I agree with the selling point comment.  Yes, that's true simplification is good also from a tooling perspective (Eclipse + JBoss Tools gets too complicated and fragile at times esp. when you throw Maven into the mix with mvn eclipse:clean and mvn eclipse:eclipse and even m2eclipse and other plugins like Mylyn, etc.)

As far as adding jBPM integration to the mix, you're better off waiting for Seam 3 but given that Seam 3 will be using Maven, I'm not sure what the future of seam-gen will be as it's currently an ant build.xml script.  seam-gen is definitely a very good jump start for new Seam devs (being able to revengr entities from an existing db schema is fantastic).

Is it possible to hook into hbm2java Hibernate Tool from Maven?

Ease-of-use is something that Microsoft has always had and done well with as a selling point.

On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 8:48 PM, Piotr Steininger <piotr.steininger@gmail.com> wrote:
The application I thought of was aimed at reducing complexity and thus barriers to entry. The particular use case I had in mind was:
I have a Weld + JSF app.Now I need to add bpm to the mix, so I would add seam-bpm, but that's not the whole story. I need some extra configurations, and maybe some boiler plate code to hook it all up, and possibly create some process definitions and add them to the mix. 

In another words, I think that some way of simplifying the process of adding libraries and configuring them could be useful. 

I did not consider the idea of CRUD, but it could be nice as well.

Bottom line is that I'd like us to explore ways to simplify and standardize as many aspects of EE development as possible. I see this as a really good selling point for the technology. 

 

On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 9:27 PM, Steven Boscarine <steven.boscarine@childrens.harvard.edu> wrote:
One significant difference is that an archetype gives you a starter application, but really knows nothing about your application.  A mojo can be run at different points of the maven lifecycle, but doesn't know much about the app it's being run on.  It's up to the mojo writer to turn the collection of classes and resources into meaningful pieces of an application. 

I can't speak for rails, but I know Grails actually is aware of your data and has a much richer model.  Grails can apply a template per each entity or database table in your application.  Maven, as of 2.2 (haven't looked at 3.0 yet), has no idea what your domain is. 

For example, if you wanted to create a plugin that generated a CRUD app per each entity in your application, your Maven2 mojo would have to start from scratch and determine what your entities are.  It is my understanding that Grails plugins have convenient hooks to that data, controllers, service, etc (although someone who has actually written a Grails plugin before would be a better source of details on the subject). 



On 02/05/2010 06:06 PM, Arbi Sookazian wrote:
That's interesting.

The Basics of Creating Rails Plugins

A Rails plugin is either an extension or a modification of the core framework. Plugins provide:

  • a way for developers to share bleeding-edge ideas without hurting the stable code base
  • a segmented architecture so that units of code can be fixed or updated on their own release schedule
  • an outlet for the core developers so that they don’t have to include every cool new feature under the sun
http://guides.rubyonrails.org/plugins.html

Sounds like CDI PEs (portable extensions) was a ripoff of this idea...  And wasn't seam-gen alarmingly similar to Grails in terms of quick project setup/startup? 

PE is strikingly similar to Rails plugins based on the above description when you think of Seam 3 having Weld as its new core and the "extras" like jBPM integration, remoting, iText, PDF, Excel, etc.

Maven 2 already has the concept of MOJO (Maven POJO) and plugins:

http://maven.apache.org/guides/plugin/guide-java-plugin-development.html

Not sure what added-value you're suggesting??


On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 2:34 PM, Piotr Steininger <piotr.steininger@gmail.com> wrote:
I totally agree. Weld archetypes are probably the best polished ones I have ever seen. They remind me of some of the Rails semantics (get up and running in minutes). 

These similarities got me thinking about another aspect of Rails - Plugins or gems (which I think is a mixed bag). The promise of plugins/gems is that you can quickly add dependent code and do some setup in minutes as well. I think that maven could very well be a platform to do the same. Currently one has to add dependencies by hand and quite often tweak the exclusions. With the introduction of maven console plugin, I think the door became open to create maven plugins/console scripts to make this a more automated process.

I don't have the expertise to create a prototype. I also don't know if this is really something that could be useful in the community (or simply serve as a tool for Maven newbies).

In any case, I wanted to see what the community thinks about this.

 
 
On Fri, Feb 5, 2010 at 5:06 PM, Dan Allen <dan.j.allen@gmail.com> wrote:
The Weld archetype initiative has had a further reaching impact than just the community of developers interested in using CDI (via Weld). A recent blog entry on Sonatype cites the Weld archetypes as "the perfect case study of how using Archetypes benefits the community." Steven is acknowledged for his effort to identify the need of archetypes and ultimately get them promoted to Maven central for all to use.

http://www.sonatype.com/people/2010/01/maven-archetypes-and-nexus-there-is-no-faster-way/

Although archetypes are rather technically simple, it's important to recognize the impact they can have by starting people off on the right foot.

-Dan

--
Dan Allen
Senior Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
Registered Linux User #231597

http://mojavelinux.com
http://mojavelinux.com/seaminaction
http://www.google.com/profiles/dan.j.allen

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