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  • Fusion Middleware Summer Camps & advanced partner trainings

    - by JuergenKress
    For Specialized partners who are working on following projects & opportunities, we offer these advanced summer camps: BPM Suite 11 ADF 11g WebCenter Portal WebLogic 12c SOA Suite 11g ADF for BPM Suite 11 WebCenter Sites 11g All training sessions will be from HQ product management and our PTS team. The sessions will take place in July in Lisbon Portugal and Munich Germany. . Participation is limited to two people per company and bootcamp. Registration is handled by first come first serve, please pay attention to the skill requirements, the pre-requisitions and the follow up! We will not accept people onto the training who do not match the criteria! Lisbon: Monday, July 9th 11:00AM - Friday July 13th 16:00 PM (Lisbon time) BPM Suite 11g advanced training by David Read ADF 11g advanced training by Grant Ronald and Frank Nimphius WebCenter Portal advanced training by Stefan Krantz and Angelo Santagata WebLogic 12c training by Cosmin Tudor Munich: Monday, July 16th 11:00 AM - Wednesday July 18th 16:00 PM (CET) SOA Suite 11g advanced training by Niall Commiskey ADF for BPM Suite 11g advanced training by David Read WebCenter Sites 11g advanced training by Product Management & PTS Cost: Free of charge, cancelation or no-show fee 2.000€. Bootcamps are limited to 20 persons first come first serve. For details and registration please visit Lisbon registration page: & Munich registration page Quotes summer camps 2011 “From zero to hero with this BPM workshop" Steven Boon, Ordina. “This is the training that prepares for real projects and POCs"Jon Petter Hjulstad, eVita - blog & twitter Impressions summer camps 2011 SOA & BPM Partner Community For regular information on Oracle SOA Suite become a member in the SOA & BPM Partner Community for registration please visit  www.oracle.com/goto/emea/soa (OPN account required) If you need support with your account please contact the Oracle Partner Business Center. Blog Twitter LinkedIn Mix Forum Technorati Tags: summer camps,OFM summer camps,training,education,SOA Community,Oracle SOA,Oracle BPM,BPM Community,OPN,Jürgen Kress

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  • Fusion Middleware Summer Camps - advanced partner trainings

    - by JuergenKress
    For Specialized partners who are working on following projects & opportunities, we offer these advanced summer camps: BPM Suite 11 ADF 11g WebCenter Portal WebLogic 12c SOA Suite 11g ADF for BPM Suite 11 WebCenter Sites 11g All training sessions will be from HQ product management and our PTS team. The sessions will take place in July in Lisbon Portugal and Munich Germany. . Participation is limited to two people per company and bootcamp. Registration is handled by first come first serve, please pay attention to the skill requirements, the pre-requisitions and the follow up! We will not accept people onto the training who do not match the criteria! Lisbon: Monday, July 9th 11:00AM - Friday July 13th 16:00 PM (Lisbon time) BPM Suite 11g advanced training by David Read ADF 11g advanced training by Grant Ronald and Frank Nimphius WebCenter Portal advanced training by Stefan Krantz and Angelo Santagata WebLogic 12c training by Cosmin Tudor Munich: Monday, July 16th 11:00 AM - Wednesday July 18th 16:00 PM (CET) SOA Suite 11g advanced training by Niall Commiskey ADF for BPM Suite 11g advanced training by David Read WebCenter Sites 11g advanced training by Product Management & PTS Cost: Free of charge, cancelation or no-show fee 2.000€. Bootcamps are limited to 20 persons first come first serve. For details and registration please visit Lisbon registration page: & Munich registration page Quotes summer camps 2011 “From zero to hero with this BPM workshop" Steven Boon, Ordina. “This is the training that prepares for real projects and POCs"Jon Petter Hjulstad, eVita - blog & twitter Impressions summer camps 2011 WebLogic Partner Community For regular information become a member in the WebLogic Partner Community please visit: http://www.oracle.com/partners/goto/wls-emea ( OPN account required). If you need support with your account please contact the Oracle Partner Business Center. Blog Twitter LinkedIn Mix Forum Wiki Technorati Tags: WebLogic,WebLogic Community,Java Message Service,Java Spring,Summer Camps,education

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  • BUILD 2012 day 1 Keynote recap

    - by pluginbaby
    On October 30, 2012 Steve Ballmer kicked off the first BUILD conference keynote. Steve shared some insights around Windows 8: 4 million customers upgraded to Windows 8 over the weekend since the October 26 release (so in 3 days only!). Focus on sharing code between Windows 8 and Windows Phone 8. Syncing everything through SkyDrive Xbox Music free streaming and Xbox Smart Glass. He did all the demos himself, showing off great “Windows 8 generation” devices already available (including an 82-inch Windows 8 “slate” by Perceptive Pixel). Steve Guggenheimer (Microsoft's Corporate Vice President DPE) talked about The Business Opportunity with Windows 8.   Notable announcements of day 1: The Windows Phone 8 SDK is now available at dev.windowsphone.com (includes SDK, free version of VS2012, Blend 5, and emulators). Release of the .NET Framework for Windows Phone 8: Ability to use C# 5 or Visual Basic 11 features in your code (async programming mode, ...), share code between WP8 and Windows Store apps. Windows Phone 8 individual developer registration is reduced to $8 for the next 8 days! (hurry up…) Note: strange absence of Steven Sinofsky on stage…   Watch the entire keynote online: http://channel9.msdn.com/Events/Build/2012/1-001 Read the full transcript: http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/news/Speeches/2012/10-30BuildDay1.aspx

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  • Lots of great stuff going on with Oracle Secure Global Desktop!

