Re: We did it!!!
Hi Mohammad, Hope everything is going fine for you and your family. Last time, we discuss together and we thought about US. Not sure it will be there, but that's what we mention. Jean-Louis 2011/10/6 Mohammad Nour El-Din nour.moham...@gmail.com Good job for all of you :) On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 7:38 AM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: Back at the computer for a moment and then... I think sleep (and up early to write slides). Couldn't let launch day go by without saying ... HELL YEAH! WE DID IT! We all should take a moment over the next few days to really just enjoy the victory. Things like this don't happen but a few times a lifetime. Don't take it for granted because you never know if or when it might happen again. Whenever we have our get-together next year we're going to have to have a special celebration for this outstanding accomplishment. We have absolutely earned it. Few groups could pull off what we have done in spare hours here and there. Time taken away from wives and children and hobbies and friends. It's such a testament to the character of this community that we're able to work so closely and passionately with each other and all the while we all come from different jobs, time zones and different everything really. It's a treasure to be sure. I know that everyone here cares so much they wish they could do more. It may surprise you to learn I feel like that pretty much all the time too. It just comes with working on something you love. When one is looking out so far ahead all the time and focusing on how far there is yet to go, it can be really easy to lose track of how far you've come and how many steps you've taken to get there. Doing something like this is like a game of jenga. You may look at the few bricks you've added and wish you could have added more. You might think they barely amount to anything compared to the tall structure you see before you. But imagine the devastation that would become of that structure if everyone who felt that way removed their bricks. That's how utterly important every contribution is. Appreciate the bricks you've added and the bricks others have added. We did this together and there is no one person who could have ever done it alone. I sooo can't wait for our get-together cause we're going to have one bg party :) When and where it is going to be ? Very excellent work everyone. Truly... outstanding. -David -- Thanks - Mohammad Nour Life is like riding a bicycle. To keep your balance you must keep moving - Albert Einstein
Re: We did it!!!
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 7:38 AM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: I know that everyone here cares so much they wish they could do more. It may surprise you to learn I feel like that pretty much all the time too. It just comes with working on something you love. When one is looking out so far ahead all the time and focusing on how far there is yet to go, it can be really easy to lose track of how far you've come and how many steps you've taken to get there. Doing something like this is like a game of jenga. You may look at the few bricks you've added and wish you could have added more. You might think they barely amount to anything compared to the tall structure you see before you. But imagine the devastation that would become of that structure if everyone who felt that way removed their bricks. That's how utterly important every contribution is. Appreciate the bricks you've added and the bricks others have added. We did this together and there is no one person who could have ever done it alone. Hi Dave et al, It was truly inspiring and as always highly energetic. Kudos for your guidance and keeping the project up and healthy. I enjoyed very much following the team's progress in this certification achievement. Wasn't it that we've had all the pieces for ages, but what we truly missed was good marketing? I think a book, a couple of articles and conference speeches would bring more curious eyes to the project and that's how I read your words: really just enjoy the victory. p.s. I read in a blog entry about your presentation about TomEE. Would you share how it went and where you'd improve it? In two weeks I'm going to present TomEE during warsjawa [1] and wish I could do it well for the victory. [1] http://warsjawa.pl Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: [jira] [Commented] (OPENEJB-1694) TomEE Beta 1.0.0 doesn't start with MyFaces CODI
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 11:50 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau (Commented) (JIRA) j...@apache.org wrote: Romain Manni-Bucau commented on OPENEJB-1694: - please check your dependencies, i just tried and it works perfectly. i tried with google CODI examples. i had to remove openwebbeans, myfaces, geronimo .. jars (remove all jar which are already in webapps/openejb/lib excepted logging jar (slf4j/log4j)). I was to have looked at the issue, too. I'm amazed you did it so prompt. I however don't like the solution. Do you propose to remove the libs from openejb/lib directory to have the other app running? I think it's like deleting/adding jars to tomcat's lib or ext or even java's ext dir - it will help and even encourage for future actions like that, but it's not a very safe way to fix the issue to me. It's too low-level, isn't it? Aren't openejb's jars separated from other webapp's jars? Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: [jira] [Commented] (OPENEJB-1694) TomEE Beta 1.0.0 doesn't start with MyFaces CODI
i propose to remove jars from its webapp (i'm pretty sure it is the problem since i had the same downloading an example). tomcat and openejb shouldn't be touched. - Romain 2011/10/6 Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 11:50 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau (Commented) (JIRA) j...@apache.org wrote: Romain Manni-Bucau commented on OPENEJB-1694: - please check your dependencies, i just tried and it works perfectly. i tried with google CODI examples. i had to remove openwebbeans, myfaces, geronimo .. jars (remove all jar which are already in webapps/openejb/lib excepted logging jar (slf4j/log4j)). I was to have looked at the issue, too. I'm amazed you did it so prompt. I however don't like the solution. Do you propose to remove the libs from openejb/lib directory to have the other app running? I think it's like deleting/adding jars to tomcat's lib or ext or even java's ext dir - it will help and even encourage for future actions like that, but it's not a very safe way to fix the issue to me. It's too low-level, isn't it? Aren't openejb's jars separated from other webapp's jars? Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: We did it!!!
