Thanks.This looks pretty cool.
I trust that this doesn't constitute an exclusive or, i.e. it would still be possible to have this published as an "official" Spring Extension? Otherwise I would be glad to have it adopted in Snowdrop.
Olaf, Manik,
I would like to include this in Snowdrop (jboss.org/snowdrop), which contains a number of JBoss-specific extensions to Spring (and is part of the JBoss product portfolio too as part of http://www.jboss.com/products/wfk/), especially as this would allow Spring developers running in latter versions of JBoss AS to get out-of-the box caching support.
Ales (in CC) has started something similar too - see https://github.com/alesj/snowdrop/tree/cache2. I think that we can blend the two approaches in a very good fashion.
Olaf, would you be OK with "adopting" the code in Snowdrop?
Marius
Manik Surtani wrote:On 28 Mar 2011, at 12:42, Olaf Bergner wrote:Hello, I've decided that Spring Infinispan is where it ought to be right now, feature-wise and documentation-wise. There's obviously a lot that could be done to improve it. Yet I don't deem it prudent to go any further as long as the fine folks over in Spring land are pondering whether and in what way to accept our offer. If you wish, you may have a look at what I've done so far at https://github.com/obergner/spring-infinispanCool! I suppose you haven't heard from Spring as yet? Have you posted this to their user mail list and developer mail list as well? Might be a good idea to gain community adoption in the meanwhile. Cheers Manik -- Manik Surtani manik@jboss.org twitter.com/maniksurtani Lead, Infinispan http://www.infinispan.org _______________________________________________ infinispan-dev mailing list infinispan-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/infinispan-dev_______________________________________________ infinispan-dev mailing list infinispan-dev@lists.jboss.org https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/infinispan-dev