    - by Chris Kawalek
    You're probably familiar with Oracle Secure Global Desktop, our solution for providing secure, browser-based access to Oracle Applications and other enterprise software. It's a fantastic product and one I've been personally involved with for nearly a decade! I wanted to give you a quick update on all the fantastic things that are going on with it: First, we have done a few videos with Oracle's Mohan Prabhala at trade shows recently. You can get a quick product refresher and an update on the latest new features by watching these: Next, we talked at length with Brian Madden and Gabe Knuth on Brian and Gabe LIVE about Oracle Secure Global Desktop. Click here or on the screenshot below to go to the brianmadden.com video. Part 1 focuses on Oracle Secure Global Desktop. Listen toward the end for Brian to say, “I kinda want this actually at TechTarget right now.” The analysts are talking about us, too. When we released Oracle Secure Global Desktop 4.7, Chris Wolf over at Gartner had this to say on Twitter. Last, just a quick reminder for existing Oracle Applications customers that Oracle Secure Global Desktop is easy for you to leverage for secure application access. Oracle Secure Global desktop is certified for use with Oracle browser-based applications such as Primavera, E-Business Suite and with Exalogic. Steven Chan over at the E-Business Suite Technology blog gives a great explanation of how Oracle Secure Global Desktop works with E-Business Suite, as an example. As the title says, lots of great stuff going on! -Chris

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  • ADF sessions at UKOUG conference by Grant Ronald

    - by JuergenKress
    For those in the UK, or those who have a few travel dollars left in their budget I just wanted to hi-light a couple of reasons you might want to present to your management as to why you should attend the UKOUG conference this year to get your ADF fill. Firstly, there are three days packed with the ADF content from the brightest minds in ADF-land. In no particular order, some of the stand out sessions for me will be: Duncan Mills presenting a keynote on the Future of Oracle's Fusion Development Luc Bors will be demoing ADF Mobile Frank Nimphius will be giving a tour around JDeveloper 12c Steven Davelaar of JHeadstart fame will be giving an insight on task flows and ADF Faces. Aino Andriessen will focus on build and deployment Frank Houweling will tell us how he can make your ADF application run 70% faster Chris Muir will give a masterclass on ADF architecture. In addition, the UKOUG will be running a 3 days of ADF Mobile hands-on sessions. Mobile is just about the hottest development topic at this time so this is an ideal opportunity to roll up your sleeves and build on-device mobile applications. There will also be a roundtable discussion on which development tool is right for you, and a roundtable on the strategic importance of ADF. Of course, the conference is not all about ADF; Tom Kyte will be there, Cliff Godwin (SVP who looks after Oracle Applications) and a host of others. This might be a great opportunity to get some ADF education. For more adf information visit Grant Ronald’s blog. WebLogic Partner Community For regular information become a member in the WebLogic Partner Community please visit: http://www.oracle.com/partners/goto/wls-emea ( OPN account required). If you need support with your account please contact the Oracle Partner Business Center. BlogTwitterLinkedInMixForumWiki Technorati Tags: ADF,UKOUG,conference,WebLogic Community,Oracle,OPN,Jürgen Kress

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  • Sharing A Stage: JDeveloper/ADF & NetBeans/Java EE 6?

