I had to put my directory structure like this:

[mywebapp]\WEB-INF\classes\META-INF\persistence.xml

It didn't work when I put it in a top-level META-INF directory.

HTH,

Adam Brod
Product Development Team


"stephan opitz" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
06/30/2006 08:13 AM
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Subject
Re: [shale] and ejb 3.0 and hibernate working together example






hello,

i defined my ejb 3.0... created a persistence.xml with a pu in the
meta-inf folder.
using eclipse with maven2 plugin (all dependicies are correct)

Exception:  javax.persistence.PersistenceException: No Persistence
provider for EntityManager.

i'm not the only one with this problem, but no solution found...
persistence.xml wouldn't be found...

should i define something else??

any solution

stephan

2006/6/29, stephan opitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> thx...
>
> thats great... i learned on studying the mailreader example...
>
> when it is ready to service... i'm right now writing on an application
> using mailreader as base... thats why it will be great using/learning
> from yours...
>
> using hibernate and ejb 3.0 is not so simple - i could find an
> example... maybe you have one? or can implement an how to look like in
> mailreader?
>
> stephan
>
> 2006/6/29, Craig McClanahan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > On 6/29/06, stephan opitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > > hello...
> > >
> > > does exist any kind of good example which include in the controller
> > > component hibernate with normal pojos or maybe already ejb 3.0???
> >
> >
> > I am almost through with a Shale+EJB3 (well, actually its Shale+JPA)
> > example.  It's the good ol' Struts MailReader application, recast to 
use the
> > new Java Persistence Architecture for talkng to the database.  One 
nice
> > thing about it (courtesy of Java EE 5) is you get dependency injection 
of
> > things like the entity managers into your managed beans (including the 
view
> > controllers behind each page).  This will get included (eventually) as 
a
> > formal Shale example later on.
> >
> > An application that used Hibernate for persistence woud be virtually
> > identical in overall structure ... the concepts behind Hibernate and 
JPA are
> > pretty similar for this kind of usage, although many of the details
> > definitely differ.
> >
> > stephan
> >
> >
> > Craig
> >
> >
>

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