On 03/27/2013 06:23 AM, Max Rydahl Andersen wrote:
So to summarize:
You want to have a list of classpath for AS 7.2 to hand out to users.
Correct summary... either a list, or a way to GET a list.
Is there any jira for it ?
My email was asking if anyone remembered a jira being created. I
couldn't find one. I've just made some now:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/JBIDE-13871
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/AS7-6806
My answer:
I talked in great length with David, Jason and Brian last week on this
and I'll send out notes from that call ASAP (just need to get past EC).
But short answer: We got an idea on how to do it, but in short term we
probably still need to find the jars based on some static info.
/max
On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 09:10:00PM +0800, Rob Stryker wrote:
> Hey guys:
>
> So I've had this in the back of my mind for a bit and kinda forgot
> about it... But now users of JBossTools alpha release are starting to
> notice, and its time to bring it up again.
>
> In the past, up until as 7.1, JBossTools would set a list of jars to
> automatically add to a project's classpath to help users get started.
> If they create a web project, or ejb project, or ear project, we'd
> helpfully add a bunch of common jars we're pretty sure users would on
> their classpath automatically.
>
> For AS 7.2/EAP6.1, we currently return 0 jars. A user creating an
> as7.2 runtime and a web project to go with it gets 0 jars, and 0 help
> at starting their project (unless they're using maven stuff or jboss
> central stuff). This was because we were informed it was
> inappropriate for us to just go willy-nilly poking around the modules
> folder ;)
>
> I do remember discussing with some of the AS guys about this, but I
> can't seem to find a jira requesting API for us to figure out what
> jars should be made available to a client. So if anyone remembers a
> jira being created, that'd be great, otherwise I can make a new one.
>
> Remember, our requirements are that this must be done based only on a
> non-running server, and preferably not launching a new VM or process
> to inspect an installation folder since that would count as
> long-running. Ideally this would just return a best-guess of what's
> publicly available to a majority of deployable units.
>
> And of course I remember from the discussion that the list of jars
> would obviously change based on what kind of deployment needs
> access... and that any correct implementation would require a running
> server and jboss-modules fully loaded etc, but that's not what JBT is
> looking for. We're just looking for a best-guess that covers most of
> the bases.
>
> Again, if we weren't told not to by the AS team, we'd probably just
> hand-pick a nice subset of jars that include javax packages and the
> like, but we've been repeatedly told that poking around the modules
> folder is inappropriate, so, guidance is requested.
>
> Anyway, if anyone knows a jira that was opened for this (if one
> indeed was opened), I'd be glad to discuss the issue there.
> Otherwise, it'd be good to get some sense of what's possible and if
> it will be included in as7.2 or not.
>
> Again, I'm not experienced at coding for app server, at all actually,
> but if I can be of any help at all in any way, I'd definitely be
> willing to try to make sure this stuff goes on. Currently exposing 0
> jars seems very wrong and users will complain.