    - by Geertjan
    A highlight for me during last week's Oracle Developer Day in Romania (which I blogged about here) was meeting Jernej Kaše (who is from Slovenia, just like my philosopher hero Slavoj Žižek), who is an Oracle Fusion Middleware evangelist. At the conference, while I was presenting NetBeans and Java EE 6 in one room, Jernej was presenting JDeveloper and ADF in another room. The application he created looks as follows, i.e., a realistic CRUD app, with a master/detail view, a search feature, and validation: In a conversation during a break, we started imagining a scenario where the two of us would be on the same stage, taking turns talking about NetBeans/Java EE and JDeveloper/ADF. In that way, attendees at a conference wouldn't need to choose which of the two topics to attend, because they'd be handled in the same session, with the session possibly being longer so that sufficient time could be spent on the respective technologies. (The JDeveloper/ADF session would then not be competing with the NetBeans/Java EE 6 session, since they'd be handled simultaneously.) The session would focus on the similarities/differences between the two respective tools/solutions, which would be extremely interesting and also unique. The crucial question in making this kind of co-presentation possible is whether (and how quickly) an application such as the one created above with JDeveloper/ADF could be created with NetBeans/Java EE 6. The NetBeans/Java EE 6 story is extremely strong on the model and controler levels, but less strong on the view layer. Though there are choices between using PrimeFaces, RichFaces, and IceFaces, that support is quite limited in the absence of a visual designer or of other specific tools (e.g., code generators to generate snippets of PrimeFaces) connected to JSF component libraries. However, it so happens that in recent months we at NetBeans have established really good connections with the PrimeFaces team (more about that another time). So I asked them what it would take to write the above UI in PrimeFaces. The PrimeFaces team were very helpful. They sent me the following screenshot, which is of the UI they created in PrimeFaces, reproducing the ADF screenshot above: Of course, the above is purely the UI layer, there's no EJB and entity classes and data connection hooked into it yet. However, this is the Facelets file that the PrimeFaces team sent me, i.e., using the PrimeFaces component library, that produces the above result: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:h="http://java.sun.com/jsf/html" xmlns:f="http://java.sun.com/jsf/core" xmlns:p="http://primefaces.org/ui"> <f:view> <h:head> <style type="text/css"> .alignRight { text-align: right; } .alignLeft { text-align: left; } .alignTop { vertical-align: top; } .ui-validation-required { color: red; font-size: 14px; margin-right: 5px; position: relative; vertical-align: top; } .ui-selectonemenu .ui-selectonemenu-trigger .ui-icon { margin-top: 7px !important; } </style> </h:head> <h:body> <h:form prependId="false" id="form"> <p:panel header="Employees"> <h:panelGrid columns="4" id="searchPanel"> Search <p:selectOneMenu> <f:selectItem itemLabel="FirstName" itemValue="FirstName" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="LastName" itemValue="LastName" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="Email" itemValue="Email" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="PhoneNumber" itemValue="PhoneNumber" /> </p:selectOneMenu> <p:inputText /> <p:commandLink process="searchPanel" update="@form"> <h:graphicImage name="next.gif" library="img" /> </p:commandLink> </h:panelGrid> <h:panelGrid columns="3" columnClasses="alignTop,,alignTop" style="width:90%;margin-left:10%"> <h:panelGrid columns="2" columnClasses="alignRight,alignLeft"> <h:outputLabel for="firstName">FirstName</h:outputLabel> <p:inputText id="firstName" /> <h:outputLabel for="lastName"> <sup class="ui-validation-required">*</sup>LastName </h:outputLabel> <p:inputText id="lastName" style="width:250px;" /> <h:outputLabel for="email"> <sup class="ui-validation-required">*</sup>Email </h:outputLabel> <p:inputText id="email" style="width:250px;" /> <h:outputLabel for="phoneNumber" value="PhoneNumber" /> <p:inputMask id="phoneNumber" mask="999.999.9999" /> <h:outputLabel for="hireDate"> <sup class="ui-validation-required">*</sup>HireDate</h:outputLabel> <p:calendar id="hireDate" pattern="MM/dd/yyyy" showOn="button" /> </h:panelGrid> <p:outputPanel style="min-width:40px;" /> <h:panelGrid columns="2" columnClasses="alignRight,alignLeft"> <h:outputLabel for="jobId"> <sup class="ui-validation-required">*</sup>JobId </h:outputLabel> <p:selectOneMenu id="jobId" > <f:selectItem itemLabel="Administration Vice President" itemValue="Administration Vice President" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="Vice President" itemValue="Vice President" /> </p:selectOneMenu> <h:outputLabel for="salary">Salary</h:outputLabel> <p:inputText id="salary" styleClass="alignRight" /> <h:outputLabel for="commissionPct">CommissionPct</h:outputLabel> <p:inputText id="commissionPct" style="width:30px;" maxlength="3" /> <h:outputLabel for="manager">ManagerId</h:outputLabel> <p:selectOneMenu id="manager"> <f:selectItem itemLabel="Steven King" itemValue="Steven" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="Michael Cook" itemValue="Michael" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="John Benjamin" itemValue="John" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="Dav Glass" itemValue="Dav" /> </p:selectOneMenu> <h:outputLabel for="department">DepartmentId</h:outputLabel> <p:selectOneMenu id="department"> <f:selectItem itemLabel="90" itemValue="90" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="80" itemValue="80" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="70" itemValue="70" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="60" itemValue="60" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="50" itemValue="50" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="40" itemValue="40" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="30" itemValue="30" /> <f:selectItem itemLabel="20" itemValue="20" /> </p:selectOneMenu> </h:panelGrid> </h:panelGrid> <p:outputPanel id="buttonPanel"> <p:commandButton value="First" process="@this" update="@form" /> <p:commandButton value="Previous" process="@this" update="@form" style="margin-left:15px;" /> <p:commandButton value="Next" process="@this" update="@form" style="margin-left:15px;" /> <p:commandButton value="Last" process="@this" update="@form" style="margin-left:15px;" /> </p:outputPanel> <p:tabView style="margin-top:25px"> <p:tab title="Job History"> <p:dataTable var="history"> <p:column headerText="StartDate"> <h:outputText value="#{history.startDate}"> <f:convertDateTime pattern="MM/dd/yyyy" /> </h:outputText> </p:column> <p:column headerText="EndDate"> <h:outputText value="#{history.endDate}"> <f:convertDateTime pattern="MM/dd/yyyy" /> </h:outputText> </p:column> <p:column headerText="JobId"> <h:outputText value="#{history.jobId}" /> </p:column> <p:column headerText="DepartmentId"> <h:outputText value="#{history.departmentIdId}" /> </p:column> </p:dataTable> </p:tab> </p:tabView> </p:panel> </h:form> </h:body> </f:view> </html> Right now, NetBeans IDE only has code completion to create the above. So there's not much help for creating such a UI right now. I don't believe that a visual designer is mandatory to create the above. A few code generators and file templates could do the job too. And I'm looking forward to seeing those kinds of tools for PrimeFaces, as well as other JSF component libraries, appearing in NetBeans IDE in upcoming releases. A related option would be for the NetBeans generated CRUD app to include the option of having a master/detail view, as well as the option of having a search feature, i.e., the application generators would provide the option of having additional features typical in Java enterprise apps. In the absence of such tools, there still is room, I believe, for NetBeans/Java EE and JDeveloper/ADF sharing a stage at a conference. The above file would have been prepared up front and the presenter would state that fact. The UI layer is only one aspect of a Java EE 6 application, so that the presenter would have ample other features to show (i.e., the entity class generation, the tools for working with servlets, with session beans, etc) prior to getting to the point where the statement would be made: "On the UI layer, I have prepared this Facelets file, which I will now show you can be connected to the lower layers of the application as follows." At that point, the session beans could be hooked into the Facelets file, the file would be saved, the browser refreshed, and then the whole application would work exactly as the ADF application does. So, Jernej, let's share a stage soon!

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  • Speaker at the German Visual FoxPro Developer Conference 2005

    The following is an excerpt from the UniversalThread conference coverage of the German Visual FoxPro Developer Conference 2005 written by Armin Neudert and Jan Vit. Unfortunately, my sessions were not covered at all but I was there as a speaker after all: [...] We are happy to welcome back several speakers that have already been giving sessions in previous DevCons, but hadn’t been here for one or more years. In detail: Steven Black is back after several years. Marcia Akins and her husband Andy Kramek couldn’t come in 2004 and are back again now. Regarding German speakers, Andreas Flohr and Torsten Weggen are also here again, after not doing sessions for two, respectively four years at this conference. At this point we would like to send some regards to the speakers that couldn’t come to Frankfurt this year, since they are very busy at the moment or are doing sessions anywhere else in the world right now. We are also proud to announce several speakers that are here for the very first time. Welcome to Doug Hennig, Rick Schumer, Craig Berntson, Marcus Luz and Benjamin Anders. And of course, there all the well known speakers which did great sessions over the last years: Sebastian Flucke, Uwe Habermann, Peter Herzog, Venelina Jordanova, Dan Jurden, Jochen Kirstätter, Nathalie Mengel, Lisa Slater Nichols, Michael Niethammer, Rick Strahl, Markus Winhard, Eugen Wirsing, Christof Wollenhaupt and myself - Armin Neudert :-) [...]

