Hi Jacques,

The forked project supports recent Java version 8, while the original
project is no longer in development.
I uses it with Eclipse so that changed .java files are built automatically
into .class files, while
DCEVM detects changed class files and load it directly into the JVM. 

Eclipse will warn me whenever .class files and JVM is not up to date. So I
know when I need to restart OFBiz from Eclipse.

DCEVM is a time-saver for me since I code mostly in Java :)

Regards,
James


Jacques Le Roux wrote
> Hi James,
> 
> Interesting notably in debugging cases!
> Is it better than what is OOTB in Eclipse? Is it better than what it
> forked http://ssw.jku.at/dcevm/ ?
> 
> Thanks
> 
> Jacques
> 
> Le 14/04/2016 00:38, james_sg a écrit :
>> Hi anon,
>>
>> To add on, if you are using Eclipse IDE for development, check out
>> https://dcevm.github.io/. DCEVM allows you to code java and test the
>> change
>> without restarting the whole application. Eclipse IDE prompts you
>> whenever
>> DCEVM cannot push the change properly, and you will know the application
>> requires a restart.
>>
>> Regards,
>> James
>>
>>
>> Pierre Smits wrote
>>> Hi anon <
>>> sa_reminder@
>>> >.
>>>
>>> Jumpstarting development is easy:
>>>
>>>     1.  Use the ./ant create-component task to create a complete
>>> skeleton
>>> of
>>>     a hot-deployment component. And after an ./ant build start you are
>>> ready to
>>>     use the skeleton. Just make sure that you load the component's
>>> permissions
>>>     after the startup (in webtools)
>>>     2. You can create widgets (screens, forms) without it requiring a
>>> restart
>>>     3. You can can create freemarker templates and groovy scripts
>>> without
>>> it
>>>     requiring a restart
>>>     4. You can create request-map and view-map URI's without it
>>> requiring a
>>>     restart
>>>
>>> The elements of a component requiring a restart is services and Java
>>> code
>>> (as it needs to be compiled. Adding new labels to the Label.xml files of
>>> the component doesn't require a restart, but the cache needs to be
>>> flushed
>>> to see the effects (again this is done in the webtools component).
>>>
>>> I trust the above will help you jumpstart your development.
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>>
>>> Pierre Smits
>>>
>>> ORRTIZ.COM <http://www.orrtiz.com>
>>> OFBiz based solutions & services
>>>
>>> OFBiz Extensions Marketplace
>>> http://oem.ofbizci.net/oci-2/
>>>
>>> On Wed, Apr 13, 2016 at 9:23 PM, Nick Rosser <
>>> nrosser@
>>> > wrote:
>>>
>>>> You could check-out BigFish -- an open-source eCommerce framework that
>>>> complements OFBiz. Bigfish.solveda.com.
>>>> Nick
>>>>
>>>> -----Original Message-----
>>>> From: anon [mailto:
>>> sa_reminder@
>>> ]
>>>> Sent: Wednesday, April 13, 2016 3:12 PM
>>>> To:
>>> [email protected]
>>>> Subject: Ofbiz Development
>>>>
>>>> Hello List,
>>>> I have been looking at the tutorials on youtube of the ofbiz framework
>>>> and
>>>> I was wondering what the development experience look like. I noticed in
>>>> the
>>>> vid that the server has to be restarted frequently and that the startup
>>>> time can take more that 5 min. Is that really what is going on?
>>>> After seeing that, I tried the moqui framework, because I am looking
>>>> for
>>>> a
>>>> fully loaded opensource ecommerce framework. Sadly, moqui uses gradle
>>>> and
>>>> I
>>>> do not have a good experience with gradle. It is just too slow for my
>>>> taste. Is there any trick that you guys use to speed up thae ofbiz
>>>> startup
>>>> time or do you guys just live with it? I left Javaland years ago
>>>> because
>>>> of
>>>> that issue...
>>>> Thanks.
>>>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> View this message in context:
>> http://ofbiz.135035.n4.nabble.com/Ofbiz-Development-tp4679376p4679405.html
>> Sent from the OFBiz - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
>>





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