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  • how to use unity-scope-sshsearch?

    - by jakommo
    I used unity-lens-sshsearch on 12.04, 12.10 and 13.04. But after upgrading to 13.10 it's not working any more. (Super+H does nothing) As the lens package is not available on 13.10 I installed unity-scope-sshsearch (successor of the lens?) but do not get any results in the dash for query's like user@host, hostname, 192.168... and so on. My ~/.ssh/config look's like this: Host user@hostname Hostname 192.168.1.1 User user Already tried it with a newly created user, still no results. How is unity-scope-sshsearch intended to work?

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  • using a Singleton to pass credentials in a multi-tenant application a code smell?

    - by Hans Gruber
    Currently working on a multi-tenant application that employs Shared DB/Shared Schema approach. IOW, we enforce tenant data segregation by defining a TenantID column on all tables. By convention, all SQL reads/writes must include a Where TenantID = '?' clause. Not an ideal solution, but hindsight is 20/20. Anyway, since virtually every page/workflow in our app must display tenant specific data, I made the (poor) decision at the project's outset to employ a Singleton to encapsulate the current user credentials (i.e. TenantID and UserID). My thinking at the time was that I didn't want to add a TenantID parameter to each and every method signature in my Data layer. Here's what the basic pseudo-code looks like: public class UserIdentity { public UserIdentity(int tenantID, int userID) { TenantID = tenantID; UserID = userID; } public int TenantID { get; private set; } public int UserID { get; private set; } } public class AuthenticationModule : IHttpModule { public void Init(HttpApplication context) { context.AuthenticateRequest += new EventHandler(context_AuthenticateRequest); } private void context_AuthenticateRequest(object sender, EventArgs e) { var userIdentity = _authenticationService.AuthenticateUser(sender); if (userIdentity == null) { //authentication failed, so redirect to login page, etc } else { //put the userIdentity into the HttpContext object so that //its only valid for the lifetime of a single request HttpContext.Current.Items["UserIdentity"] = userIdentity; } } } public static class CurrentUser { public static UserIdentity Instance { get { return HttpContext.Current.Items["UserIdentity"]; } } } public class WidgetRepository: IWidgetRepository{ public IEnumerable<Widget> ListWidgets(){ var tenantId = CurrentUser.Instance.TenantID; //call sproc with tenantId parameter } } As you can see, there are several code smells here. This is a singleton, so it's already not unit test friendly. On top of that you have a very tight-coupling between CurrentUser and the HttpContext object. By extension, this also means that I have a reference to System.Web in my Data layer (shudder). I want to pay down some technical debt this sprint by getting rid of this singleton for the reasons mentioned above. I have a few thoughts on what an better implementation might be, but if anyone has any guidance or lessons learned they could share, I would be much obliged.

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  • C++ Singleton design pattern.

    - by Artem Barger
    Recently I've bumped into realization/implementation of Singleton design pattern for C++. It has looked in the following way (I have adopted it from real life example): // a lot of methods is omitted here class Singleton { public: static Singleton* getInstance( ); ~Singleton( ); private: Singleton( ); static Singleton* instance; }; From this declaration I can deduce that instance field is initiated on the heap, that means there is a memory allocation. That is completely unclear for me is when does exactly memory is going to be deallocated? Or there is a bug and memory leak? It seems like there is a problem in implementation. PS. And main question how to implement it in the right way?

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  • super(type,subclass) in simple singleton implementation

    - by Tianchen Wu
    when I was implementing naive singleton in python, I came up with a problem with super key word. As usual the behavior of super is always tricky and buggy, hope someone can shed light on it. Thanks :) The problem is that: class Singleton(object): def __new__(cls,*args,**kw): if not hasattr(cls,'_instance'): #create a instance of type cls, origin=super(Singleton,Singleton).__new__(cls,*args,**kw) cls._instance=origin return cls._instance class B(Singleton): def __init__(self,b): self.b=b It actually works, but I am wondering Will it be better if I change line 5 to the below, like in most of the books? origin=super(Singleton,cls).__new__(cls,*args,**ks) what's the difference to make?