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  • We Found 100 Manufacturing Heros That Focus on Innovation!

    - by Stephen Slade
    There’s a good piece written by Ann Grackin of ChainLink Research on the Manufacturing Leadership 100 Awards program held recently in Palm Beach Fl, Apr 30-May 3, 2012.  This article (link below) highlights the summary of the Summit with specific focus on manufacturing innovation.  There were several informative keynotes and sessions from industrial leaders who are leveraging the latest tools and technologies to make better decisions. Ann writes that she was a panelist with Cindy Reese, SVP, Worldwide Operations, Oracle; and Steven Tungate, VP/GM, Supply Chain & Innovation, Toshiba America Business Solutions about Factories and Supply Networks of the Future. Ann writes “So what are these manufacturers doing? Significant rationalization of the supply base (Toshiba, especially, has this issue since they have a long history of many acquisitions), streamlining production to increase productivity, and looking for lower-cost countries for manufacturing….  No doubt firms have global customer bases, so they need to be present in these markets. However, a low-cost-country manufacturing source does introduce more risk in the supply chain. And that was discussed. Quality, security, and intellectual property protection were the critical global manufacturing issues also discussed. “Cindy (Reese) told a fascinating story about Oracle’s acquisition of Sun and the supply chain that was subsequently created. Here was one of the key points: Although Oracle sells on a global basis, they now do their own factory-installed software. This keeps potential ‘factory-installed malware’ from getting into the servers at contract manufacturers, and prevents pirated software. In this way, Oracle ensures that they deliver the quality and security people expect”. Learn more about the Manufacturing Leadership 100 program from Manufacturing Executive at: http://www.mlsummit.com/ Full Article Link:  http://www.clresearch.com/research/detail.cfm?guid=52327213-3048-79ED-99D4-E433DA64D4F0

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  • links for 2011-02-01

    - by Bob Rhubart
    OTN Virtual Developer Day for WebLogic Server and WebLogic Developer Broadcasts (WebLogic Server) Mike Lehmann with details on a whole bunch of upcoming online events for those with an interest in WebLogic. (tags: WebLogic oracle otn) IOUC Summit: Open Arms and Cheese Shoes (Oracle Technology Network Blog (aka TechBlog)) Event highlights from OTN head honcho Justin Kestelyn. (tags: oracle otn IOUC) Prognostications for the Future of BI (BI & Analytics Pulse) Jacqueline Coolidge looks into the Business Intelligence crystal ball. (tags: oracle otn businessintelligence) Edwin Biemond: Some handy code for your managed Beans ( ADF & JSF ) "Back in 2009, I already a made a blogpost about some handy code which you can use in your ADF Web Application. You can say this blogspot is part 2 and here I will show you the code, I use most in my own managed Beans." - Oracle ACE Edwin Biemond (tags: java SOA oracle oracleace) Leon Smiers: Process, content and collaboration "Taking a look at today’s business, most companies still have a lot [to do] as far as adapting to and leveraging Web 2.0 possibilities is concerned." - Leon Smiers (tags: e20 oracle enterprise2.0) Antony Reynolds: Using the SOA-BPM VIrtualBox Appliance Antony says: "Recently I have been setting up some machines for fellow engineers. My base setup consists of Oracle Enterprise Linux with Oracle Virtual Box." (tags: oracle otn soa virtualization virtualbox bpm) Oracle Weblogic Server Gets Smart with CERN | SiliconANGLE CERN, the home to European particle physics, chose Oracle Weblogic Server to handle technical applications and copious HR and administrative Java-based web applications used by CERN employees. Oracle got its start by scheduling the interventions of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). (tags: Weblogic oracle CERN) Oracle Virtual Developers Day: WebLogic - February 10, 2011 Virtual Developer Day: WebLogic - February 10, 2011. Speakers: Frances Zhao - Principal Prod Mngr, Java Platform Group; Will Lyons - Dir, WebLogic Server Prod Mgmt; Steven Button - Principal Prod Mngr, WebLogic Server; Pyounguk Cho - Principal Prod Mngr, Java Platform Group. (tags: oracle otn weblogic java)

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  • ArchBeat Link-o-Rama Top 20 for May 27-June 2, 2012

    - by Bob Rhubart
    The Top 20 most-clicked links as shared via my social networks for the week of May 27 - June 2, 2012. 10 Great WebCenter Sites Resources (FatWire) | John Brunswick Cloning a WebCenter Portal Managed Server | Maiko Rocha Identity Propagation across Web and Web Service 11g | Prakash Yamuna Oracle DB with OEM in Amazon Cloud | Frank Munz IT professionals: Very much the time to change our approach | Andy Mulholland Sorting and Filtering By Model-Based LOV Display Value | Steven Davelaar Enable Content editing of Iterative components |Stefan Krantz Complexity of Social Computing - Is it a Consideration for EAs? | Pat Shepherd Updating metadata in a WebCenter Content Presenter template | Yannick Ongena Eclipse DemoCamp - June 2012 - Redwood Shores, CA Roll Your Own Solaris Blogroll |  Larry Wake BI Architecture Master Class for Partners - Oracle Architecture Unplugged Sample External Login.jsp page for Oracle Access Manager 11g | Brian Eidelman 2012 Oracle Fusion Middleware Innovation Awards - Win a FREE Pass to Oracle OpenWorld 2012 in SF Application integration: reorganise, recycle, repurpose | Andrew Clarke RIDC Accelerator for Portal | Stefan Krantz Bay Area Coherence Special Interest Group (BACSIG) Meeting June 7 The Application Architecture Domain | Michael Glas Designing and Developing Cross-Cutting Features | Stephen Rylander Configuring the iPlanet as web tier for Oracle WebCenter Content (UCM) | Adao Junior Thought for the Day "Liberate yourself from that idea that people are watching you." — Russell Brand Source: Good Reads

