Hi Siarhei, I too use JBoss tools and Eclipse Plugin. How did you set this up?
Thanks, On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 8:08 PM, Siarhei Dudzin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > What's wrong with JBoss Tools? We use maven-eclipse-plugin + JBoss Tools, > works well so far... > > Siarhei > > On Thu, Jul 10, 2008 at 7:37 PM, Pedro Viegas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote: > > > Hi all, > > > > I've been trying to build an environment for developing web applications > > that generate WAR files with a productive debug/development process. > > I'm using JBoss as the application server. Tomcat is a no go and Jetty > has > > issues with some bytecode APIs I use. > > > > All is working fine in the traditional way. I package the WAR, deploy it > to > > the server with the cargo plugin and test it. > > Through JBoss Eclipse Plugin I have debug and hotcode replacement for > java > > classes, BUT not for JSPs! > > How can I make JBoss aware of JSP/CSS/JS changes? > > > > I have seen a bunch of examples for Tomcat and Jetty to indicate a path > to > > the webapp folder. > > For JBoss the only solution so far has always included building an > exploded > > WAR somewhere and point JBoss deploy URLs to it so it deploys them. > > Even the solution of using the war:inplace is not functional since JBoss > > deployer only scans WAR/JAR/EAR/etc files. A directory like > > "src/main/webapp" is simply ignored. > > > > All I wanted to do was deploy the application through Maven a Eclipse > > lanched debug JBoss instance and be able to change my JSP files and > refresh > > them on the browser. > > As anyone been able to do this? > > > > Thanks, > > > > -- > > Pedro Viegas > > > > ------------------------------------------------------------ > > Walking on water and developing software > > from a specification are easy if both are > > frozen. > > - Edward V. Berard > > > -- Pedro Viegas ------------------------------------------------------------ Walking on water and developing software from a specification are easy if both are frozen. - Edward V. Berard