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  • SharePoint For Newbie Developers: Code Scope

    - by Mark Rackley
    So, I continue to try to come up with diagrams and information to help new SharePoint developers wrap their heads around this SharePoint beast, especially when those newer to development are on my team. To that end, I drew up the below diagram to help some of our junior devs understand where/when code is being executed in SharePoint at a high level. Note that I say “High Level”… This is a simplistic diagram that can get a LOT more complicated if you want to dive in deeper.  For the purposes of my lesson it served its purpose well. So, please no comments from you peanut gallery about information 3 levels down that’s missing unless it adds to the discussion.  Thanks So, the diagram below details where code is executed on a page load and gives the basic flow of the page load. There are actually many more steps, but again, we are staying high level here. I just know someone is still going to say something like “Well.. actually… the dlls are getting executed when…”  Anyway, here’s the diagram with some information I like to point out: Code Scope / Where it is executed So, looking at the diagram we see that dlls and XSL are executed on the server and that JavaScript/jQuery are executed on the client. This is the main thing I like to point out for the following reasons: XSL (for the most part) is faster than JavaScript I actually get this question a lot. Since XSL is executed on the server less data is getting passed over the wire and a beefier machine (hopefully) is doing the processing. The outcome of course is better performance. When You are using jQuery and making Web Service calls you are building XML strings and sending them to the server, then ALL the results come back and the client machine has to parse through the XML and use what it needs and ignore the rest (and there is a lot of garbage that comes back from SharePoint Web Service calls). XSL and JavaScript cannot work together in the same scope Let me clarify. JavaScript can send data back to SharePoint in postbacks that XSL can then use. XSL can output JavaScript and initiate JavaScript variables.  However, XSL cannot call a JavaScript method to get a value and JavaScript cannot directly interact with XSL and call its templates. They are executed in there scope only. No crossing of boundaries here. So, what does this all mean? Well, nothing too deep. This is just some basic fundamental information that all SharePoint devs need to understand. It will help you determine what is the best solution for your specific development situation and it will help the new guys understand why they get an error when trying to call a JavaScript Function from within XSL.  Let me know if you think quick little blogs like this are helpful or just add to the noise. I could probably put together several more that are similar.  As always, thanks for stopping by, hope you learned something new.

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  • Singleton

    Imagine that you need some global logging system in your application.You need to be able log your messages to some file at any point of your application, but also you need to numerate your messages.How can you accomplish this? - SINGLETON

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  • Angularjs wait until

    - by Diolor
    I have: $scope.bounds = {} And later in my code: $scope.$on('leafletDirectiveMap.load', function(){ console.log('runs'); Dajaxice.async.hello($scope.populate, { 'west' : $scope.bounds.southWest.lng, 'east': $scope.bounds.northEast.lng, 'north' : $scope.bounds.northEast.lat, 'south': $scope.bounds.southWest.lat, }); }); The bounds as you can see at the begging they are empty but they are loaded later (some milliseconds) with a javascript library (leaflet angular). However the $scope.$on(...) runs before the bounds have been set so the 'west' : $scope.bounds.southWest.lng, returns an error with an undefined variable. What I want to do is to wait the bounds (southWest and northEast) to have been set and then run the Dajaxice.async.hello(...). So I need something like "wait until bounds are set".

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  • Giving my function access to outside variable

    - by brett
    I have an array outside: $myArr = array(); I would like to give my function access to the array outside it so it can add values to it function someFuntion(){ $myVal = //some processing here to determine value of $myVal $myArr[] = $myVal; } How do I give the function the right scoping to the variable?