On Oct 6, 2011, at 2:50 AM, Jacek Laskowski wrote: On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 7:38 AM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: I know that everyone here cares so much they wish they could do more. It may surprise you to learn I feel like that pretty much all the time too. It just comes with working on something you love. When one is looking out so far ahead all the time and focusing on how far there is yet to go, it can be really easy to lose track of how far you've come and how many steps you've taken to get there. Doing something like this is like a game of jenga. You may look at the few bricks you've added and wish you could have added more. You might think they barely amount to anything compared to the tall structure you see before you. But imagine the devastation that would become of that structure if everyone who felt that way removed their bricks. That's how utterly important every contribution is. Appreciate the bricks you've added and the bricks others have added. We did this together and there is no one person who could have ever done it alone. Hi Dave et al, It was truly inspiring and as always highly energetic. Kudos for your guidance and keeping the project up and healthy. I enjoyed very much following the team's progress in this certification achievement. Wasn't it that we've had all the pieces for ages, but what we truly missed was good marketing? I think a book, a couple of articles and conference speeches would bring more curious eyes to the project and that's how I read your words: really just enjoy the victory. p.s. I read in a blog entry about your presentation about TomEE. Would you share how it went and where you'd improve it? In two weeks I'm going to present TomEE during warsjawa [1] and wish I could do it well for the victory. :) The talk is tomorrow at 11am. Slides done, just trying to get some slightly more interesting demo code working. Will let you know how it goes and post slides (all of them from the week). After this I hear there's this great little Bed and Breakfast run by 7 dwarves where one can get some good rest. -David [1] http://warsjawa.pl Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: We did it!!!
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:38 PM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: The talk is tomorrow at 11am. Slides done, just trying to get some slightly more interesting demo code working. Oh, is it? I read about openejb and tomee on Cay Horstmann's blog in JavaOne 2011 Day 3 [1]: In the afternoon, I saw a presentation of OpenEJB, Apache's EJB server whose claim to fame is that you can start it up via public static void main. That's really useful for unit testing. I had looked at it three years ago when it wasn't quite ready for prime time, but now it looked pretty nice. Check it out for testing your session and entity beans. Doh, it wasn't really about tomee :) [1] http://weblogs.java.net/blog/cayhorstmann/archive/2011/10/05/javaone-2011-day-3 Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: [jira] [Commented] (OPENEJB-1694) TomEE Beta 1.0.0 doesn't start with MyFaces CODI
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:00 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i propose to remove jars from its webapp (i'm pretty sure it is the problem since i had the same downloading an example). tomcat and openejb shouldn't be touched. Ah, thanks Romain for your patience to elaborate on it. You did write about removing the jars which are already in webapps/openejb/lib excepted logging jar (slf4j/log4j). Thanks again. I think it should be somewhere in the doc so people won't run into it again or will be warned it may happen. Is there a place for it? Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: [jira] [Commented] (OPENEJB-1694) TomEE Beta 1.0.0 doesn't start with MyFaces CODI
On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:12 PM, Heinz Burgstaller (Commented) (JIRA) j...@apache.org wrote: [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OPENEJB-1694?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanelfocusedCommentId=13121821#comment-13121821 ] Heinz Burgstaller commented on OPENEJB-1694: This solution would remove the JEE6 Stack from TomEE? The examples from (http://code.google.com/a/apache-extras.org/p/myfaces-codi-examples/) are using CODI for Transaction Management. My prefered solution is a JEE6 Stack with included MyFaces CODI functionality, and OpenEJB handles Transaction Management. Removing all the libs from /webapps/openejb/ would leave me a plain Tomcat 7, or is that wrong? It looks I wasn't the only one misled by not listening/reading carefully :) A beauty of helping people who expect no help. Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: [jira] [Commented] (OPENEJB-1694) TomEE Beta 1.0.0 doesn't start with MyFaces CODI
