Thanks for explaining how it works Clement!
I am indeed using maven and I tried to add the jar as a
maven-ipojo-plugin dependency
but it still does not seem to work.
I'll play a bit with it and if it still does not work I'll try to extract
and provide a simple example so you can eventually tell me what I'm doing
wrong.

Best,
Milen


On Sat, Sep 13, 2014 at 9:01 AM, Clement Escoffier <
clement.escoff...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi,
>
> Stereotypes are analyzed at build time, not at runtime. So they are
> packaged in regular jars. To work as expected, the stereotype need to be
> available from the ‘manipulator’ engine, in other words: be in the same
> class path.
>
> So, if you are using Maven, you can do as follows:
>
> <plugin>
>     <groupId>org.apache.felix</groupId>
>     <artifactId>maven-ipojo-plugin</artifactId>
>     <executions>
>         <execution>
>             <goals>
>                 <goal>ipojo-bundle</goal>
>             </goals>
>         </execution>
>     </executions>
>     <dependencies>
>         <dependency>
>             <groupId>your.groupId</groupId>
>             <artifactId>your.sterotype.artifactId</artifactId>
>             <version>your.version</version>
>         </dependency>
>     </dependencies>
> </plugin>
>
> Cheers,
>
> Clement
>
>
>
> On 13 septembre 2014 at 02:06:25, Milen Dyankov (milendyan...@gmail.com)
> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Is the usage of a @Stereotype annotated annotation from another bundle
> supported? It doesn't seem to work even though the package is properly
> exported and imported.
>
> The docs only say:
>
> If the stereotyped annotation is directly in the manipulated module, no
> > problems: any front-end will work as expected.
> > If not, the different manipulator's front-end have variable support for
> > the stereotype feature.
>
>
> This is not very clear to me and to be honest I'm no sure what a
> "manipulator's front-end" is.
>
> Regards,
> Milen
>
>
>
> --
> http://about.me/milen
>



-- 
http://about.me/milen

Reply via email to