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  • Singelton restricted to instance of dll

    - by codeySmurf
    If I create a singleton class in the context of a dll, the singleton class is instantiated once and used by all instances of the dll. I am using a dll as a plug-in for an application. Now the following thing came to my mind: If I use a singleton Class, it will be shared across multiple instances of the plug-in. However, this makes it difficult to manage the lifetime of the singleton class efficiently. The only way I could think of would be to use a reference count and to make the singleton delete its self when the reference count is 0. Does anyone have any better ideas on that? Is there any good way to restrict the singleton object to one instance of the dll? Language is c++

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  • Application Scope v's Static - Not Quite the same

    - by Duncan Mills
    An interesting question came up today which, innocent as it sounded, needed a second or two to consider. What's the difference between storing say a Map of reference information as a Static as opposed to storing the same map as an application scoped variable in JSF?  From the perspective of the web application itself there seems to be no functional difference, in both cases, the information is confined to the current JVM and potentially visible to your app code (note that Application Scope is not magically propagated across a cluster, you would need a separate instance on each VM). To my mind the primary consideration here is a matter of leakage. A static will be (potentially) visible to everything running within the same VM (OK this depends on which class-loader was used but let's keep this simple), and this includes your model code and indeed other web applications running in the same container. An Application Scoped object, in JSF terms, is much more ring-fenced and is only visible to the Web app itself, not other web apps running on the same server and not directly to the business model layer if that is running in the same VM. So given that I'm a big fan of coding applications to say what I mean, then using Application Scope appeals because it explicitly states how I expect the data to be used and a provides a more explicit statement about visibility and indeed dependency as I'd generally explicitly inject it where it is needed.  Alternative viewpoints / thoughts are, as ever, welcomed...

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  • How to access 'private functions' in a singleton from another object inside it.

    - by Cedric Dugas
    I am currently trying to create a test suite for my javascript apps. My problem is that, it seems I cannot get access to init() from my utils object, as you can see below: I have my app that follow a singleton pattern: var appModal = function () { var utils = Object.create(moduleUtils); function init(caller, options ) { } }(); My test suite is in moduleUtils, this is a object literal converted to a prototype moduleUtils.debug = { addSlideTest : function(){ /* this function cannot fire init() from appModal */ }}

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  • Android SDK vs NDK in oppurtunities and career scope

    - by Gopal S Akshintala
    Hi I am very much interested in Android Mobile Developement and I am equally comfortable with Java and C/C++. I would like to build my career in Android. So I am confused on to which way to go, wheather as Android SDK developer or NDK developer. Please advice me pros n cons of both and also the career scope and oppurtunities in both(With factors like excitement in Job, Payroll, competetion, Openings in Job Market, career growth etc).Thanks...:)

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  • Should code comments have scope?

    - by Rig Veda
    I am asking this because I have seen places where, whoever coded initially had provided proper comments, but later on modifications were made to the code but the comments were left untouched. I remember reading somewhere " Don't get suckered in by the comments, debug only code". So is it a good/ relevant/ practical idea that tells the scope of the comments so as to prompt the developer for editing the comment. Your thoughts.

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  • How to use a scope in combination with a Model method?

    - by Bjorn
    Hi all, I'm currently working on some scope filters, and I'd like to have it filter on a method (don't know how to name it otherwise). My code: class Product < ActiveRecord::Base def price_with_discount price-discount.to_f end scope :by_price, lambda {|min,max|{ :conditions => { :price_with_discount => min.to_f..max.to_f }}} end This doesn't work: "No attribute named price_with_discount exists for table products". How can I trick my scope into using the method I defined instead of searching for a column named price_with_discount? Bjorn

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  • What is the difference between an object's scope and it's context in javascript?

    - by DKinzer
    In the vernacular, scope and context have a lot in common. Which is why I get confused when I read references to both, such as in the quote below from an article on closures: Scope refers to where variables and functions are accessible, and in what context it is being executed. (@robertnyman) As far as I can tell, context is just a reference to an object. Can someone please explain what exactly is context, as used, for instance, in the jQuery syntax, $(selector, context). And is an object's scope the same at it's context?

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  • Settings object with singleton pattern

    - by axis
    I need to build an object that will have only one instance because this Object is dedicated to the storage of vital settings for my application and I would like to avoid a misuse of this type or a conflict at run-time. The most popular solution for this, according to the internet, is the Singleton pattern. But I would like to know about other ideas or solutions for this; also I would like to know if other solutions can be much more easy to grasp for an user of this hypothetical library. Thanks.