this is a common issue, i wrote a small utility about it: http://code.google.com/p/rmannibucau/source/browse/util/lib-helper/src/main/java/fr/rmannibucau/libhelper/Main.java - Romain 2011/10/6 Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:00 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i propose to remove jars from its webapp (i'm pretty sure it is the problem since i had the same downloading an example). tomcat and openejb shouldn't be touched. Ah, thanks Romain for your patience to elaborate on it. You did write about removing the jars which are already in webapps/openejb/lib excepted logging jar (slf4j/log4j). Thanks again. I think it should be somewhere in the doc so people won't run into it again or will be warned it may happen. Is there a place for it? Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: tomee
On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 11:29 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i played a bit with tomcat logo: http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.svg http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee-certified.svg here the png version (FF chrome doesn't support shades :(): http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.png Sorry to say so, but I don't like the logo at all. There's too much detail in it and the combination of red and claws don't invite for further exploration (but just to run away to not get eaten or bitten at the very least :)) Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: tomee
yep the colors are too complicated but white it was too naked and tomcat logo with flat colors looked too...flat. i wanted to put apache and openejb logo on th epict but that's true it is not a success However there is a svg version to start so normally it is easier to hack on it ;) - Romain 2011/10/6 Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 11:29 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i played a bit with tomcat logo: http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.svg http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee-certified.svg here the png version (FF chrome doesn't support shades :(): http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.png Sorry to say so, but I don't like the logo at all. There's too much detail in it and the combination of red and claws don't invite for further exploration (but just to run away to not get eaten or bitten at the very least :)) Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: We did it!!!
Actually I hear that quite often that OEJB is just for unit testing... no idea why... Cheers Daniel On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 1:51 PM, Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl wrote: On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:38 PM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: The talk is tomorrow at 11am. Slides done, just trying to get some slightly more interesting demo code working. Oh, is it? I read about openejb and tomee on Cay Horstmann's blog in JavaOne 2011 Day 3 [1]: In the afternoon, I saw a presentation of OpenEJB, Apache's EJB server whose claim to fame is that you can start it up via public static void main. That's really useful for unit testing. I had looked at it three years ago when it wasn't quite ready for prime time, but now it looked pretty nice. Check it out for testing your session and entity beans. Doh, it wasn't really about tomee :) [1] http://weblogs.java.net/blog/cayhorstmann/archive/2011/10/05/javaone-2011-day-3 Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: We did it!!!
i think it is before JEE 6 it was the only one to be able to do it with a good quality so since you are able to do something you only can do it (it is often like it :() - Romain 2011/10/6 dsh daniel.hais...@googlemail.com Actually I hear that quite often that OEJB is just for unit testing... no idea why... Cheers Daniel On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 1:51 PM, Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl wrote: On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:38 PM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: The talk is tomorrow at 11am. Slides done, just trying to get some slightly more interesting demo code working. Oh, is it? I read about openejb and tomee on Cay Horstmann's blog in JavaOne 2011 Day 3 [1]: In the afternoon, I saw a presentation of OpenEJB, Apache's EJB server whose claim to fame is that you can start it up via public static void main. That's really useful for unit testing. I had looked at it three years ago when it wasn't quite ready for prime time, but now it looked pretty nice. Check it out for testing your session and entity beans. Doh, it wasn't really about tomee :) [1] http://weblogs.java.net/blog/cayhorstmann/archive/2011/10/05/javaone-2011-day-3 Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB)
Re: We did it!!!
