Hi James,
I believe that's where the core distribution of Wildfly comes in --- to
allow interested users to boot/extend wildfly as any type of server, not
merely EE container.
I do find this useful. In my previous project, we build a software to
distrbute fax to email. This software is running in different IDC across
Australia, where faxes are terminated from telcom network, and instances of
this software need to be managed and synchronized provision data from
central node. If this piece of software has been equipped with Domain
Management features like Wildfly provides, it would have make our lives
much easier.
Regards,
On Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 3:37 AM, James R. Perkins <jperkins(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
For the wildfly-maven-plugin I've written a simple class to
launch a
process that starts WildFly. It also has a thin wrapper around the
deployment builder to ease the deployment process.
I've heard we've been asked a few times about possibly creating a Gradle
plugin. As I understand it you can't use a maven plugin with Gradle. I'm
considering creating a separate bootstrap(ish) type of project to simple
launch WildFly from Java. Would anyone else find this useful? Or does
anyone have any objections to this?
--
James R. Perkins
JBoss by Red Hat
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