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  • `this` in global scope in ECMAScript 6

    - by Nathan Wall
    I've tried looking in the ES6 draft myself, but I'm not sure where to look: Can someone tell me if this in ES6 necessarily refers to the global object? Will this object have same members as the global scope? If you could answer for ES5 that would be helpful as well. I know this in global scope refers to the global object in the browser and in most other ES environments, like Node. I just want to know if that's the defined behavior by the spec or if that's extended behavior that implementers have added (and if this behavior will continue in ES6 implementations). In addition, is the global object always the same thing as the global scope? Or are there distinctions? Update - Why I want to know: I am basically trying to figure out how to get the global object reliably in ES5 & 6. I can't rely on window because that's specific to the browser, nor can I rely on global because that's specific to environments like Node. I know this in Node can refer to module in module scope, but I think it still refers to global in global scope. I want a cross-environment ES5 & 6 compliant way to get the global object (if possible). It seems like in all the environments I know of this in global scope does that, but I want to know if it's part of the actual spec (and so reliable across any environment that I may not be familiar with). I also need to know if the global scope and the global object are the same thing by the spec. In other words will all variables in global scope be the same as globalobject.variable_name?

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  • Unit-testing a directive with isolated scope and bidirectional value

    - by unludo
    I want to unit test a directive which looks like this: angular.module('myApp', []) .directive('myTest', function () { return { restrict: 'E', scope: { message: '='}, replace: true, template: '<div ng-if="message"><p>{{message}}</p></div>', link: function (scope, element, attrs) { } }; }); Here is my failing test: describe('myTest directive:', function () { var scope, compile, validHTML; validHTML = '<my-test message="message"></my-test>'; beforeEach(module('myApp')); beforeEach(inject(function($compile, $rootScope){ scope = $rootScope.$new(); compile = $compile; })); function create() { var elem, compiledElem; elem = angular.element(validHTML); compiledElem = compile(elem)(scope); scope.$digest(); return compiledElem; } it('should have a scope on root element', function () { scope.message = 'not empty'; var el = create(); console.log(el.text()); expect(el.text()).toBeDefined(); expect(el.text()).not.toBe(''); }); }); Can you spot why it's failing? The corresponding jsFiddle Thanks :)

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  • Error deploying web application on Weblogic 10.3 using maven 2: "Can't find wsdl /wsdls/wsat.wsdl"

