+1 I see this being very powerful as it creates a small and easily distributable JAR that can easily be deployed to various types of environments. I also see this being used as an OSGi CLI tool base for many projects.
On Tue, Oct 29, 2019 at 6:54 AM Francois Papon <francois.pa...@openobject.fr> wrote: > +1 > > It make sense and it could really improve the tooling around Karaf. > > regards, > > François > fpa...@apache.org > > Le 29/10/2019 à 10:06, Jean-Baptiste Onofré a écrit : > > Hi guys, > > > > For some months now, Romain and I worked on a PoC named Winegrower. > > > > Winegrower provides three modules: > > > > 1. a Java runtime with OSGi programming model with a flat/single > > classloader. > > > > 2. Winegrower "Cepages" are extensions (similar to spring-boot > > starter) that allows you to easily add flavors to your applications > > running with Winegrower. > > > > 3. Java agent to add winegrower at low level and get turnkey feature > > like monitoring, etc. > > > > We think Winegrower would be a great addition to Karaf for two reasons: > > > > 1. It's a first implementation about a flat/single classloader > > approach for OSGi. I know OSGi Alliance (and especially Ray) is > > thinking about that. > > > > 2. It's a great start to provide better tooling around OSGi and Karaf. > > The idea is to have > > > > Just to be clear, you can develop an application and test it with > > Winegrower. Then, you can run the application using a simple JVM with > > the Winegrower Ripener or deploy in Karaf, it's up to you, depending > > of the use case. > > > > The current Winegrower codebase is there: > > > > https://github.com/jbonofre/winegrower > > > > You can take a look on the README and the examples. > > > > We also deployed a quick website: https://jbonofre.github.io/winegrower/ > > > > Thoughts ? > > > > Regards > > JB & Romain > > > -- *Patrique Legault*