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  • Technical Questions for Java Experts

    - by Tori Wieldt
    The "Oracle Technology Network" (meaning me) will be at Devoxx next week doing interviews with Java experts. Do you have technical questions about Project Jigsaw, JavaFX or Java on MacOS? Take a look at the list below of experts and topics. Leave your questions as a comment on this blog and I'll do my best to include them. Most of the interviews happen Tuesday, so get you questions in quickly. Thanks! Interviewee InterviewTopic Arun Gupta and Alexis Moussine-Pouchkine Java EE Mark Reinhold OpenJDK Mark Reinhold Project Jigsaw Jasper Potts JavaFX Scott Kovatch Java on Mac OS Brian Goetz & Mark Reinhold JDK 8 Brian Goetz Project Lambda Steven Chin JavaFX Marek Potociar JAX-RS Claude Falguiere Dev for Tablets Alan Bateman NIO2 Regina ten Bruggencate JDuchess Martijn Verburg Adopt a JSR Note: This is different than the call for questions for the Fireside chat on Tuesday afternoon, Devoxx conference keynote speakers (Henrik Ståhl, senior director of product management for the Java platform at Oracle, and Cameron Purdy, VP of development for the Java EE platform) and the technical discussion panel on Friday morning. Leave (and vote on) those questions here. 

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  • How to Implement Complex Form Data?

    - by SoulBeaver
    I'm supposed to implement a relatively complex form that looks like follows, but has at least four more pages requiring the user to fill in all necessary information for the tracks: This data will need to be sent to the server, which is implemented using Dropwizard. I'm looking for best practices on how to upload and send such a complex form with potentially dozens of songs to the server. The simplest available solution I have seen is a simple multipart/form-data request with the following form schema (Source): Client <html> <body> <h1>File Upload with Jersey</h1> <form action="rest/file/upload" method="post" enctype="multipart/form-data"> <p> Select a file : <input type="file" name="file" size="45" /> </p> <input type="submit" value="Upload It" /> </form> </body> </html> Server @POST @Path("/upload") @Consumes(MediaType.MULTIPART_FORM_DATA) public Response uploadTrack(final FormDataMultiPart multiPart) { List<FormDataBodyPart> artists = multiPart.getFields("artist"); StringBuffer output = new StringBuffer(); for (FormDataBodyPart artist : artists) output.append(artist.getValueAs(String.class)); List<FormDataBodyPart> tracks = multiPart.getFields("track"); for (FormDataBodyPart track : tracks) writeToFile(track.getValueAs(InputStream.class), "Foo"); return Response.status(200).entity(output.toString()).build(); } Then I have also read about file uploads via Ajax or Formdata (Mozilla HttpRequest) which allows for Posts in the formats application/x-www-form-urlencoded, multipart/form-data, or text/plain. I don't know which approach, if any, is best. An ideal solution would be to utilize Jackson to convert a json string into my data objects, but I don't get the impression that this is possible with binary data.

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  • JOIN THE ORACLE Fusion Middleware Summer Camps

    - by mseika
    JOIN THE ORACLE Fusion Middleware Summer Camps For Specialized partners who are working on following projects & opportunities, we offer these advanced summer camps: - BPM Suite 11 - ADF 11g - WebCenter Portal - WebLogic 12c - SOA Suite 11g - ADF for BPM Suite 11 - WebCenter Sites 11g All training sessions will be from HQ product management and our PTS team. The sessions will take place in July in Lisbon Portugal and Munich Germany. . Participation is limited to two people per company and bootcamp. Registration is handled by first come first serve, please pay attention to the skill requirements, the pre-requisitions and the follow up! We will not accept people onto the training who do not match the criteria! Lisbon: Monday, July 9th 11:00AM - Friday July 13th 16:00 PM (Lisbon time) - ADF 11g advanced training by Grant Ronald and Frank Nimphius - WebCenter Portal advanced training by Stefan Krantz and Angelo Santagata - WebLogic 12c training by Cosmin Tudor Munich: Monday, July 16th 11:00 AM - Wednesday July 18th 16:00 PM (CET) - ADF for BPM Suite 11g advanced training by David Read - WebCenter Sites 11g advanced training by Product Management & PTS Cost: Free of charge, cancelation or no-show fee 2.000€ Bootcamps are limited to 20 persons first come first serve For details and registration please visit Lisbon registration page: & Munich registration page Quotes summer camps 2011 “From zero to hero with this BPM workshop” Steven Boon, Ordina Linkedin “This is the training that prepares for real projects and POCs” Jon Petter Hjulstad, eVita – blog & twitter SOA & BPM Partner Community registration Please first login at http://partner.oracle.com and then visit: http://www.oracle.com/goto/emea/soa. If you have any questions please contact the Oracle Partner Business Center. If you have questions please feel free to contact us any time! Best regards Jürgen KressOracle EMEA SOA & BPM Partner Adoption EMEATel. +49 89 1430 1479E-Mail: [email protected]

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  • Using Native Drag and Drop in HTML 5 pages

