Burr Sutter wrote:
Hey Martin,
It would be IDEAL is for you to craft what you think you have heard into
this Jira.
please use the jbpm 4 userguide as a reference. if there is something left unclear
in terms of supported vs unsupported, then raising a jira issue for that particular
item is appropriate.
You have the best experience with current jBPM3
users/customers and you can write these items down in a way that really
communicates best with the jBPM3 customerbase. You are the best
qualified to get this language right.
Pretty please? :-)
We are looking at jBPM3 and jBPM4 side-by-side (in the same
container/JVM, in the same DB).
We are NOT looking at migration tools at this time, in previous
discussions it was determined that any migration tools that are crafted
would be incomplete at best and take up a substantial amount of time
that nobody has right now. Therefore, the side-by-side becomes a lot
more important since current users will have current processes/instances
in jBPM3 but deploy another application (new project) based on jBPM4.
So at this moment, we are not looking to help people migrate, jBPM4
(especially in light of its newly documented limitations) is for new
projects - rebuild your JPDL, re-write your jBPM action handlers,
re-write all uses of jBPM APIs, re-write your custom queries against the
Hibernate schema and database.
This position could change after July 1st and jBPM4.0 (without the
letters GA) hitting
jboss.org.
just for my verification: you are saying that we might still change our opinion and
decide to build full DB migration at that point if customer demand mandates it, right ?
Tom, did I state this correctly? Please feel free to jump on me if
necessary.
yes. very well :-)
regards, tom.
Burr
Martin Putz wrote:
> I really appreciate this initiative. When it's time for the supported
> jBPM 4 version, we need to make this clear to customers as well,
> either by removing the unsupported elements, or by having a clear
> statement in the docs. Has this list made it into a JIRA (docs) issue
> already?
>
> The limitations make sense to me. It's not going to make all our
> existing jBPM 3 customers happy, but our current model of half-baked
> support for some features or configurations is not satisfying either.
>
> Another aspect that has been discussed already, but for which I'm not
> sure what the outcome was, are our 'migration' plans. I reckon we can
> have jBPM 3 & 4 side-by-side, but are we going to offer some further
> help to move from jBPM 3 to 4? Not thinking about full DB migration,
> but conversion tools for processes including how-to docs?
>
> Martin
>
>
> Burr Sutter wrote:
>>
>>
>> Tom Baeyens wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> Burr Sutter wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Tom Baeyens wrote:
>>>>> 2 more
>>>>>
>>>>> * no user provided hibernate sessions
>>>>> * no user provided jdbc connections
>>>>>
>>>> Would our jBPM3 customers think these are "losses"?
>>>
>>> in my estimation, I think that less then 1% of our users uses this
>>> feature.
>> Very good, I think you, Alejandro and Martin would have the best
>> insight into what features are used or not.
>>>
>>>>> regards, tom.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Tom Baeyens wrote:
>>>>>> Burr,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In jBPM 4 one of the main goals is to improve the
>>>>>> supportability. Therefor we are seriously expanding the QA
>>>>>> capabilities in the project.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Another part of that is clearly indicate what environments and
>>>>>> configurations we support and which not.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Here are a couple of limitations that I'ld like to start with
>>>>>> from a product perspective:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> * only one jBPM instance on a jboss server
>>>> Can I have several .wars or .ears that all use that jBPM instance?
>>>
>>> yes
>>>
>> Excellent, I think that is pretty critical, at least for smaller
>> shops & developers. Large IT shops may only have a single
>> application running on a single instance of AS but I don't think that
>> is the norm.
>>>>>> * only installation and configuration of jbpm as in the soa
platform
>>>> What does this statement mean?
>>>
>>> configuration of transaction related stuff:
>>> - jbpm configured to bind to JTA
>>> - jbpm command interceptor with JTA required semantics
>>> - jbpm configured to use hibernate's current session
>>> - jbpm configured to not create hibernate transactions
>>> - hibernate configured with a xa datasource
>>> - job executor configured as in the soa platform
>>>
>>> we create a set of configurations for jBPM, app server and hibernate
>>> so that it works. users have to stick with the configuration we
>>> provide and for which we have QA set up.
>>>
>>> we saw in jbpm 3 that a lot of users burned their fingers if they
>>> start messing with these transactional settings. e.g. let spring
>>> manage the transaction.
>>>
>>> jbpm 4 has improved conofigurability. but we must only support
>>> those configuration sets for which we have QA running.
>> Solid strategy.
