Good point. I guess this could easily be done by moving this to
OpenShift. With dedicated WildFly / Neo4j instances for each major
WildFly version. This way we could also provide an online Neo4j
browser (similar to [1] and [2]). Even with a custom documentation and
mini guides.
[1]
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/37370820/hosting-a-public-read-only-n...
[2]
http://neo4j.het.io/browser/
On Mon, Feb 6, 2017 at 2:14 PM, Kabir Khan <kabir.khan(a)jboss.com> wrote:
Very cool. If we could have the neo4j server somewhere central,
perhaps we could eventually do the comparisons of model versions from there?
> On 6 Feb 2017, at 11:15, Harald Pehl <hpehl(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> TL;DR
>
> A tool to analyse the WildFly management model tree using a graph database.
>
> # Longer version
>
> As a heavy consumer of the WildFly management model I've always been
> looking for a way to analyse the management model. So I decided to
> start a little side project over the weekend. The result is a tool [1]
> which reads a (sub)tree of the WildFly management model and stores the
> results into a graph database using Neo4j [2]. To get started, you
> need a running WildFly and Neo4j instance.
>
> The tool writes nodes for each resource, attribute, operation, request
> property and capability. In addition it creates relationships between
> these nodes. You can use the data to
>
> - get alternatives and requires relations between attributes
> - get deprecated attributes and request parameters for one or all resources
> - find attributes which might miss a capability reference
> - find inconsistent attributes
> - see differences between resources (using external diff tools)
>
> See [3] for more use cases. I hope this is useful for others as well.
> Feedback, suggestions and critics are welcome!
>
> [1]
https://github.com/hal/model-graph
> [2]
https://neo4j.com/
> [3]
https://github.com/hal/model-graph#examples
>
> --
> Harald Pehl
> JBoss by Red Hat
>
http://hpehl.info
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--
Harald Pehl
JBoss by Red Hat
http://hpehl.info