Check out the JPA example -- it is running in tomcat with no EE at
all, 100% J2SE with the hibernate entitymanager (you can also use the
Hibernate session manager if you don't want to use the Java standard
APIs)

That is the stack that I am on:

Maven build
JSF RI 1.2
Facelets 1.1.14
JBoss Seam 2.0.0.GA
Trinidad 1.2.5-SNAPSHOT
Tomahawk 1.1.7-SNAPSHOT
Tomahawk Sandbox 1.1.7-SNAPSHOT

-Andrew


On Dec 15, 2007 6:40 PM, ying lcs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Dec 15, 2007 3:18 PM, Andrew Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Check out the examples folder in the Seam download, there are many
> > examples. As for the other two, someone else will have to answer
> >
>
> Thank you.
> The drawable of Seam is it ties to JEE.  I either need to run it in a
> JEE container (e.g. Jboss), or I run an 'embedded jboss' with tomcat
> (to me, which beats the purpose of running my web app inside tomcat,
> if I just need a servlet container and wants to be lightweight).
>
>
> >
> > On Dec 15, 2007 10:18 AM, ying lcs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > I am new to JSF, I would like to know what is the good way to start a
> > > JSF project running on tomcat.
> > > I am planning to Hibernate for database communication.
> > >
> > >
> > > What other things/framework do I need? Spring? Shale? Seam?
> > >
> > > Thank you.
> > >
> >
>

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