > changed and it gets automatically updated in the running karaf instance. > You can then continue your debug session. > > While a tighter karaf integration may be nice I never really needed it. > > Christian > > > Am 19.05.2013 13:59, schrieb Karabo Molema: > > Hi >> >> Is anyone using Karaf and IntelliJ together. If so, can you please share >> your development process. The plugins I have found seem to be inadequate >> at working with Karaf. Maybe I am not using them properly, note that I am >> beginner when in the OSGi universe. >> >> Regards >> Karabo >> > > > -- > Christian Schneider > http://www.liquid-reality.de > > Open Source Architect > Talend Application Integration Division http://www.talend.com > >