    - by nikolaosk
    This is going to be the eighth post in a series of posts regarding HTML 5. You can find the other posts here, here , here , here, here , here and here. In this post I will show you how to implement Drag and Drop functionality in an HTML 5 page using JQuery.This is a great functionality and we do not need to resort anymore to plugins like Silverlight and Flash to achieve this great feature. This is also called a native approach on Drag and Drop.I will use some events and I will write code to respond when these events are fired.As I said earlier we need to write Javascript to implement the drag and drop functionality. I will use the very popular JQuery Library. Please download the library (minified version) from http://jquery.com/downloadI will create a simple HTML page.There will be two thumbnails pics on it. There will also be the drag and drop area where the user will drag the thumb pics into it and they will resize to their actual size. The HTML markup for the page follows<!doctype html><html lang="en"><head><title>Liverpool Legends Gallery</title><meta charset="utf-8"><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css"><script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8" src="jquery-1.8.1.min.js"></script>  <script language="JavaScript" src="drag.js"></script>   </head><body><header><h1>A page dedicated to Liverpool Legends</h1><h2>Drag and Drop the thumb image in the designated area to see the full image</h2></header><div id="main"><img src="thumbs/steven-gerrard.jpg"  big="large-images/steven-gerrard-large.jpg" alt="John Barnes"><img src="thumbs/robbie-fowler.jpg" big="large-images/robbie-fowler-large.jpg" alt="Ian Rush"><div id="drag"><p>Drop your image here</p> </div></body></html> There is nothing difficult or fancy in the HTML markup above. I have a link to the external JQuery library and another javascript file that I will implement the whole drag and drop functionality.The code for the css file (style.css) follows#main{  float: left;  width: 340px;  margin-right: 30px;}#drag{  float: left;  width: 400px;  height:300px;  background-color: #c0c0c0;}These are simple CSS rules. This post cannot be a tutorial on CSS.For all these posts I assume that you have the basic HTML,CSS,Javascript skills.Now I am going to create a javascript file (drag.js) to implement the drag and drop functionality.I will provide the whole code for the drag.js file and then I will explain what I am doing in each step.$(function() {          var players = $('#main img');          players.attr('draggable', 'true');                    players.bind('dragstart', function(event) {              var data = event.originalEvent.dataTransfer;               var src = $(this).attr("big");              data.setData("Text", src);               return true;          });          var target = $('#drag');          target.bind('drop', function(event) {            var data = event.originalEvent.dataTransfer;            var src = ( data.getData('Text') );                         var img = $("<img></img>").attr("src", src);            $(this).html(img);            if (event.preventDefault) event.preventDefault();            return(false);          });                   target.bind('dragover', function(event) {                if (event.preventDefault) event.preventDefault();            return false;          });           players.bind('dragend', function(event) {             if (event.preventDefault) event.preventDefault();             return false;           });        });   In these lines var players = $('#main img'); players.attr('draggable', 'true');We grab all the images in the #main div and store them in a variable and then make them draggable.Then in following lines I am using the dragstart event.  players.bind('dragstart', function(event) {              var data = event.originalEvent.dataTransfer;               var src = $(this).attr("big");              data.setData("Text", src);               return true;          }); In this event I am associating the custom data attribute value with the item I am dragging.Then I create a variable to get hold of the dropping area var target = $('#drag'); Then in the following lines I implement the drop event and what happens when the user drops the image in the designated area on the page. target.bind('drop', function(event) {            var data = event.originalEvent.dataTransfer;            var src = ( data.getData('Text') );                         var img = $("<img></img>").attr("src", src);            $(this).html(img);            if (event.preventDefault) event.preventDefault();            return(false);          }); The dragend  event is fired when the user has finished the drag operation        players.bind('dragend', function(event) {             if (event.preventDefault) event.preventDefault();             return false;           }); When this method event.preventDefault() is called , the default action of the event will not be triggered.Please have a look a the picture below to see how the page looks before the drag and drop takes place. Then simply I drag and drop a picture in the dropping area.Have a look at the picture below It works!!! Hope it helps!!  

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  • ArchBeat Link-o-Rama for December 14, 2012

    - by Bob Rhubart
    JMS Step 6 - How to Set Up an AQ JMS (Advanced Queueing JMS) for SOA Purposes | John-Brown Evans John Brown Evans' post continues the series of JMS articles that demonstrate how to use JMS queues in a SOA context. "This example leads you through the creation of an Oracle database Advanced Queue and the related WebLogic server objects in order to use AQ JMS in connection with a SOA composite," John explains. And if you missed the first 5 steps, don't worry – the post includes links. Cloud Deployment Models | B. R. Clouse Looking out for the cloud newbies... "As the cloud paradigm grows in depth and breadth, more readers are approaching the topic for the first time, or from a new perspective," says B. R. Clouse. "This blog is a basic review of cloud deployment models, to help orient newcomers and neophytes." Understanding the JSF Lifecycle and ADF Optimized Lifecycle | Steven Davelaar Would you call that a surprise ending? Oracle WebCenter & ADF Architecture Team (A-Team) member learned a lot more than he expected while creating a UKOUG presentation entitled "What you need to know about JSF to be succesful with ADF." Using Oracle Enterprise Manager Cloud Control 12c with Filer Snapshotting | Porus Homi Havewala This concise technical article includes a script for database backup using snapshots and cataloging in RMAN. Thought for the Day "A program which perfectly meets a lousy specification is a lousy program." — Cem Kaner Source: SoftwareQuotes.com

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  • Profit : August, 2012

    - by user462779
    August 2012 issue of Profit is now available online. Way back in 2003, I wrote my first feature for Profit. It was titled “Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Application Servers (But Were Afraid To Ask),” and it discussed “cutting-edge” technologies like portals and XML and the brand-new Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE; we’re now on Java EE 7). But despite the dated terms I used in my Profit debut, I noticed something in rereading that old story that has stayed constant: mid-tier technology is where innovative enterprise IT projects happen. It may have been XML in 2003, but it’s SOA in 2012. While preparing the August issue of Profit was more than just a stroll down memory lane for me, it has provided a nice bit of perspective about what changes and what doesn’t in this dynamic IT industry. Technologies continuously evolve—some become standard practice, some are revived or reinvented, and some are left by the wayside. But the drive to innovate and the desire to succeed are business principles that never go out of fashion. Also, be sure to check out the Profit JD Edwards Special Issue 2012 (PDF), featuring partner profiles, customer successes, and Oracle executive interviews. The Middleware Advantage Three ways a flexible, integrate software layer can deliver a competitive edge Playing to Win Electronic Arts’ superefficient hub processes millions of online gaming transactions every day. Adjustable Loans With Oracle Exadata, Reliance Commercial Finance keeps pace with India’s commercial loan market. Future Proof To keep pace with mobile, social, and location-based services, smart technologists are using middleware to innovate. Spring Training Knowledge and communication help Jackson Hewitt’s Tim Bechtold get seasonal workers in top shape. Keeping Online Customers Happy Customers worldwide are comfortable with online service—but are companies meeting customers’ needs?

