[jbosstools-dev] Regarding Stacks, Runtimes, and Remote Descriptors
Rob Stryker
rstryker at redhat.com
Sat Mar 2 02:52:06 EST 2013
license, size, and disclaimer can all be added in the labels section of
the yaml.
Max has already made it clear that having three things that do the same
thing is wasteful and confusing, so the question isn't *if* we will
unify them, but rather *how*.
On 03/01/2013 09:29 PM, Snjezana Peco wrote:
> I think we need to keep all of those options (since they already
> exist). Each of them has its advantages/disadvantages.
> I agree with the proposed changes and emphasize that stacks don't have
> the following properties:
>
> - license
> - size
> - requireSso (see https://github.com/jbosstools/jbosstools-base/pull/50)
> - disclaimer
>
> Snjeza
>
> On 3/1/2013 10:22 AM, Rob Stryker wrote:
>> I would like to hear some feedback here from Max and Snjezana.
>>
>> On 02/28/2013 08:05 PM, Fred Bricon wrote:
>>> I mostly agree with the changes you described. Here's my 0.02€ :
>>> - I strongly believe runtimes should be split into different stacks
>>> descriptors, but I don't like the idea of having to maintain a fork of
>>> the JDF one. We should only add extensions (old AS'es, seam, ESB ...).
>>> - I believe the merge all stacks descriptors in one metamodel should be
>>> done in stacks client. I know Raphael kinda started working on that a
>>> few months back, he probably can give us his insight.
>>> - runtimes in stacks could list their managing JBT plugins in the
>>> labels property : i.e if ESB runtime can be downloaded, but no ESB
>>> plugin is installed, the we'd be able to discover both the runtime AND
>>> its associated plugin
>>>
>>> Fred
>>>
>>> Le mercredi 27 février 2013 18:22:35, Rob Stryker a écrit :
>>>> Regarding Stacks, Runtimes, and Remote Descriptors
>>>>
>>>> Hi All:
>>>>
>>>> This email is to try to begin discussion on some recent duplication of
>>>> code and responsibilities, which should probably be fixed before
>>>> things get too comfortable. I'm speaking specifically about the role
>>>> of discovering runtimes to download, where that's done, how that's
>>>> done, and which responsibility belongs to who. Forgive me if the email
>>>> is long, as I am trying to be thorough.
>>>>
>>>> Currently, there are three places from which runtimes to download may
>>>> be discovered.
>>>>
>>>> 1) base/runtimes has an extension point named downloadRuntimes, which
>>>> is used by AS Tools and Seam Tools (and perhaps others).
>>>>
>>>> 2) a remote descriptor file which acts as a second arm of 1) and is
>>>> basically an xml form of 1) used to dynamically add new runtimes as
>>>> they become available
>>>>
>>>> 3) The new Stacks methodology, currently stored in
>>>> jbosstools-central/maven/plugins/org.jboss.tools.maven.project.examples
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> We should begin unifying these three locations into one, but the goal
>>>> is to do it correctly. So, I would first like to list the benefits of
>>>> each.
>>>>
>>>> a) downloadable runtimes provided through the extension point cannot
>>>> be removed without a maintenance or major release of some type, and
>>>> for this reason are semi-permanent
>>>>
>>>> b) downloadable runtimes available via the remote descriptor file may
>>>> be added OR removed at will. This provides flexibility and
>>>> post-release updates are easy.
>>>>
>>>> c) The new stacks section has a more robust model capable of providing
>>>> more information than the downloadable runtimes does. However, the
>>>> plugin requires several libraries and is currently placed in the
>>>> jboss-central module, where others may not make use of it.
>>>>
>>>> d) the Stacks yaml file does not provide a place to access the file
>>>> size for the download, however it does provide a 'labels' section,
>>>> which seems extendable to add whatever properties you may want to add.
>>>>
>>>> At first glance, it seems that Stacks is the superior framework. It is
>>>> extensible, it can have unlimited labels (aka properties) if desired,
>>>> and it already provides more information which is usable to others who
>>>> may want it. To make use of stacks inside Runtimes, however, we'd
>>>> either need to:
>>>> a) Expand the API in runtimes to allow other plugins (like in
>>>> central) to provide downloadable runtimes, or,
>>>> b) Push 'stacks' out of central and down into runtimes, as its
>>>> own
>>>> plugin upon which runtimes.core and runtime.ui can depend.
>>>>
>>>> The main negative of pushing stacks into base/runtimes, in my opinion,
>>>> is that there are a significant number of libraries required. It's not
>>>> too much, by far, but it is about 7 jars totalling about 1 megabyte.
>>>> Whether these jars belong in base/runtimes is debatable, and currently
>>>> we do not have a "3rd-party dependencies" section in base where we
>>>> organize common dependencies and versions together so that each plugin
>>>> doesn't need to bundle their own 3rd party libraries. I admit, this is
>>>> a debate for another time, but, I just wanted to point out that
>>>> pushing the stacks logic down into runtimes would be another example
>>>> of this issue.
>>>>
>>>> Even still, I would argue that we should push stacks into its own
>>>> small plugin below runtimes, deprecate the "downloadRuntimes"
>>>> extension point, and the online downloadRuntime.xml (wherever the file
>>>> is, I forget).
>>>>
>>>> However, once we do that, there are many more questions. The first is,
>>>> who's job is it to provide the yaml file from which stacks are
>>>> generated?
