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https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/TEIID-600?page=com.atlassian.jira.plug...
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John Doyle commented on TEIID-600:
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Can you better explain the distinction between the two categories of connector
dependencies?
I don't know all of the issues you are trying to address with this change, but I'm
concerned that it's a solution that won't work for all users. Will custom
connectors have to promote jars to the lib, and if so, how do they make the determination
of which ones go in lib and which ones don't. What about completing versions of
libraries?
Larry had proposed some weeks back pulling the connectors further out of teiid so that
they could support multiple versions, and I approve of that direction. This change seems
to go the other way.
Better handling of connector depdendencies
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Key: TEIID-600
URL:
https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/TEIID-600
Project: Teiid
Issue Type: Quality Risk
Components: Connector API
Affects Versions: 6.0.0
Reporter: Steven Hawkins
Assignee: Steven Hawkins
Priority: Critical
Fix For: 6.1.0
Connector dependencies by in large really fall into two categories - our built-in jars or
jars that are intended to be at a system level (such as a driver). By only allowing these
jars to exist under a post delegation class loader there are many downsides - it has a
negative impact on memory, it can cause issues with classloader leaks, makes built in
connector patching more difficult, and simply won't work in the case of native oracle
drivers. Here are the steps we would like to take to address this:
Promote all top-level built-in connector jars to the lib - this would be things like
connector-jdbc, connector-ldap, etc.
Add the notion of the common extension classpath to the dqp.
Change the common extension classpath to be a delegating classloader.
Change the meaning of the connector classpath to "required common
dependencies", then at the start of any connector service ensure/add all entries from
the connector classpath into the common extension classpath. The common extension
classpath will be cached and managed similar to the connector classloader cache. Changes
to extension modules will cause it to be reloaded. Since this approach does not actually
threat connector classpath setting as a classpath ordering of the entries doe not matter
and thus patch jars would not be useful in this setting. Rather users would simply
replace the extension module they are attempting to patch.
The connector type classpath would remain and still specifies required post delegation
libraries.
How Designer is managing dependencies does not need to initially change at all.
Basically all jars added as connector dependencies will be treated as common. The only
scenario that won't work initially is a custom connector requiring post-delegation
libraries. We can address this at a later time.
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