jsr342-experts@javaee-spec.java.net

[jsr342-experts] Re: [javaee-spec users] Re: Re: Re: Modularization Framework/SPI

From: Werner Keil <werner.keil_at_gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 26 Jul 2012 16:48:35 +0200

I also don't quite get the sense of all these separate +1 replies.

Should have been in a single reply, e.g. I also +1ed a message with a
couple of bullet points earlier, but NOT in a message per bullet point[?]

While commercial products like WLP or WebSphere often lag at lest a whole
EE generation behind, most Open Source containers, be it Glassfish, JBoss
or Geronimo seem to be quite comfortable with OSGi at the moment.

Werner

On Thu, Jul 26, 2012 at 4:19 PM, Jeff Genender <jgenender_at_savoirtech.com>wrote:

> Guys,
>
> I don't get the support for the marketing drivel. We all come from
> different backgrounds. Be it Jboss modules, OSGI, roll your own, or
> whatever. If you want data, go look at the Jboss modules, Geronimo
> (Websphere CE), Glassfish, Equinox, Karaf, Felix user mailing lists and the
> number of blogs on the subject. Go do your own count of users... That's
> *not* marketing... Thats *not* anecdotal... That's our users. That is who
> we represent. That's *real* data. guess what... They *use* our designs.
> Let's please stop the BS at this point. This is a dead horse. If you have
> something useful to contribute, please do it...but let's stop the +1s on
> the loaded marketing material.
>
> Jeff
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jul 26, 2012, at 9:04 AM, Reza Rahman <reza_rahman_at_lycos.com> wrote:
>
> +1 (and I can guarantee that I'm a dispassionate observer on this one
> :-)).
>
> On 7/26/2012 8:23 AM, Jevgeni Kabanov wrote:
>
> I'm glad we agree on the sentiment.
>
> The paper is NOT based on customer data. This was a community-wide poll
> with 1450+ answers. It agrees with other larger polls, e.g. one conducted
> by Eclipse. It certainly is not my side of the fence, it's what the world
> looks like, at least in the outline.
>
> My point was that OSGi adoption is fairly low, and it's the poster-boy
> of Java modularity story. Is there an actual need outside the largest
> shops? Can we accommodate the largest shops in the spec without impacting
> the majority of the community? These are important questions that need
> answering before we commit to any one solution.
>
> JK
>
> --
> Founder & CEO of ZeroTurnaround
> @ekabanov | Skype: ekabanov | http://www.linkedin.com/in/ekabanov
>
> On Thursday, 26 July 2012 at 15:17, Jeff Genender wrote:
>
> Jevgeni,
>
> I have to disagree vehemently with your fist comment. Your presentation
> of your paper is strawman. Your paper/analysis is from your customers which
> is your side of the fence. You have a small slice of a different sort of
> customer and your survey is directed at people who use JRebel and its likes
> which is anti OSGi in nature. Different strokes for different folks but I
> am certainly not calling yours anecdotal... just strawman. ;-)
>
> I wasn't stating OSGi is the end-all. But it does fit a need for what
> people want form what *I* see. People want the same thing with LiveRebel.
> The areas I listed is what LiveRebel helps to define as well.
>
> Hence, what you produce is exactly what I want and what your last
> statement pretty much summed up. We need something that allows someone to
> plug in whatever modular system for now, be it OSGi, JBoss Modules, or even
> LiveRebel. You stated exactly what I want to see.
>
> Jeff
>
>
> On Jul 26, 2012, at 6:57 AM, Jevgeni Kabanov wrote:
>
> This all is very anecdotal. In our survey most folks did not indicate
> that they use OSGi or anything like it:
>
> http://files.zeroturnaround.com/developer-productivity-report/zeroturnaround-developer-productivity-report-2012.pdf
> (only a third are our customers, the rest just the folks across the
> community that responded)
>
> There were also a bunch of open questions and although the no downtime
> provisioning of application is a great concern, there were fairly little
> issues with multiple library version. And modularity without a good
> isolation model is not a way to solve hot update or the class loading
> issues you mentioned.
>
> I'm afraid we're trying to solve the issues of the largest shops, which
> are always more complex than the rest and probably do need a custom
> solution built on OSGi or whatnot. And they already have access to OSGi on
> the Glassfish, Websphere and so on.
>
> Wouldn't it make more sense to accommodate OSGi as an optional extension
> of the spec and just define better interoperation? I'm afraid that baking
> modularity into the Java EE spec will introduce more complexity than it's
> worth for most of the Java EE ecosystem.
>
> JK
>
> --
> Founder & CEO of ZeroTurnaround
> @ekabanov | Skype: ekabanov | http://www.linkedin.com/in/ekabanov
>
> On Thursday, 26 July 2012 at 14:41, Jeff Genender wrote:
>