>>>>
>>>> Currently there is only one yaml file, and it is referenced directly
>>>> via a github url. Aside from how (IMO) this is fairly crazy in itself,
>>>> it causes another problem. The stacks client jar *can* cache the yaml
>>>> file and only update if the timestamp has changed, however, when
>>>> checking the timestamp on a github file, there isn't one...
>>>>
>>>> This would seem to imply we should take control of the yaml file
>>>> ourselves and put it NOT in github but rather in a release-specific
>>>> online-accessible folder, ex: jbt4.1/stacks.yaml, jbt5.0/stacks.yaml,
>>>> etc.
>>>>
>>>> The problem with this is that we are then taking control away from the
>>>> jdf team, and once we take the file away, it is our job to keep it
>>>> updated and in synch. This may cause errors if we are not very
>>>> careful.
>>>>
>>>> Assuming we do this, though, the next question is, do we add seam and
>>>> esb runtimes to this yaml file, which currently only provides
>>>> application servers? Remember, the purpose of moving stacks down would
>>>> be to deprecate the downloadRuntime extension point, therefore any
>>>> replacement would need to do everything downloadRuntime does, which
>>>> includes providing seam and esb runtimes for download.
>>>>
>>>> Let's assume (for now) that we simply add lines to the yaml to allow
>>>> it to provide seam and esb runtimes. We may come back to this point
>>>> later, but for now, assume we do that.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Then which plugin will provide the url to our copied yaml? Who's
>>>> responsibility is it to point to this yaml file? Let's look at our
>>>> options:
>>>>
>>>> 1) The runtimes plugin references the yaml
>>>> 2) The central plugin references the yaml
>>>>
>>>> Both of these fail after thinking about it. How?
>>>>
>>>> 1) If the runtimes plugin references the yaml, then the download
>>>> runtimes dialog will list things (like seam) which may not be present
>>>> in the installation. Imagine an installation with only base and server
>>>> plugins installed, and so no seam or esb. A user clicking 'download
>>>> runtimes' will see esb and seam downloads, but the plugins which are
>>>> prepared to handle those runtimes after the download are not present.
>>>>
>>>> 2) If central is in charge of providing this yaml, perhaps through a
>>>> new extension point to the base/runtimes/stacks plugin we add there,
>>>> then an installation including only plugins from base / server will
>>>> have a BLANK download list. Users who install only ASTools will not be
>>>> able to download JBoss Application Servers.
>>>>
>>>> So both of these fail in their own way. The only solution as I can
>>>> see, the only way it would work, would be to have multiple such yaml
>>>> files, one for astools, one for seam, one for esb, etc. Each of these
>>>> modules would provide their own yaml url to base/runtimes/stacks via
>>>> an extension point in base/runtimes/stacks, and let stacks fetch each
>>>> one and build a unified model.
>>>>
>>>> Problems:
>>>> a) multiple urls need to be loaded
>>>> b) multiple yaml files need to be kept up to date, instead of just
>>>> one. Multiply number of contributing plugins by number of major
>>>> releases
>>>> c) Possibility of duplicates. Once you have multiple yaml files
>>>> generating models, it's possible some duplication leaks in. I'm not so
>>>> sure about this one, but Fred listed it as a concern.
>>>>
>>>> So, by my analysis, this is the only way I can imagine a unification
>>>> of these three models. I'll summarize the changes below, but it does
>>>> seem there would be a bit of work to do.
>>>>
>>>> Summary of changes:
>>>> 1) Deprecate downloadRuntimes extension point
>>>> 2) Create new plugin in runtimes module called "stacks"
>>>> 3) Add extension point to 'stacks' plugin called stacksProvider
>>>> 4) modify runtime.core and runtime.ui to use the model built in
>>>> 'stacks'
>>>> 5) Create a web-accessible location for jbt-release-relevent
>>>> data on
>>>> a per-module basis. For example,
>>>> http://wherever/jbt/4.1.0/stacks/astools.yaml, etc.
>>>> 6) Copy the current jdf yaml file to that location for astools.yaml
>>>> 7) Create a new yaml file which can build stacks for esb, seam, etc
>>>> 8) Ensure astools, esb, seam, etc, make use of the new
>>>> stacksProvider
>>>> extension point
>>>> 9) Test the shit out of it
>>>>
>>>> There are other benefits to this approach. Currently there's no really
>>>> good mapping of downloadRuntimes id's to an app-server id. This is
>>>> done in a hard-coded fashion in astools. This could instead be added
>>>> to the labels in the astools.yaml file if desired. It would allow
>>>> dynamic addition or removal of any runtimes, though in the yaml
>>>> syntax. It would minimize connections and re-downloads of the yaml
>>>> files, since they'll actually have a timestamp now (as opposed to in
>>>> github, where they don't). And it could help clean up some other areas
>>>> that could benefit from a cleanup.
>>>>
>>>> I'd really like feedback on this issue from anyone who knows anything
>>>> about the topic, because I know for sure I'm lacking a bit in fully
>>>> understanding the entire api. But I'd love at the least for someone to
>>>> tell me which of the logic here is obviously bad or if i'm wrong on
>>>> any details.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks and look forward to the feedback
>>>>
>>>> - Rob Stryker
>>>> I break things, and then put them back together.
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