Gang! you guys did an outstanding job! Congratulations! I hope for a bright future of TomEE container! (I know it will have it) Again, great job guys! -M On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 2:14 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i think it is before JEE 6 it was the only one to be able to do it with a good quality so since you are able to do something you only can do it (it is often like it :() - Romain 2011/10/6 dsh daniel.hais...@googlemail.com Actually I hear that quite often that OEJB is just for unit testing... no idea why... Cheers Daniel On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 1:51 PM, Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl wrote: On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 12:38 PM, David Blevins david.blev...@gmail.com wrote: The talk is tomorrow at 11am. Slides done, just trying to get some slightly more interesting demo code working. Oh, is it? I read about openejb and tomee on Cay Horstmann's blog in JavaOne 2011 Day 3 [1]: In the afternoon, I saw a presentation of OpenEJB, Apache's EJB server whose claim to fame is that you can start it up via public static void main. That's really useful for unit testing. I had looked at it three years ago when it wasn't quite ready for prime time, but now it looked pretty nice. Check it out for testing your session and entity beans. Doh, it wasn't really about tomee :) [1] http://weblogs.java.net/blog/cayhorstmann/archive/2011/10/05/javaone-2011-day-3 Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB) -- Matthias Wessendorf blog: http://matthiaswessendorf.wordpress.com/ sessions: http://www.slideshare.net/mwessendorf twitter: http://twitter.com/mwessendorf
DataSourceFactory / BasicManagedDataSource plan of action?
I know DataSourceFactory is currently in progress, so this just an enquiry as to the plan of action based upon my very specific issue. I am currently using a modified DataSourceFactory and BasicManagedDataSource due to changes in the latest version. I'll explain why further down. Basically just changed the following in DataSourceFactory to force the default create call: //if (DataSource.class.isAssignableFrom(impl)) { if (false) { And in BasicManagedDataSource the close override is commented out - Not sure why close is overridden in the first place as this prevents the ds from being closed? So now my reason. I am using assembler.createResource(ri) directly in a custom openejb specific deployer to create dynamic datasources during runtime. This deployer also closes the ds on undeployment - Hence the 'close' requirement. To be more specific - The deployer creates an entirely new database schema, deploys a datasource that accesses this schema, then creates and deploys an application from a template which incorporates a persistence unit. This is entirely dynamic at runtime and can not be pre-configured. As the schema may also require a restore during runtime it is also possible to undeploy the application, including it's datasources. The current trunk version of DataSourceFactory is currently hsql specific (with a comment that it needs to be worked on), so the question is what is intended here? Is someone working on it, or is it an open issue? What needs to be done in? : @Override public void setJdbcUrl(String string) {... Are we planning to reflect methods on all possible datasources? Regards, Andy. -- View this message in context: http://openejb.979440.n4.nabble.com/DataSourceFactory-BasicManagedDataSource-plan-of-action-tp3878426p3878426.html Sent from the OpenEJB Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Re: DataSourceFactory / BasicManagedDataSource plan of action?
