Sent: 22 July 2004 12:05
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: EJB + Struts + Hibernate
Hi Marco
I'm running all the hibernate stuff in the webapp, /WEB-INF/lib and had
no issues.. Have you the ehcahche jar file in you lib directory?
Only the jdbc drivers in the common/lib directory t
ll have to try to put
It in either one of the two and see if it is working.
Regards
marco
-Original Message-
From: Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 22 July 2004 09:24
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: EJB + Struts + Hibernate
Marco
Can you try and put it on tomcat/
rking.
Regards
marco
-Original Message-
From: Richard [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 22 July 2004 09:24
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: EJB + Struts + Hibernate
Marco
Can you try and put it on tomcat/common/lib directory?
HTH
Richard
Marco Mistroni wrote:
>He
--Original Message-
From: Mark Lowe [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 27 June 2004 15:43
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: EJB + Struts + Hibernate
+1
You'll want to look at spring whether you want to use EJB or Hibernate.
On 27 Jun 2004, at 16:02, Bryan Hunt wrote:
I don't beli
4 15:43
To: Struts Users Mailing List
Subject: Re: EJB + Struts + Hibernate
+1
You'll want to look at spring whether you want to use EJB or Hibernate.
On 27 Jun 2004, at 16:02, Bryan Hunt wrote:
> I don't believe it is unless you feel that the application will need
> to be distribut
Spring is ultra cool. The most usefull thing that I'm doing with it is
using it's built in hibernate support rather than creating
and having to manage my own session factory code. It also allows u to
manage your transactions in the xml config file
and use aspect oriented programming for stuff li
+1
If your interfaces are in place you can pretty much change the
persistence layer to whatever you like very quickly.
I'll check ibatis 2 out if it does mean editing lots of xml files :o)
On 28 Jun 2004, at 10:54, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 04/06/28 8:55, "Mark Lowe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
On 04/06/28 8:55, "Mark Lowe" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The only thing thats stopped me using ibatis is that there's no
> xdoclet template thus the need to edit and maintain a bunch of mapping
> files, "YAWN".
>
iBatis has the DAO framework so you could switch from persistence
layer
with rel
Hi,
I have. but I m not using EJB on top...just straight
Hibernate
Frankly, it depends on your type of app...
For example, If u want to use the session façade, you will have
A session EJB that hides the entity EJB. If u r not happy using entity
EJB,
U would replace entity code with hib
The only thing thats stopped me using ibatis is that there's no xdoclet
template thus the need to edit and maintain a bunch of mapping files,
"YAWN".
Mark
On 28 Jun 2004, at 02:11, Vic Cekvenich wrote:
EJB is heavy, therefore slow and less scaleable. So in order to
support a heavy transaction l
EJB is heavy, therefore slow and less scaleable. So in order to support
a heavy transaction load, you would avoid it.
(and I think the reason somone mentioned iBatis is that it's popular and
scaleable, more so that Hibrenate becuase it's lower to the metal (SQL))
.V
Irfandhy Franciscus wrote:
.
On Sun, 2004-06-27 at 19:05, Pedro Salgado wrote:
> Have you checked iBatis? www.ibatis.com
>
> Pedro Salgado
>
> On 04/06/27 12:16, "Irfandhy Franciscus" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Thanks for the reply. So far I have tested my apps with JUnit and
> > HttpUnit using a single resin serve.
Have you checked iBatis? www.ibatis.com
Pedro Salgado
On 04/06/27 12:16, "Irfandhy Franciscus" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the reply. So far I have tested my apps with JUnit and
> HttpUnit using a single resin serve. and it is working fine. I am just
> scared that it would not be
Well I'm using it to deal with the business service side of my
applications between hibernate and struts. It saves me a lot of work. I
can really say anymore than that.
This article turned me on to it:
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2004/04/07/wiringwebapps.html
And matt raiable's app fuse
What's so special about SPRING? I am always interested in application
frameworks. Can anyone give a quick synopsis of the pluses and minuses?
Micahel
At 07:42 AM 6/27/2004, Mark Lowe wrote:
+1
You'll want to look at spring whether you want to use EJB or Hibernate.
On 27 Jun 2004, at 16:02, Brya
Thanks for the reply. So far I have tested my apps with JUnit and
HttpUnit using a single resin serve. and it is working fine. I am just
scared that it would not be able to handle heavy concurrent transaction
without EJB.
Thanks for the replies.
Mark Lowe wrote:
+1
You'll want to look at spring
+1
You'll want to look at spring whether you want to use EJB or Hibernate.
On 27 Jun 2004, at 16:02, Bryan Hunt wrote:
I don't believe it is unless you feel that the application will need
to be distributed across a cluster.
I use the (excellent) spring framework ( springframework.org ) so that
I
I don't believe it is unless you feel that the application will need to
be distributed across a cluster.
I use the (excellent) spring framework ( springframework.org ) so that I
can plug into a EJB layer if necessary in the future.
--b
Irfandhy Franciscus wrote:
Hi,
Does any of you guys has eve
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