On Jan 7, 2009, at 1:16 PM, Jim Knutson wrote:
As Mike has mentioned, I also prefer platform consistency and if
there's
a problem with the platform view, we should fix it for the platform.
Let me throw out some potentials here:
* There is a general pattern existing in the platform today for
sharing
schemas across the technologies. Web services, servlets, ejbs,
and I
believe JCA Adapters all use this. Given that this metadata is
likely
to be shared across multiple technologies, it might be worth looking
at reusing the platform schema sharing mechanism to encorporate the
metadata into existing platform DDs. This further emphasises the
fact that this spec. is using the existing platform component model
to enhance it.
To be clear, the specifics that you're proposing are:
1. <web-beans
xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee">
2. Import the <ejb-ref>, <message-ref>, etc. syntax into the web-
beans.xml
For #1, it's important to remember that the official namespace has
changed in almost every version of the JavaEE specs. So it's not
accurate to say JavaEE has a history of consistent namespaces.
Long term, the reverse would be better, i.e. use the WebBeans
namespace style instead of the older JavaEE style. For JavaEE, a big
advantage would be making JavaEE configuration more modular and
extensible. For example:
<web-app xmlns="urn:java:javax.servlet"
xmlns:javaee="urn:java:javax.javaee"
xmlns:ejb="urn:java:javax.ejb"
xmlns:jms="urn:java:javax.jms">
<javaee:resource-ref> ...
<javaee:env-entry>...
<ejb:ejb-ref> ...
<jms:message-destination-ref> ...
</web-app>
I'd love to see the above change happen in JavaEE 6 as a platform-
wide, consistent, modular naming scheme.
For #2, if the modularity in #1 were adopted, then you'd solve #2
automatically. Otherwise, #2 is a bit odd, because those ejb-ref,
message-ref, etc really should be designed as a layer on top of JavaEE
IoC. The ejb-ref, etc should not be peers of WebBeans, they should be
layered on top of it.
* The implication of the above doesn't preclude the use of a unique
namespaces, but the default should probably be a platform namespace
for the well known cases.
Somewhat. As in my example above, it would be even better if the
shared JavaEE elements had their own namespace that didn't conflict
with the servlet, ejb, jca, webbeans, etc namespaces. That change
would clean up the entire platform and make it more modular, without
losing any generality or power.
And, since the JavaEE namespace does change with each version, there's
no real barrier to this proposal.
* Any Java-XML mappings should not be defined by this spec. JAXB
already
covers appropriate Java-XML mappings and we shouldn't define
anything
different. It's a pain to do and get it right for all cases.
It would be a mistake to use JAXB, because JAXB is solving a different
problem: general XML/Java serialization as opposed to XML
configuration. A hammer is not appropriate for every task, and
specifically, the semantics of configuration do not match the
semantics of deserialization. No one is proposing that the XML
configuration be a general Java deserialization specification. In
this situation, the semantics are sufficiently different that each
spec should focus on its core needs and not try to overgeneralize.
I'm going to have to dig deeper to fully understand the metadata
and
Java-XML mappings, but I'm assuming the only real need for this is to
incorporate extensibility into the XML instances for programmer
defined
stereotypes.
No, it's far bigger than that. It's central to the whole IoC concept
and capabilities of the spec.
-- Scott
Thanks,
Jim Knutson
WebSphere J2EE Architect
Scott Ferguson <ferg(a)caucho.com> wrote on 12/21/2008 09:58:08 AM:
>
> On Dec 20, 2008, at 10:12 PM, Gavin King wrote:
>
> > I would like to open up a discussion about the XML format
defined in
> > chapter 10.
> >
> > Mike is concerned that the XML format is different to the style
used
> > in other Java EE specifications, where class/method names are
> > generally specified as strings in the body of XML elements, and
that
> > the XML format may turn out to be confusing to users.
> >
> > On the other hand, the format currently defined by the
specification
> > is typesafe, allowing tooling to provide validation and
> > auto-completion of all class/method names, and is also less
verbose.
> > It's also consistent with the approach used by existing
solutions in
> > the spec (Spring, Seam).
> >
> > I've recently discovered that it's possible to write a Java 6
> > Processor that would generate the XML schema for a package
containing
> > web beans as part of the compilation process. (This is an
awesome new
> > feature of javac, that used to be provided by the APT plugin.)
> >
> > One possible path to take would be to use hyphenated names in
the XML
> > (i.e. <foo-bar> instead of <FooBar>) to make the XML more visually
> > consistent with other EE descriptors.
>
> I love the new format. The urn:java:package namespace is brilliant,
> to the extent that I'd go postal if it reverted to the earlier
draft.
> Among other advantages, it makes the XML so much more readable by
> emphasizing the bean's name. The name change to <foo-bar> would
be a
> good change, for consistency.
>
> Specifically, I just went through the process of changing our
security
> tag/bean configuration to the new format, and the improvement is
> dramatic. With the new format, the XML expresses exactly what the
> configuration means, and with no extraneous verbiage. It's
brilliant.
>
> There are a few things that I'd like tweaked, though:
>
> 1) The inline bean vs property needs to be simplified. (9.5
> injection point declarations), specifically the existence of a child
> element should not affect the parsing. Instead, it should follow
the
> method model (9.2.6) where "has a direct child <Initializer>, ...,
or
> binding type." 9.5 should be rewritten as:
>
> a) If the Java type is a parameterized type .... is a type
> declaration
> b) Otherwise if ... binding type ... is a type declaration
> c) Otherwise, the injection point declaration is an inline Web
> Bean declaration, and the declared type ...
>
> i.e. removing the old 3rd rule because it was making things more
> confusing. The slight extra verbosity by requiring <Current/> for
an
> injected type is outweighed by the simplification, and consistency
> with 9.2.6.
>
> The specific problem is: when does an XML element refer to a type
and
> when does it refer to a bean to be instantiated (9.6 vs 9.7), which
> isn't obvious from the spec (it's well-defined, but can be
simplified.)
>
> 2) Property injection (bean-style setters) really need to be
> supported. The bean pattern is historic and embedded in essentially
> all specifications, so it's not really something WebBeans can avoid.
> Aside from the historic value, property injection lets you validate
> input easily at the configuration point, which is very nice.
>
> 3) Argument vs field is somewhat visually confusing. The spec
> logic works, but it's easy to confuse a constructor arg for a field
> and waste time. I'm not sure it needs to be changed, but
something to
> think about. You could have field/property as <myapp:foo-bar> and
> types/annotations as <myapp:FooBar> or add an <arg> (I'm not sure
> these are good ideas or even if there needs to be a change. I'm
just
> throwing the idea out.)
>
> 4) Annotation declaration is great. I would like the ability to
> add non-webbeans annotations (for service declarations/
introspection),
> but that non-critical and could certainly be put off until a later
spec.
>
> -- Scott
>
> >
> >
> > I would like to get everyone's thoughts on this issue:
> >
> > Do you like the existing format?
> > Do you find it confusing? In what way?
> > Have you used this approach in Spring or Seam? If so, how did it
> > compare?
> > How important is typesafety?
> >
> > --
> > Gavin King
> > gavin.king(a)gmail.com
> >
http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/Gavin
> >
http://hibernate.org
> >
http://seamframework.org
> >
> >
>