> Hi Craig... thanks for the response and I darned well agree with a lot
> in this email ;-)
>
> answers in line...
>
> On Jul 25, 2012, at 7:30 PM, Craig Ringer wrote:
>
> On 07/25/2012 09:53 PM, Jeff Genender wrote:
>
> In my world, I am seeing users pushing modularity in front of JavaEE and
> we are really missing this boat. A large section of my clients are moving
> to OSGi stacks picking and choosing what they want in their stacks, with
> some building their own JavaEE light containers (JTA, JPA).
>
>
> Can you explain in a bit more detail what problems they're encountering
> that leave them forced to take this option? Application and business
> problems, not just the common "we need X because we've always used it"
> issues I see come up sometimes.
>
>
> Here are what I usually hear:
>
> 1) The comments made come along the line of the thick stack and having
> resources used by major components that aren't used. Complaint is EE-bloat.
> 2) Ability to hot deploy/undeploy without corrupting the classloaders.
> Example... try to deploy/deploy a war many times in a standard JavaEE
> container until an OutOf Memory exception occurs.
> 3) Ability to provision applications and services on the fly without
> having to reboot - think cloud-like Applications As A Service (AaaS).
> 4) Ability to prevent class clashing with multiple versions. Wanting to
> run multiple applications in the same container without worry for parent
> classloading corruption - the class tree classloading issues.
> 5) Dependent execution. The ability to run transitive dependencies on
> other applications/jars, much like a Unix inti.d or Windows services model.
> i.e. an application can;t run until its other dependent applications are
> running.
>
> OSGi seems to wor in this model, albeit with a great amount of pain.
>
>
>
> Do you have people who really must swap out the JTA implementation in a
> an app server with a different one in order to meet business or application
> requirements? JPA I fully understand, but JTA? I'm surprised and interested
> by that.
>
>
> Yes, many of my clients are interested in the Blueprint JTA
> implementation or use a local resource like Spring. Hence those who want to
> use Spring local transactions can rip out the JTA, or if they need XA, they
> wire up Aries/Blueprint and enable aries-transaction. I see this choice a
> lot.
>
>
> I'm having very frustrating problems with the lack of plugability of
> some of the upper layer stuff myself. Hibernate is a very poor fit for the
> needs of an app I'm working on, but getting EclipseLink to integrate well
> into AS7 is a major pain. I appreciate the need for pluggability at least
> at the higher levels of the stack, and it's been a major source of pain for
> me since I started working with Java EE.
>
> My comments were specific to CDI and some low level, tightly integrated
> components in the server like the EJB3 implementation, JTA, JCA, etc. These
> are tightly integrated and - from what I've seen in AS7's sources and on
> the bug tracker - the existing SPIs appear inadeaute to allow them to
> simply be swapped out and replaced. I'd *love* to be wrong about this, but
> my experience even trying to swap out theoretically pluggable things like
> JPA implementations argues against it.
>
> I would like to see a certain baseline of infrastructure locked in place
> as something thatthe app server does not have to support replacing (it
> still may if it chooses). In exchange, certain higher level components like
> JSF2, JPA2, maybe JAX-RS, etc would *have* to support being swapped out
> with either app-bundled implementations or modules installed in the app
> server. This would give vendors realistic test targets and narrow the
> number of configurations to something (almost) testable. It would also make
> it clearer which specs need really complete SPIs as a priority.
>
> As for needing a module system: I could not possibly agree more, and
> think that things like CDI *should* be modules within the app server - for
> app server maintainability and good design. Sure enough you'll see that all
> the low level components in AS7 are modules. I just don't think the spec
> should require the server vendor to support applications swapping out
> arbitrary modules; that needs to be confined to modules implementing specs
> where there's a good enough SPI.
>
> The trouble with the module system issue is that JBoss modules is
> probably a bit too basic, and OSGi is (IMO) convoluted and horrible to work
> with. There isn't a really good candidate.
>
>
> I completely agree with you... but I am just concerned we are going to
> miss the boat if we keep putting this off. ;-)
>
> Jeff
>
>
> --
> Craig Ringer
>
>
>
>
> No virus found in this message.
> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
> Version: 2012.0.2171 / Virus Database: 2437/5147 - Release Date: 07/22/12
>
>
>
>




347.gif
(image/gif attachment: 347.gif)