Thanks Craig!

After a quick glance: This seems to aim at a different issue, as I was
asking for automatic deployment in a development enviroment.

Still, this could be quite valuable once the application is deployed on a
different server.

On 3/13/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Sorry for entering this party late, but I created a wiki page a while ago
on remote debugging Pluto (and contained portlets) with Eclipse. It can be
found at http://wiki.apache.org/portals/Pluto/RemoteDebuggingWithPluto .

Basically, this uses the JPDA (Java Platform Debugging Architecture)
standard that nearly every IDE and app server supports. This kind of
debugging does not require that you install Pluto in Eclipse or any other
IDE.

If anyone has done this kind of debugging in NetBeans, IDEA or JDeveloper
(or others), please add that information to this wiki page.
/Craig

"Jörn Zaefferer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote on 03/08/2007
05:59:41 PM:

> Hi,
>
> I'm looking for a portlet container or portal server that can be
> used to develope and test portlets, without the delaying overhead of
> a heavy portal server like Websphere Portal (my target platform).
>
> My attempts to use Pluto from Eclipse (with WTP plugins) were rather
> unsuccessful. I need a way to auto-deploy or publish the changed
> code into the running server runtime.
>
> Simply using the pluto-bundled tomcat from within Eclipse doesn't
> work, as Eclipse recognizes only Tomcat as the runtime, and strips
> all other webapps (like pluto) when starting tomcat.
>
> Any hint on how to setup Pluto or some portal server using Pluto, or
> any other server, as a fast and efficient development enviroment is
> highly appreciated.
>
> Thanks and regards
> Jörn Zaefferer

Reply via email to