On Tue, Apr 21, 2009 at 1:15 PM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> wrote:
On 21 Apr 2009, at 17:05, Dan Allen wrote:
I'd like to start a new thread to discuss the Seam 3 foundation (since
> this is no longer about the Seam 2.1 branch).
>
> So far, we have four main SVN divisions:
>
> examples
> modules
> docs
> sandbox
>
> I raised the question whether we should divide up modules into official,
> sandbox, and thirdparty. Shane said that likely we don't need that
> fine-grained of a division.
>
I don't really like this at all - official is not very community
orientated.
Okay, that's not really what I meant. I was thinking more along the lines of
production ready versus...well, a sandbox. But I think there is a general
consensus on a two-way split.
modules
modules-sandbox
Speaking of which, if we followed the web beans convention, the folder names
would be:
seam-modules
seam-modules-sandbox
seam-examples
seam-examples-sandbox
Should we add the seam- prefix? Or is it fine the way it is. I actually
don't care, just pointing out that I noticed the difference.
> The first example (booking) will be using JSF 2.0. I'm going to express
> this as a dependency per example right now because I'm thinking we still
> want Seam 3 to work with JSF 1.2 (or should we?).
>
I personally think we should require JSF2, we aren't porting all the stuff
we added to the JSF2 spec over...
I'll also assume that the app server has JSF 2.0. We might want a build
> somewhere that can install JSF 2 into JBoss AS just like Web Beans has. Of
> course, we are waiting on a deployer from my understanding.
>
You can do it today, just replace the libraries in
deploy/jbossweb.deploy/jsf-libs - writing an ant script to do this is a good
idea.
I wrote a Maven script ;)
modules/jsf-updater-tool
I'll likely weave in the antrun plugin to get fancier, but it is simple
enough right now that it gets the job done.
-Dan
--
Dan Allen
Senior Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
http://mojavelinux.com
http://mojavelinux.com/seaminaction
http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Dan
NOTE: While I make a strong effort to keep up with my email on a daily
basis, personal or other work matters can sometimes keep me away
from my email. If you contact me, but don't hear back for more than a week,
it is very likely that I am excessively backlogged or the message was
caught in the spam filters. Please don't hesitate to resend a message if
you feel that it did not reach my attention.