Hi Janne,

I think you could use some maven toolings for generating the xmls. The bigger question though is: Do you really want to write JBI artifacts now that servicemix is based on OSGi. So the better way to go may be to write simple osgi bundles. For writing OSGi bundles Eclipse with Sonatype m2eclipse plugin is probably all you need.
I have written a small tutorial for developing OSGi bunldes on Karaf:
http://www.liquid-reality.de/display/liquid/2011/02/15/Karaf+Tutorial+Part+1+-+Installation+and+First+application

My company has just released a distribution of Karaf + Camel + CXF with some nice examples for integrations. See: http://www.talend.com/products-application-integration/talend-integration-factory-community-edition.php

It is basically the same as servicemix but without JBI support. This is just to show that we believe that JBI is not necessary anymore to build an integration platform. You can deploy the same
kind of integration bundles using the normal servicemix distro.

Christian


Am 16.02.2011 12:54, schrieb janne postilista:
Hi,

  which IDE is best suited for developing a project to be deployed in
ServiceMix 4? Eclipse or Netbeans?

What kind of plugins, etc, are there for developing service assemblies
(binding components etc)? Do people actually write the required XML,
etc, by hand, or what is the common practise?

ServiceMix documentation
http://servicemix.apache.org/eclipse-plugin.html links to a dead end,
also googling for "servicemix eclipse" brings a few dead ends like
http://swik.net/ServiceMix/Blog%3A+ServiceMix+%28SM%29/Creating+graphical+JBI+deployments+with+ServiceMix+in+Eclipse+%28created%29/b3zo

I know there's some tooling linked to Fuse ESB, but that's either not
free (fuse integration developer) or cover only part of the service
assembly (Fuse IDE for Camel http://fusesource.com/fuse/camel-beta/ )


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