i think nobody works on it now, in setJdbcUrl we should probably manage more datasource driver or just try a direct set if we are able to get the url before (i think it was done before david refactor but it was a bit too raw). i don't know if i'll match your need but i made resources.xml works with mysql without any issues, can't it replace your deployer? it is a kind of light openejb.xml embeddable in an application (see in webapps examples). - Romain 2011/10/6 AndyG andy.gumbre...@orprovision.com I know DataSourceFactory is currently in progress, so this just an enquiry as to the plan of action based upon my very specific issue. I am currently using a modified DataSourceFactory and BasicManagedDataSource due to changes in the latest version. I'll explain why further down. Basically just changed the following in DataSourceFactory to force the default create call: //if (DataSource.class.isAssignableFrom(impl)) { if (false) { And in BasicManagedDataSource the close override is commented out - Not sure why close is overridden in the first place as this prevents the ds from being closed? So now my reason. I am using assembler.createResource(ri) directly in a custom openejb specific deployer to create dynamic datasources during runtime. This deployer also closes the ds on undeployment - Hence the 'close' requirement. To be more specific - The deployer creates an entirely new database schema, deploys a datasource that accesses this schema, then creates and deploys an application from a template which incorporates a persistence unit. This is entirely dynamic at runtime and can not be pre-configured. As the schema may also require a restore during runtime it is also possible to undeploy the application, including it's datasources. The current trunk version of DataSourceFactory is currently hsql specific (with a comment that it needs to be worked on), so the question is what is intended here? Is someone working on it, or is it an open issue? What needs to be done in? : @Override public void setJdbcUrl(String string) {... Are we planning to reflect methods on all possible datasources? Regards, Andy. -- View this message in context: http://openejb.979440.n4.nabble.com/DataSourceFactory-BasicManagedDataSource-plan-of-action-tp3878426p3878426.html Sent from the OpenEJB Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Re: We did it!!!
Wasn't it that we've had all the pieces for ages, but what we truly missed was good marketing? I think a book, a couple of articles and conference speeches would bring more curious eyes to the project Jacek, I am glad you bought it up. Blogging:- Definitely blogging makes a big difference. I have already been asked by a couple of folks about TomEE. I am going to blog about this , the coming weekend. Okay now I said it, now I will have to do it :). I am planning to write a single paragraph, if I can do more, that would be cool. Conference speeches:- David is doing a tremendous job with conference speeches @ JavaOne. My big regret is not being able to attend even a single one of them, even though I am so close. On a side not, he spent the whole afternoon with me even (and treated me to lunch) though he had a packed schedule. Not sure how he does it, but it reiterated my belief that he cared a lot about the project and cares equally for the people involved in it, no matter how big or small the contribution is. Articles:- I will be writing an article pretty soon. I said it again, will have to write one now:). Would be nice to see a couple more. Tweeting:- Fantastic work with the tweets. Every time I would open twitter, would see a tweet or two about TomEE. We need to continue this in the coming months. Website:- We probably need a different color for TomEE. Maybe a different layout all together. Simplicity should be the key. Docs:- Of course, the most successful projects have had the best of docs. That was one of their biggest marketing tool. To me it says If you care about the users, you will have good docs . Gonna jump in this , but on a smaller scale. User questions:- We are doing a great job here with prompt responses. I am guilty of not being active here. Would like to be more active. Kudos to the folks who participate and respond to user questions. -- Karan Singh Malhi twitter.com/KaranSinghMalhi
Re: We did it!!!
So concerning the book I am open to work on a book proposal with everybody who wants to join. Ideally I would target O'Reilly... the good thing is that we already have the animal right... we just would have to make it O'Reilly compliant and thus have the various scary colours and gradients removed :) Did a book for IBM Press in the past but I suspect they aren't an ideal candidate. Cheers Daniel On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 5:03 PM, Karan Malhi karan.ma...@gmail.com wrote: Wasn't it that we've had all the pieces for ages, but what we truly missed was good marketing? I think a book, a couple of articles and conference speeches would bring more curious eyes to the project Jacek, I am glad you bought it up. Blogging:- Definitely blogging makes a big difference. I have already been asked by a couple of folks about TomEE. I am going to blog about this , the coming weekend. Okay now I said it, now I will have to do it :). I am planning to write a single paragraph, if I can do more, that would be cool. Conference speeches:- David is doing a tremendous job with conference speeches @ JavaOne. My big regret is not being able to attend even a single one of them, even though I am so close. On a side not, he spent the whole afternoon with me even (and treated me to lunch) though he had a packed schedule. Not sure how he does it, but it reiterated my belief that he cared a lot about the project and cares equally for the people involved in it, no matter how big or small the contribution is. Articles:- I will be writing an article pretty soon. I said it again, will have to write one now:). Would be nice to see a couple more. Tweeting:- Fantastic work with the tweets. Every time I would open twitter, would see a tweet or two about TomEE. We need to continue this in the coming months. Website:- We probably need a different color for TomEE. Maybe a different layout all together. Simplicity should be the key. Docs:- Of course, the most successful projects have had the best of docs. That was one of their biggest marketing tool. To me it says If you care about the users, you will have good docs . Gonna jump in this , but on a smaller scale. User questions:- We are doing a great job here with prompt responses. I am guilty of not being active here. Would like to be more active. Kudos to the folks who participate and respond to user questions. -- Karan Singh Malhi twitter.com/KaranSinghMalhi
Svn URL + trunk deps.
