<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=us-ascii">
<META NAME="Generator" CONTENT="MS Exchange Server version 6.5.7654.12">
<TITLE>Drools Flow persistance</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<!-- Converted from text/rtf format -->
<P><SPAN LANG="fr-ch"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">Hello,</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<P><SPAN LANG="fr-ch"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">I been searching through all the documentation I could find about how to persist a flow.</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<P><SPAN LANG="fr-ch"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">In the whats-new-in-drools-5-video-and-q session I found the following:</FONT></SPAN>
<BR><SPAN LANG="fr-ch"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">----------------------------</FONT></SPAN>
<BR><SPAN LANG="en-gb"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">Q: For long-running processes involving human tasks, how is the state of the process/flow persisted?<BR>
<BR>
A: Various approaches available - database via hibernate for instance, file system, all intended for high performance. Working Memories are now transactional and persistable (JPA is also an option). </FONT></SPAN></P>
<P><SPAN LANG="fr-ch"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">----------------------------</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<P><SPAN LANG="en-gb"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">Is there any examples available somewhere which describes how to persist to the file system (for a simple start)?</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<P><SPAN LANG="en-gb"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">Best regards</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<P><SPAN LANG="en-gb"><FONT SIZE=2 FACE="Verdana">Jan Petersen</FONT></SPAN>
</P>
<BR>
<BR>
</BODY>
</HTML>