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  • Internet Explorer 9 is coming Monday to a web near you

    - by brian_ritchie
    Internet Explorer 9 is finally here...well almost.  Microsoft is releasing their new browser on March 14, 2011. IE9 has a number of improvements, including: Faster, Faster, Faster.  Did I mention it is faster?   With the new browsers coming out from Mozilla, Google, and Microsoft, there have been a flood of speed test coverage.  Chrome has long held the javascript speed crown.  But according to Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols over at ZDNET..."for the moment at least IE9 is actually the fastest browser I’ve tested to date."  He came to this revelation after figuring out that the 32-bit version of IE9 has the new Chakra JIT (the 64-bit version doesn't).  It also has a DirectX-based rendering engine so it can do cool tricks once reserved for desktop applications. Windows 7 Desktop Integration.  Read my post for more details.  Unfortantely, they didn't integrate my ideas...at least not yet :) Hot new UI.  Ok, they "borrowed" some ideas from Chrome...but that is the best form of flattery. Standards Compliance.  A real focus on HTML5 and CSS3.  Definite goodness for developers. So, go get yourself some IE9 on Monday and enjoy! 

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  • Using the Java SE 8 Date Time API with JPA 2.1

    - by reza_rahman
    Most of you are hopefully aware of the new Date Time API included in Java SE 8. If you are not, you should check them out right now using the Java Tutorial Trail dedicated to the topic. It is a significantly leap forward in processing temporal data in Java. For those who already use Joda-Time the changes will look very familiar - very simplistically speaking the Java SE 8 feature is basically Joda-Time standardized. Quite naturally you will likely want to use the new Date Time APIs in your JPA domain model to better represent temporal data. The problem is that JPA 2.1 will not support the new API out of the box. So what are you to do? Fortunately you can make use of fairly simple JPA 2.1 Type Converters to use the Date Time API in your JPA domain classes. Steven Gertiser shows you how to do it in an extremely well written blog entry. Besides explaining the problem and the solution the entry is actually very good for getting a better understanding of JPA 2.1 Type Converters as well. I think such a set of converters may be a good fit for Apache DeltaSpike as a Java EE 7 extension? In case you are wondering about Java SE 8 support in the JPA specification itself, Nick Williams has already entered an excellent, well researched JIRA entry asking for such support in a future version of the JPA specification that's well worth looking at. Another possibility of course is for JPA providers to start supporting the Date Time API natively before anything is formalized in the specification. What do you think?

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  • JavaOne LAD Call for Papers

    - by Tori Wieldt
    JavaOne LAD Call for Papers closes next Friday, October 4. Here are Java Evangelist Steven Chin's top three reasons why you submit a session:1) Imagine a parallel world where Java is king. Where the government has mandated that all software be open-source and recognized Java as an official platform. That is exactly what happened in Brazil and it shows in all aspects of their country from government systems to TV standards.2) A JUG in Every Village - Brazil has the most user groups of any country in the world by a significant margin. "I've stayed after JavaOne to visit several cities and gotten a great audience whether it was a large city like Brasilia or Goiania, or a coastal town like Fortaleza, Salvador, or Maceio," Chin explains.3) A Community-Supported Conference - SouJava and the entire Brazilian user group community is active and involved with JavaOne Brazil, making it a really engaging regional JavaOne conference. Submissions should be: From the community, all proposals should be non-Oracle. Java-related topics (not technologies such as Flex, .NET, Objective C, etc... unless it's specifically a topic about how such things INTEGRATE with Java) Non-product pitches Interesting/innovative uses of Java Practical relevant case studies/examples/practices/etc. The call for papers will close on Friday, October 4, 2012 at 11:59 pm local time. We look forward to hearing from you!

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  • Embedded Nashorn in JEditorPane

    - by Geertjan
    Here's a prototype for some kind of backoffice content management system. Several interesting goodies are included, such as an embedded JavaScript editor, as can be seen in the screenshot: Key items of interest in the above are as follows: Embedded JavaScript editor (i.e., the latest and greatest Nashorn technology, look it up, if you're not aware of what that is.) The way that's done is to include the relevant JavaScript modules in your NetBeans Platform application. Make very sure to include "Lexer to NetBeans Bridge", which does a bunch of critical stuff under the hood. The JEditorPane is defined as follows, along the lines that I blogged about recently thanks to Steven Yi: javaScriptPane.setContentType("text/javascript"); EditorKit kit = CloneableEditorSupport.getEditorKit("text/javascript"); javaScriptPane.setEditorKit(kit); javaScriptPane.getDocument().putProperty("mimeType", "text/javascript"); Note that "javaScriptPane" above is simply a JEditorPane. Timon Veenstra's excellent solution for integrating Nodes with MultiViewElements, which is described here by Timon, and nowhere else in the world. The tab you see above is within a pluggable container, so anyone else could create a new module and register their own MultiViewElement such that it will be incorporated into the editor. A small trick to ensure that only one window opens per news item: @NbBundle.Messages("OpenNews=Open") private class OpenNewsAction extends AbstractAction { public OpenNewsAction() { super(Bundle.OpenNews()); } @Override public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) { News news = getLookup().lookup(News.class); Mode editorMode = WindowManager.getDefault().findMode("editor"); for (TopComponent tc : WindowManager.getDefault().getOpenedTopComponents(editorMode)) { if (tc.getDisplayName().equals(news.getTitle())) { tc.requestActive(); return; } } TopComponent tc = MultiViews.createMultiView("application/x-newsnode", NewsNode.this); tc.open(); tc.requestActive(); } } The rest of what you see above is all standard NetBeans Platform stuff. The sources of everything you see above is here: http://java.net/projects/nb-api-samples/sources/api-samples/show/versions/7.3/misc/CMSBackOffice

