If you find yourself needing to post more than 2 questions per week on the mailing list, including follow-up questions and requests, you need to hire a consultant that knows Shiro, or find help internally in your company who is willing to do the same. Demanding free help for what you really should be learning on your own is not in the scope of this, or any mailing list. Again, if you want for someone to hold your hand, you will need to pay for those services.
On Sep 14, 2015, at 4:16 PM, Sreyan Chakravarty wrote: > Then where should I go for help ? > > On Tue, Sep 15, 2015 at 1:44 AM, Lenny Primak <[email protected]> wrote: > Dear Sreyan, > > I've been watching your threads over time, and seems to me that you expect > too much "free help" from this mailing list. > I myself taught myself Shiro from the ground up in about 15 days, had a few > questions, but mostly figured it out on my own. > Shiro is an open source product and has ample documentation, and is very well > (and simply!) designed. > Please try to understand the concepts yourself, and don't expect people on > the mailing list to "hand hold you" through every aspect of Shiro. > If you need consulting services, I am sure you can arrange for something, > Otherwise, expecting and _demanding_ what amounts to free consulting > services, on weekends too, is a bit too much IMHO. > > On Sep 14, 2015, at 3:58 PM, Sreyan Chakravarty wrote: > > > I am new to Shiro and am struggling to understand some of its concepts. Is > > there any way I can attach a debugger to Shiro and check the flow of method > > calls ? > > > > I am using Shiro in Tomcat with Eclipse. > > > > Regards > > Sreyan Chakravarty > >
