Hi George,
This sounds a bit complex :)
In summary we have the following three situations:
1) Application server type of container + primary JPA provider, e.g.
Wildfly + Hibernate JPA
2) Application server type of container + other JPA provider, e.g.Wildfly +
Eclipselink
3) Non application server type of container, i.e. application has to come
packaged with the JPA libraries, e.g. Tomcat
At the moment Forge supports 1). Adding support for 3) would not be very
hard I think. However we should handle 2) case by case I guess. I think
that we definitely need an abstraction in the JPA commands that knows how
to deal with the container+provider combinations.
WDYT?
Cheers,
Ivan
On Fri, Nov 28, 2014 at 1:57 AM, George Gastaldi <ggastald(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
I think this involves doing what's defined in
https://docs.jboss.org/author/display/WFLY8/JPA+Reference+Guide
We should be able to do the necessary changes in the project, however I
think we may need to point users to this documentation to handle the
changes in the AS itself (or ask Forge to do that itself)
Em 27/11/2014, às 19:58, Ivan St. Ivanov <ivan.st.ivanov(a)gmail.com>
escreveu:
Thanks George!
So I have attached the test. You can put it in the javaee addon, under the
test folder. It's located in the org.jboss.forge.addon.javaee.jpa.ui.setup
package. After you run it, look for the 'dependencies = ' string in the
output. I've set it up to use EclipseLink on Wildfly container. I suppose
it is not going to work with the JPA API dependency only, is it?
Cheers,
Ivan
On Thu, Nov 27, 2014 at 11:35 PM, George Gastaldi <ggastald(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
> Try doing project.getFacet(MavenFacet.class).getModel() and you should
> have the pom.xml model available
>
>
>
> Em 27/11/2014, às 19:28, Ivan St. Ivanov <ivan.st.ivanov(a)gmail.com>
> escreveu:
>
> So I was preparing the test. I wanted to create a test case that prints
> the content of the pom.xml after it invokes the setup command. Here is how
> I prepare everything:
>
> @Inject
> private UITestHarness testHarness;
>
> @Inject
> private ProjectFactory projectFactory;
>
> @Inject
> private EclipseLinkProvider provider;
>
> @Inject
> private WildflyContainer wildflyContainer;
>
> @Test
> public void testPomXmlContent() throws Exception
> {
> Project project = projectFactory.createTempProject();
> WizardCommandController tester =
testHarness.createWizardController(JPASetupWizard.class,
> project.getRoot());
>
> tester.initialize();
>
> // Setting UI values
> tester.setValueFor("jpaVersion", "2.1");
> tester.setValueFor("provider", provider);
> tester.setValueFor("container", wildflyContainer);
>
> tester.next().initialize();
>
> Assert.assertTrue(tester.isValid());
> tester.execute();
> }
>
> And now I want to somehow get the dependency facet or some other facet
> and print the content of pom.xml (or the dependencies). How can I do that?
>
> Thanks,
> Ivan
>
> On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 10:56 AM, Ivan St. Ivanov <
> ivan.st.ivanov(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi George,
>>
>> I can work on providing those tests and crafting a solution for the case
>> when the JPA provider is not packed with the target container. Will jump in
>> the IRC channel this week and discuss in more details with you.
>>
>> I see that the JavaEEDefaultContainer implements methods that imply JTA
>> data source. No matter that SAP HCP is built on top of Tomcat, we have our
>> own persistence service, which provides JTA data source. So, generally you
>> are right that I should not extend that abstract class, but in this
>> concrete case with HANA Cloud Platform it is the right thing to do.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Ivan
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 3:26 PM, George Gastaldi <ggastald(a)redhat.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Right, I think this makes sense. We might need to add more tests
>>> under these conditions. This area sure needs a bit of improvement.
>>>
>>> It looks like SAPHanaCloudPlatformContainer shouldn't be extending
>>> JavaEEDefaultContainer, afaik that is only meant to be extended by
>>> implementations of JavaEE servers (TomEE, Wildfly, EAP, Weblogic,
>>> GlassFish).
