On Sep 4, 2006, at 4:54 PM, Jason Dillon wrote:
On Sep 4, 2006, at 1:39 PM, David Jencks wrote:
IMO this would be a perversion of the geronimo architecture. What
does "fully started" mean anyway? If you start with say geronimo-
jetty-minimal and add cars to turn it into a full j2ee server
while it is running, when exactly is it started? It certainly has
nothing to do with the kernel.
When we thought about this last the best idea we could come up
with is that it's "fully started" when all the modules listed in
persistent configuration lists (should be persistent module lists)
that are in the bootstrap or included recursively in those modules
are started. Think about what happens if a module in the original
PCL includes another PCL.
Started (or fully started) means that the server has loaded,
initialized and started all modules in the persistent
configuration, such that it could then start to serve
applications... and start listening on ports, etc. True there
might be more modules to be loaded or configured after that, but
the point is to tell when the server is ready to start accepting
work. There is a period while the server is starting, when it
starts listening to http, but it is not ready to serve applications
which have been configured to be deployed.
ya- that's a bug :-(
Anyways, I don't care too much what it is called... but I think
that flag should be exposed as a simple Boolean on some common MBean.
That's a great idea!
Maybe its not the Kernel, as the kernel might be started, but the
system might not be ready to serve my webapps or whatever. Having
to pull in geronimo-kernel to perform a simple remote call to fetch
a boolean is overkill... especially since that module has magical
logging fluff that rudely overwrites configuration.
If we had a specialized MBean/GBean that just exposed the very
common remote functionality via JMX directly then we would be in a
very good position to keep tools (IDE plugins, maven plugins, etc)
working even after we change the internals around. Such tools need
an easy way to:
* Detect when the server is started and ready to server applications
* Shutdown
Probably some other things too...
yup
thanks
david jencks
--jason