Hello folks, Best regards from the last day of the JavaOne conference. I found - I believe - 2 simple issues which could be corrected swiftly by us: a) Let's correct the svn URL displayed on our site. We claim that our source can be grabbed from: svn co http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/openejb/trunk/openejb3 whereas I found that URL to return 404. The correct URL is: svn co http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/openejb/trunk/openejb b) Also, it would appear that we lack some deps in trunk, more specifically javaee-api version 6.0-3-SNAPSHOT: [ERROR] Failed to execute goal on project openejb-itests-beans: Could not resolve dependencies for project org.apache.openejb:openejb-itests-beans:jar:4.0.0-beta-2-SNAPSHOT: Failure to find org.apache.openejb:javaee-api:jar:6.0-3-SNAPSHOT in ... These seem like quick fixes. You agree? // Best regards, // Lennart -- View this message in context: http://openejb.979440.n4.nabble.com/Svn-URL-trunk-deps-tp3879038p3879038.html Sent from the OpenEJB Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Re: Svn URL + trunk deps.
for b) javaee-api is deployed: https://repository.apache.org/content/groups/snapshots/org/apache/openejb/javaee-api/6.0-3-SNAPSHOT/ - Romain 2011/10/6 Lennart Jörelid l...@jguru.se Hello folks, Best regards from the last day of the JavaOne conference. I found - I believe - 2 simple issues which could be corrected swiftly by us: a) Let's correct the svn URL displayed on our site. We claim that our source can be grabbed from: svn co http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/openejb/trunk/openejb3 whereas I found that URL to return 404. The correct URL is: svn co http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/openejb/trunk/openejb b) Also, it would appear that we lack some deps in trunk, more specifically javaee-api version 6.0-3-SNAPSHOT: [ERROR] Failed to execute goal on project openejb-itests-beans: Could not resolve dependencies for project org.apache.openejb:openejb-itests-beans:jar:4.0.0-beta-2-SNAPSHOT: Failure to find org.apache.openejb:javaee-api:jar:6.0-3-SNAPSHOT in ... These seem like quick fixes. You agree? // Best regards, // Lennart -- View this message in context: http://openejb.979440.n4.nabble.com/Svn-URL-trunk-deps-tp3879038p3879038.html Sent from the OpenEJB Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Re: tomee
Hey Romain, Great to see you working on the logo. Was thinking that the logo with the feather only might be an option too. On Thu, Oct 6, 2011 at 5:02 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: yep the colors are too complicated but white it was too naked and tomcat logo with flat colors looked too...flat. i wanted to put apache and openejb logo on th epict but that's true it is not a success However there is a svg version to start so normally it is easier to hack on it ;) - Romain 2011/10/6 Jacek Laskowski ja...@japila.pl On Wed, Oct 5, 2011 at 11:29 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau rmannibu...@gmail.com wrote: i played a bit with tomcat logo: http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.svg http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee-certified.svg here the png version (FF chrome doesn't support shades :(): http://people.apache.org/~rmannibucau/tomee.png Sorry to say so, but I don't like the logo at all. There's too much detail in it and the combination of red and claws don't invite for further exploration (but just to run away to not get eaten or bitten at the very least :)) Jacek -- Jacek Laskowski Java EE, functional languages and IBM WebSphere - http://blog.japila.pl Warszawa JUG conference = Confitura (formerly Javarsovia) :: http://confitura.pl Hoping to save time by spending it by David Blevins (Apache OpenEJB) -- Karan Singh Malhi twitter.com/KaranSinghMalhi