On Jul 9, 2011, at 12:55 PM, Mark Struberg wrote:

> You might try using OpenWebBeans + OpenEJB. Those 2 play really well 
> together, and EJB contains MDB. Not sure though if the MDB impl in OpenEJB 
> already works together with CDI. David, I guess you know more than I about 
> that, mind to share your thoughts?

Overall SessionBean integration is now pretty good.  This includes @WebService 
beans which are either an @Stateless or @Singleton.  We use CXF for that.  
Jean-Louis and Romain have been hacking on extending the existing CXF 
integration which currently covers JAX-WS to also cover JAX-RS.  When not in 
Tomcat, we default to using Jetty as the HTTP impl.  That all works in plain 
Java SE or you can boot it as a standalone server -- whatever is easiest for 
you.

MDB-wise things might be a little behind.  We're definitely now using OWB to 
construct MDBs -- as of two weeks ago we no longer use our own code for 
instantiating beans and instead use the OWB code so things can get CDI 
constructor injection.  All part of the plans to make things super consistent 
and seamless.  So @Inject constructors should definitely work.

Field and method injection might still be missing.  I'm pretty sure it is 
missing, but wouldn't be hard to add.

MDB Interceptors should work -- we use the same interceptor code for 
everything.  MDB Decorators might work, but I would have to check.

All this work is still ongoing, so if there are feature requests, now is the 
prime-time to get them in.  Always much harder when you're working on something 
unrelated and have to shift-gears.

Let me know what you want and I'll add it :)



-David


> --- On Sat, 7/9/11, Pieter Martin <pieter.mar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> From: Pieter Martin <pieter.mar...@gmail.com>
>> Subject: Re: codi and webservices
>> To: "MyFaces Discussion" <users@myfaces.apache.org>
>> Date: Saturday, July 9, 2011, 3:24 PM
>> Thanks, yes I am using OpenWebBeans
>> and happily so. I tried the 
>> BeanManagerProvider and things are working well.
>> 
>> I reckon I will have the same issue with regards to jms,
>> when I get 
>> round to putting hornetq or ApacheMq into Jetty?
>> 
>> Thanks
>> Pieter
>> 
>> 
>> On 09/07/2011 11:32, Mark Struberg wrote:
>>> Hi Pieter!
>>> 
>>> This is more a CDI container question than a CODI
>> question :)
>>>   From the stacktrace you posted in an older post
>> I saw that you are using Apache OpenWebBeans, right? good
>> decision btw :D
>>> 
>>> Since I know a little bit about OWB, I'll try to
>> explain ;)
>>> 
>>> Basically any Servlet inside your webapp already
>> should have all things correctly setup. If you are
>> interested in the details then check OWBs
>> WebBeansConfigurationListener. If you are using
>> CXFNonSpringServlet then the Servlet itself will not be
>> created by CDI, so the servlet instance itself is not a
>> CDI-managed object (Maybe there is some CXFCdiServlet in the
>> future...) This basically means that any @Inject inside this
>> class will not get injected.
>>> 
>>> In this case you can use CODIs BeanManagerProvider to
>> get access to a CDI managed bean manually.
>>> I use this trick with an old JAX-RS stack as well.
>>> 
>>> hope this helps!
>>> 
>>> LieGrue,
>>> strub
>>> 
>>> 
>>> --- On Sat, 7/9/11, Pieter Martin<pieter.mar...@gmail.com> 
>> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> From: Pieter Martin<pieter.mar...@gmail.com>
>>>> Subject: RE: codi and webservices
>>>> To: "MyFaces Discussion"<users@myfaces.apache.org>
>>>> Date: Saturday, July 9, 2011, 8:28 AM
>>>> Hi,
>>>> 
>>>> Is there any support for having a webservice
>> request
>>>> happening inside a cdi/codi world. In particular I
>> am using
>>>> apache cxf in jetty, starting up the
>> CXFNonSpringServlet
>>>> which does the magic. So I imagine somehow this
>> servlet's
>>>> requests needs to be wrapped in a codi life cycle
>> similar to
>>>> how faces works.
>>>> 
>>>> Is this possible?
>>>> 
>>>> Thanks
>>>> Pieter
>>>> 
>> 
>> 
> 

Reply via email to