    - by Marcos Carceles
    Hi, I'm using maven for deploying a web application in my Weblogic 10.3 server remotely. I created my pom file based on the indication on this previous question: Using maven as build tool for Weblogic 10.3 My pom.xml file is: <project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/maven-v4_0_0.xsd"> <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion> <groupId>com.balfourbeatty.horizon.maven.test</groupId> <artifactId>maven-test-webapp</artifactId> <packaging>war</packaging> <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version> <name>maven-test-webapp Maven Webapp</name> <url>http://maven.apache.org</url> <properties> <weblogic.version>10.3</weblogic.version> </properties> <build> <plugins> <plugin> <groupId>org.apache.myfaces.trinidadbuild</groupId> <artifactId>maven-jdev-plugin</artifactId> </plugin> <plugin> <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId> <artifactId>weblogic-maven-plugin</artifactId> <version>2.9.1</version> <configuration> <name>maven-test-webapp</name> <adminServerHostName>******************</adminServerHostName> <adminServerPort>****</adminServerPort> <adminServerProtocol>t3</adminServerProtocol> <userId>******</userId> <password>*****</password> <upload>true</upload> <remote>true</remote> <verbose>true</verbose> <debug>true</debug> <targetNames>WLS_Spaces</targetNames> <noExit>true</noExit> <projectPackaging>war</projectPackaging> </configuration> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>com.sun</groupId> <artifactId>tools</artifactId> <version>1.6</version> <scope>system</scope> <systemPath>${java.home}/../lib/tools.jar</systemPath> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>weblogic</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>webservices</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.utils.full</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.i18n</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.rmi.client</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>javax.enterprise.deploy</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>webserviceclient</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.security.wls</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.security.identity</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.security</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>wlclient</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.transaction</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.utils.classloaders</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>wljmsclient</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.management.core</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>wls-api</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.descriptor</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.logging</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.socket.api</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.security.digest</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.workmanager</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.weblogic.lifecycle</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.utils.wrapper</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>wlsafclient</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.management.jmx</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>com.bea.core.descriptor.wl</artifactId> <version>${weblogic.version}</version> <scope>provided</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>weblogic</groupId> <artifactId>javax.mail</artifactId> <version>10.3</version> </dependency> </dependencies> </plugin> </plugins> <finalName>maven-test-webapp</finalName> </build> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>junit</groupId> <artifactId>junit</artifactId> <version>3.8.1</version> <scope>test</scope> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId> <artifactId>weblogic-maven-plugin</artifactId> <version>2.9.1</version> </dependency> </dependencies> <distributionManagement> <!-- use the following if you're not using a snapshot version. --> <repository> <id>internal</id> <name>Archiva Managed Internal Repository</name> <url>http://localhost:8180/archiva/repository/internal</url> </repository> <!-- use the following if you ARE using a snapshot version. --> <snapshotRepository> <id>snapshots</id> <name>Archiva Managed Snapshot Repository</name> <url>http://localhost:8180/archiva/repository/snapshots</url> </snapshotRepository> </distributionManagement> </project> All the dependencies are already resolved properly, as they are in the local archiva repository. The application does not contain any web-service, being just a "hello world" application. /index.jsp /WEB-INF/web.xml The error I get is: [BasicOperation.execute():423] : Initiating deploy operation for app, maven-test-webapp, on targets: [BasicOperation.execute():425] : WLS_Spaces Task 14 initiated: [Deployer:149026]deploy application maven-test-webapp on WLS_Spaces. dumping Exception stack Task 14 failed: [Deployer:149026]deploy application maven-test-webapp on WLS_Spaces. Target state: deploy failed on Server WLS_Spaces weblogic.wsee.ws.WsException: When processing WebService module 'maven-test-webapp.war'. Can't find wsdl /wsdls/wsat.wsdl at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEWebModule.loadWsdlDefinitions(WSEEWebModule.java:159) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEModule.loadWsdl(WSEEModule.java:334) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEAnnotationProcessor.isWsdlHasPolicy(WSEEAnnotationProcessor.java:312) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEAnnotationProcessor.process(WSEEAnnotationProcessor.java:91) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEAnnotationProcessor.process(WSEEAnnotationProcessor.java:51) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.WSEEModule.prepare(WSEEModule.java:102) at weblogic.wsee.deploy.ServletDeployListener.contextPrepared(ServletDeployListener.java:26) at weblogic.servlet.internal.EventsManager$FireContextPreparedAction.run(EventsManager.java:503) at weblogic.security.acl.internal.AuthenticatedSubject.doAs(AuthenticatedSubject.java:321) at weblogic.security.service.SecurityManager.runAs(SecurityManager.java:121) at weblogic.servlet.internal.EventsManager.notifyContextPreparedEvent(EventsManager.java:162) at weblogic.servlet.internal.WebAppServletContext.initContextListeners(WebAppServletContext.java:1782) at weblogic.servlet.internal.WebAppServletContext.prepare(WebAppServletContext.java:1136) at weblogic.servlet.internal.HttpServer.doPostContextInit(HttpServer.java:449) at weblogic.servlet.internal.HttpServer.loadWebApp(HttpServer.java:424) at weblogic.servlet.internal.WebAppModule.registerWebApp(WebAppModule.java:924) at weblogic.servlet.internal.WebAppModule.prepare(WebAppModule.java:356) at weblogic.application.internal.flow.ScopedModuleDriver.prepare(ScopedModuleDriver.java:176) at weblogic.application.internal.flow.ModuleListenerInvoker.prepare(ModuleListenerInvoker.java:199) at weblogic.application.internal.flow.DeploymentCallbackFlow$1.next(DeploymentCallbackFlow.java:391) at weblogic.application.utils.StateMachineDriver.nextState(StateMachineDriver.java:83) at weblogic.application.internal.flow.DeploymentCallbackFlow.prepare(DeploymentCallbackFlow.java:59) at weblogic.application.internal.flow.DeploymentCallbackFlow.prepare(DeploymentCallbackFlow.java:43) at weblogic.application.internal.BaseDeployment$1.next(BaseDeployment.java:1221) at weblogic.application.utils.StateMachineDriver.nextState(StateMachineDriver.java:83) at weblogic.application.internal.BaseDeployment.prepare(BaseDeployment.java:367) at weblogic.application.internal.SingleModuleDeployment.prepare(SingleModuleDeployment.java:39) at weblogic.application.internal.DeploymentStateChecker.prepare(DeploymentStateChecker.java:154) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.AppContainerInvoker.prepare(AppContainerInvoker.java:60) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.operations.ActivateOperation.createAndPrepareContainer(ActivateOperation.java:207) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.operations.ActivateOperation.doPrepare(ActivateOperation.java:98) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.operations.AbstractOperation.prepare(AbstractOperation.java:217) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.DeploymentManager.handleDeploymentPrepare(DeploymentManager.java:747) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.DeploymentManager.prepareDeploymentList(DeploymentManager.java:1216) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.DeploymentManager.handlePrepare(DeploymentManager.java:250) at weblogic.deploy.internal.targetserver.DeploymentServiceDispatcher.prepare(DeploymentServiceDispatcher.java:159) at weblogic.deploy.service.internal.targetserver.DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer.doPrepareCallback(DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer.java:157) at weblogic.deploy.service.internal.targetserver.DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer.access$000(DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer.java:12) at weblogic.deploy.service.internal.targetserver.DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer$1.run(DeploymentReceiverCallbackDeliverer.java:45) at weblogic.work.SelfTuningWorkManagerImpl$WorkAdapterImpl.run(SelfTuningWorkManagerImpl.java:516) at weblogic.work.ExecuteThread.execute(ExecuteThread.java:201) at weblogic.work.ExecuteThread.run(ExecuteThread.java:173) Does anyone have any idea on what could the problem be? Many thanks!

