Embedding webui is crapy.
Which is why we link
To the console and show in browser externally or embedded.
We deliberately try not to depend
Nor duplicate the console.
The "tree" browser is simply just there since its trivial to do and been asked
for.
Afaik there is no tree browser in console and even if there is then its a webapp with no
way to integrate with besides viewing.
Btw. Latest as7.1 has weird scrolling behavior when embedded in eclipse. Just noticed that
:(
/max (sent from my phone)
On 10/02/2012, at 20.09, Heiko Braun <hbraun(a)redhat.com> wrote:
IMO it's pretty lame to work on three different, redundant efforts:
- the web UI
- the CLI UI
- the eclipse UI
I can somehow understand the CLI UI, but i think the best approach for eclipse would be
to embed the web UI. Maybe with a different layout. Something that fits better into the
overall frame. But technically it should be possible to reuse the web UI.
I keep hearing the term "like JMX console" over and over again. If you think
that power users require something more generic then the full blown web UI, why not build
it within the console itself? And then use it embedded within eclipse?
/Ike
On Feb 10, 2012, at 7:54 PM, Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
>
> For now we just added the "raw" view but would like to either make this
more "beginner user-friendly" or move it over to something like the full blown
JMX console we got
> for "older" AS's where you can do edit operations etc.
>
> but for now we just do this "baby" raw console as a read only operation and
see where it takes us.
>
> /max
>
> On Feb 10, 2012, at 19:08, Rob Cernich wrote:
>
>>> Looks a lot like the CLI GUI. We should collaborate.
>>
>> It was certainly inspired by the CLI GUI, though I haven't had a chance to
look at the code yet. The UI piece is probably going to be specific to each (SWT on the
Eclipse side, I assume Swing on the CLI side). The model code could be shared, but
there's not much there on the Eclipse side:
>> * a resource node - represents an addressable resource (e.g.
/subsystem=switchyard)
>> * an attributes node - container for attributes defined by a resource
>> * an attribute node - an attribute value associated with a resource
>> * a category node - represents a "child-type" defined by a resource
(e.g. subsystem).
>>
>> The model is built using read-resource-description, read-children-names and
read-resource, depending on the node type.
>>
>> For me, I was just looking to make sure I had access to the management interface
from within Eclipse so I could add some SwitchYard specific capabilities to the Servers
View. The "baby console" was just a POC demonstrating the possibilities.
>>
>> Best,
>> Rob
>> _______________________________________________
>> jboss-as7-dev mailing list
>> jboss-as7-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/jboss-as7-dev
>
> /max
>
http://about.me/maxandersen
>
>
>
>
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