+1
On Apr 9, 2012, at 10:05 AM, Hadrian Zbarcea wrote:

> +1. I wanted to say the same thing. Dan beat me to it.
> Hadrian
> 
> On 04/09/2012 12:02 PM, Daniel Kulp wrote:
>> On Monday, April 09, 2012 05:43:15 PM Claus Ibsen wrote:
>>> Its just that Apache iBatis moved out of Apache, and is no longer an
>>> Apache project. And therefore people should use the product hosted by
>>> MyBatis instead. And as Apache iBatis is retired, then that is fine
>>> with me to remove camel-ibatis in Camel 3.0.
>>> http://ibatis.apache.org/
>>> 
>>> The old http client 3.1 is very much still in use. It simply just
>>> works. And still other products and frameworks use it.
>>> http client 4.x has a very different API / configuration model / that
>>> is a bit pain in the ****.
>> 
>> According to the hc website, 3.x is end-of-life:
>> 
>> http://hc.apache.org/
>> 
>> (see very bottom)
>> 
>> Thus, from my perspective, there is no difference between this and the
>> iBatis case.   In neither case is there a community behind the component to
>> support it.   With iBatis, folks need to move to MyBatis.  With http client,
>> they need to move to 4.x.       I'm fine keeping the 3.x version around for
>> a little while to help people move, but for 3.0, we really need to make sure
>> the DEFAULT is the version that is actually supported by the communities.
>> 
>> 
>> Dan
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> So I want to keep both of them.
>>> - camel-http
>>> - camel-mina
>>> 
>>>> Regards
>>>> JB
>>>> 
>>>> On 04/09/2012 03:27 PM, Glen Mazza wrote:
>>>>> Team, I noticed Camel is maintaining both an "HTTP" (using Apache HTTP
>>>>> client 3.x) and an "HTTP4" component (using Apache HTTP client 4.x).
>>>>> For
>>>>> Camel 3.0, can/should the former be removed so only one component is
>>>>> maintained, with the latter component optionally being renamed to HTTP
>>>>> in the process?
>>>>> 
>>>>> Glen
>>>> 
>>>> --
>>>> Jean-Baptiste Onofré
>>>> jbono...@apache.org
>>>> http://blog.nanthrax.net
>>>> Talend - http://www.talend.com
> 
> -- 
> Hadrian Zbarcea
> Principal Software Architect
> Talend, Inc
> http://coders.talend.com/
> http://camelbot.blogspot.com/

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