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  • How can I implement an abstract singleton class in Java?

    - by Simon
    Here is my sample abstract singleton class: public abstract class A { protected static A instance; public static A getInstance() { return instance; } //...rest of my abstract methods... } And here is the concrete implementation: public class B extends A { private B() { } static { instance = new B(); } //...implementations of my abstract methods... } Unfortunately I can't get the static code in class B to execute, so the instance variable never gets set. I have tried this: Class c = B.class; A.getInstance() - returns null; and this ClassLoader.getSystemClassLoader().loadClass("B"); A.getInstance() - return null; Running both these in the eclipse debugger the static code never gets executed. The only way I could find to get the static code executed is to change the accessibility on B's constructor to public, and to call it. I'm using sun-java6-jre on Ubuntu 32bit to run these tests.

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  • Singleton class design in C#, are these two classes equivalent?

    - by Oskar
    I was reading up on singleton class design in C# on this great resource and decided to go with alternative 4: public sealed class Singleton1 { static readonly Singleton1 _instance = new Singleton1(); static Singleton1() { } Singleton1() { } public static Singleton1 Instance { get { return _instance; } } } Now I wonder if this can be rewritten using auto properties like this? public sealed class Singleton2 { static Singleton2() { Instance = new Singleton2(); } Singleton2() { } public static Singleton2 Instance { get; private set; } } If its only a matter of readability I definitely prefer the second version, but I want to get it right.

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  • How to make a Scala Applet whose Applet class is a singleton?

    - by Jamie
    Hi, I don't know if a solution exists but it would be highly desirable. I'm making a Scala Applet, and I want the main Applet class to be a singleton so it can be accessed elsewhere in the applet, sort of like: object App extends Applet { def init { // do init here } } Instead I have to make the App class a normal instantiatable class otherwise it complains because the contructor is private. So the ugly hack I have is to go: object A { var pp: App = null } class App extends Applet { A.pp = this def init { // do init here } } I really hate this, and is one of the reasons I don't like making applets in Scala right now. Any better solution? It would be nice...

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