>>>
>>> On 11/24/2014 10:39 AM, Ivan St. Ivanov wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi George,
>>>
>>> I was thinking of something general in the area of tying up
>>> somehow (not coupling) the JPA containers and providers. The containers
>>> know very well whether they have JPA support at all or, if they have, what
>>> is their native provider (e.g. Hibernate for Wildfly). So IMHO whenever the
>>> user specifies a container with a provider the setup command should do the
>>> following:
>>>
>>> 1) Validate whether this combination is possible at all (e.g. not
>>> sure what will happen if we specify Wildfly with EclipseLink, at the moment
>>> it fails)
>>> 2) If the current container does not have built-in support for JPA
>>> (i.e. it is based on Tomcat, like SAP HCP) or it supports natively
>>> different JPA provider, then add the listDependencies() content to the
>>> pom.xml in the appropriate scope
>>>
>>> Something like this. Not sure though how was this whole thing
>>> intended to work: do we need to fully decouple providers and containers in
>>> the JPA addon?
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> Ivan
>>>
>>> On Mon, Nov 24, 2014 at 1:11 PM, George Gastaldi <ggastald(a)redhat.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hi Ivan,
>>>>
>>>> Yes, that's the idea. It's strange that this method is not being
>>>> called. I'll investigate further.
>>>>
>>>> Another solution would be to create a new Forge's
PersistenceProvider
>>>> implementation in a separate addon and select that instead when running
>>>> Jpa:Setup.
>>>>
>>>> Best Regards,
>>>>
>>>> George Gastaldi
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> > Em 24/11/2014, às 08:25, Ivan St. Ivanov
<ivan.st.ivanov(a)gmail.com>
>>>> escreveu:
>>>> >
>>>> > Hi everybody,
>>>> >
>>>> > I have the following usecase. I am developing a web application
that
>>>> uses JPA with Eclipse Link and will be deployed on SAP HANA Cloud
Platform
>>>> (think of it as Tomcat). Which means that I need the Eclipse Link
>>>> dependencies in the pom.xml in the compile scope. When I generated the
>>>> project and set up Eclipse Link, I got this in the pom:
>>>> >
>>>> > <dependencies>
>>>> > <dependency>
>>>> >
<groupId>org.hibernate.javax.persistence</groupId>
>>>> > <artifactId>hibernate-jpa-2.0-api</artifactId>
>>>> > <scope>provided</scope>
>>>> > </dependency>
>>>> > </dependencies>
>>>> >
>>>> > However, I rather need something like:
>>>> >
>>>> > <dependency>
>>>> > <groupId>org.eclipse.persistence</groupId>
>>>> > <artifactId>javax.persistence</artifactId>
>>>> > </dependency>
>>>> > <dependency>
>>>> > <groupId>org.eclipse.persistence</groupId>
>>>> > <artifactId>eclipselink</artifactId>
>>>> > </dependency>
>>>> >
>>>> > I see in
>>>> org.jboss.forge.addon.javaee.jpa.providers.EclipseLinkProvider:
>>>> >
>>>> >
>>>> > @Override
>>>> > public List<Dependency> listDependencies()
>>>> > {
>>>> > return Arrays.asList((Dependency)
>>>>
DependencyBuilder.create("org.eclipse.persistence:eclipselink"),
>>>> > (Dependency)
>>>>
DependencyBuilder.create("org.eclipse.persistence:javax.persistence"));
>>>> > }
>>>> >
>>>> > So we already have functionality on provider level that knows which
>>>> are the dependencies. However, it seems that this method is not called.
>>>> What was the idea of having it? How can I make sure that the
dependencies
>>>> are correctly configured?
>>>> >
>>>> > I think that it has something to do with the type of the container:
>>>> if it is SAP HANA Cloud Platform, then find the dependencies for the JPA
>>>> provider and add them in the default scope of the pom.xml instead of
adding
>>>> hibernate-jpa-2.0-api. If it is a full fledged application server, then
we
>>>> can go with the API in provided scope. Something like this.
>>>> >
>>>> > WDYT?
>>>> >
>>>> > Thanks,
>>>> > Ivan
>>>> > _______________________________________________
>>>> > forge-dev mailing list
>>>> > forge-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>> >
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/forge-dev
>>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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<JPASetupDifferentProviderTest.java>
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