It's scary to me in two ways: 1) there is so much code that it is
difficult to thoroughly review the it all for security
vulnerabiliities (something my customer requires), and 2) code size is
an hint of the complexity (richness?) of Cocoon/Lenya and hence the
difficulty in mastering it.
I may have miscounted some files, and everyone's configuration is
surely different. On another system, with fewer Cocoon blocks turned
on, I counted:
Lenya: 459 *.java files in the src directory, and 429 in build.
Cocoon: 2448 *.java files in the src directory, and 0 in build.
Don't misunderstand me, I'm a big proponent of both Lenya and Cocoon.
They are both remarkable in many ways. But as others have said
elsewhere -- particularly about Cocoon -- their size and complexity
have probably hindered their popularity.
On 12/23/05, Josias Thoeny <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thu, 2005-12-22 at 16:08 -0500, Bob Harner wrote:
> > Just for kicks, I ran a little program of mine that counts lines of
> > source code (excluding blank lines and comments) against the .java
> > files in the Lenya & Cocoon source. Here's what it says:
> >
> > Cocoon 2.1.7 *.java: 2,399,544 lines in 2454 files
> > Lenya 1.2.4 *.java: 1,091,217 lines in 1002 files
> >
>
> Hi Bob,
>
> In Lenya 1.2.4 I can find only 450 java files.
> Could it be possible that you also counted the files in the build
> directory?
>
> Anyway thanks for the numbers, it's interesting.
>
> Josias
>
> > Of course, this doesn't include the java source of all the jar files
> > that Cocoon ships with. (And everybody has a different way of
> > counting SLOC, so these should be considered ballpark totals.)
> >
> > These numbers are very scary.
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