>>>
>>>>>> - distribution ships with an ant based installer that installs
>>>>>> jbpm into jboss
>>>> Do we limit the support of jBPM to just JBoss EAP & SOA-P?
>>>> Historically, we've supported BEA, IBM, Tomcat, J2SE, etc.
>>>
>>> Yes. Unless we have QA set of for it in the project.
>> I have always felt this was an unnecessary risk and had asked for
>> this limitation before now and it will be a problem for several jBPM
>> 3 users/customers. However, we can increase our "platform" support
>> in future months based on specific user feedback.
>>>
>>> With the infrastructure we have in place now, it should be pretty
>>> straightforward to add such a container like e.g. Tomcat. But it
>>> takes work that has lower priority then embedding jBPM 4 into SOA-P 5.
>>>
>>> This is just a resource issue. In the project, next target (after
>>> SOA-P 5) would be Tomcat. I don't know know when we'll be able to
>>> deliver on that as SOA-P 5 takes precedence.
>> WAS, WLS, EWS (supported Tomcat) would be higher priorities in my
>> book but I understand the project's need to be seen as Tomcat
>> friendly in order to increase adoption.
>>>
>>>>>> - jbpm is installed in jbpm as a service archive
>>>> jBPM is already be pre-installed inside of SOA-P, is there anything
>>>> in jBPM4 that requires it to be in a .sar?
>>>
>>> jBPM 4 installation is a combination of a sar, libs, configs and
>>> some ejbs.
>>>
>>> the sar part is necessary to publish the central jbpm ProcessEngine
>>> object into JNDI when JBoss boots.
>> OK, I'm assuming that you'll work closely with Kevin whenever the
>> integration task comes up in the future.
>>>
>>>>>> - jbpm ProcessEngine is published in JNDI
>>>> Sounds good
>>>>>> - hibernate session factory configuration as part of the jbpm
>>>>>> installation
>>>> Does this mean that a user can't "hijack" the hibernate
session and
>>>> "work around" jBPM's use?
>>>
>>> They can but we should not support those scenarios until we have QA
>>> set up for these.
>> Makes sense to me.
>>>
>>>>>> - jta transaction integration
>>>> excellent
>>>>>> - timer and async message run through our JobExecutor
>>>>>> * only jboss idm identity component integration
>>>> Will the JBoss Identity component ship with EAP5? Or is this a
>>>> component that jBPM will include in its own jars?
>>>
>>> It is targetted to ship with SOA-P 5. They seem to be on track as
>>> well.
>> But what about EAP/AS users? We'll need to support that as a
>> platform with the identity component.
>>>
>>>>>> * no async messaging through JMS
>>>> That will make some jBPM3 users unhappy. NTT feels this will add
>>>> scalability, especially in a cluster.
>>>
>>> Same here. We have all functional components in place, but except
>>> for QA. Setting that up requires productization resources which we
>>> don't have. So that work is now serialized and will have to be
>>> prioritized after GA.
>> This one feels a bit "high priority" to me only because some high
>> profile customer made such a big deal out of it. With that said,
>> I'm not sure if the jBPM4 architecture without JMS is vastly better
>> than jBPM3 therefore the need for JMS just goes away. Only you can
>> make that call.
>>>
>>>>>> * no timer support through EJB Timer
>>>>>> * no spring transaction integration.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> We might be offering those to the community in order to get
>>>>>> feedback and flesh these out. But until those extra features get
>>>>>> stable and we have the necessary QA build out, I would like not
>>>>>> to introduce those into the product. This focus will help us to
>>>>>> deliver in time.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Do these seem reasonable limitations to you ?
>>>> Will these items ship in the .jars/.zips that we send to customers?
>>>
>>> Good question. We're building the userguide docs so that those can
>>> be shipped as-is to customers.
>>>
>>> But in terms of disabling actual features as part of the
>>> sanetization process, i didn't give that much thought yet.
>> OK, either we need to be able to "cut" the feature out of the product
>> zip OR we need to make it really easy in the docs to see that it is
>> "technology preview". Ideally it would just get removed. We did
>> this recently with Drools->BRMS, several files from the .org version
>> were removed as they were too experimental.
>>>
>>>>>> Do you see other jBPM aspects that need clarification if they are
>>>>>> supported or not ?
>>>> Martin P would be one of the best resources to ask what should be
>>>> "in" vs "out".
>>>
>> I've copied Martin, I guess I should have from the "get go".
>>
--
regards, tom.