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  • JEditorPane on Steroids with Nashorn

    - by Geertjan
    Continuing from Embedded Nashorn in JEditorPane, here is the same JEditorPane on steroids with Nashorn, in the context of some kind of CMS backend system: Above, you see heavy reusage of NetBeans IDE editor infrastructure. Parts of it are with thanks to Steven Yi, who has done some great research in this area. Code completion, right-click popup menu, line numbering, editor toolbar, find/replace features, block selection, comment/uncomment features, etc, etc, etc, all the rich editor features from NetBeans IDE are there, within a plain old JEditorPane. And everything is externally extensible, e.g., new actions can be registered by external modules into the right-click popup menu or the editor toolbar or the sidebar, etc. For example, here's code completion (Ctrl-Space): It even has the cool new feature where if you select a closing brace and the opening brace isn't in the visible area, a rectangular popup appears at the top of the editor, to show how the current piece of code begins: The only thing I am missing is code folding! I wish that would work too, still figuring it out. What's also cool is that this is a Maven project. The sources: http://java.net/projects/nb-api-samples/sources/api-samples/show/versions/7.3/misc/CMSBackOffice2

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  • setting up subreport in ireport using XML datasource

    - by shyam
    can anyone explain in detail(if possible with screen shorts) how to add subreport (one to many relation) this being the xml data source <addressbook> <category name="home"> <person id="1"> <LASTNAME>Davolio</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Nancy</FIRSTNAME> <hobbies> <hobby>Radio Control</hobby> <hobby>R/C Cars</hobby> <hobby>Micro R/C Cars</hobby> <hobby>Die-Cast Models</hobby> </hobbies> <email>[email protected]</email> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> <person id="2"> <LASTNAME>Fuller</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Andrew</FIRSTNAME> <email>[email protected]</email> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> <person id="3"> <LASTNAME>Leverling</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Janet</FIRSTNAME> <hobbies> <hobby>Rockets</hobby> <hobby>Puzzles</hobby> <hobby>Science Hobby</hobby> <hobby>Toy Horse</hobby> </hobbies> <email>[email protected]</email> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> </category> <category name="work"> <person id="4"> <LASTNAME>Peacock</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Margaret</FIRSTNAME> <hobbies> <hobby>Toy Horse</hobby> </hobbies> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> <person id="5"> <LASTNAME>Buchanan</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Steven</FIRSTNAME> <hobbies> </hobbies> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> <person id="6"> <LASTNAME>Suyama</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Michael</FIRSTNAME> </person> <person id="7"> <LASTNAME>King</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Robert</FIRSTNAME> </person> </category> <category name="Other"> <person id="8"> <LASTNAME>Callahan</LASTNAME> <FIRSTNAME>Laura</FIRSTNAME> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> <person id="9"> <LASTNAME>Dodsworth</LASTNAME> <email>[email protected]</email> </person> </category> </addressbook>

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  • Segfaulting Java process

    - by zenmonkey
    I've a java process that is working on some large data set in memory. I've seen it crash with a SIGSEGV signal sometimes, so i was wondering some potential causes and fixes could do. Caues: - JVM bug - Native library bug (e.g pthreads etc) - JNI bug in user code Fixes: - Upgrade to new JVM In my particular case, this is the output form the log file (pruned) A fatal error has been detected by the Java Runtime Environment: # SIGSEGV (0xb) at pc=0x00002aaaaacd1b94, pid=32116, tid=1086544208 # JRE version: 6.0_14-b08 Java VM: Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (14.0-b16 mixed mode linux-amd64 ) Problematic frame: C [libpthread.so.0+0xab94] pthread_cond_timedwait+0x154 # If you would like to submit a bug report, please visit: http://java.sun.com/webapps/bugreport/crash.jsp # --------------- T H R E A D --------------- Current thread (0x00002aacaad41000): WatcherThread [stack: 0x0000000040b35000,0x0000000040c36000] [id=32141] siginfo:si_signo=SIGSEGV: si_errno=0, si_code=1 (SEGV_MAPERR), si_addr=0x00002aabc40008c0 Registers: RAX=0x0000000000000000, RBX=0x0000000000000000, RCX=0x0000000000000000, RDX=0x0000000000000002 RSP=0x0000000040c34cc0, RBP=0x0000000040c34d80, RSI=0x0000000000000001, RDI=0x00002aabc40008c0 R8 =0x00002aacaad42528, R9 =0x0000000000000000, R10=0x0000000040c34cd8, R11=0x0000000000000202 R12=0x0000000000000001, R13=0x0000000040c34d40, R14=0xffffffffffffff92, R15=0x00002aacaad42550 RIP=0x00002aaaaacd1b94, EFL=0x0000000000010246, CSGSFS=0x000000000000e033, ERR=0x0000000000000006 TRAPNO=0x000000000000000e Top of Stack: (sp=0x0000000040c34cc0) 0x0000000040c34cc0: 0000000000000000 00002aabc40008c0 0x0000000040c34cd0: 00002aacaad42528 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34ce0: 0000000002fae0e0 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34cf0: 00002aaaaacd1750 0000000040c34cc0 0x0000000040c34d00: 00002aacaad42528 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34d10: 00002aacaad42528 00002aacaad42500 0x0000000040c34d20: 0000000000000032 00002aaaabadf876 0x0000000040c34d30: fffffffdaad40e80 0000000040c34d40 0x0000000040c34d40: 000000004bbb7166 0000000015f07098 0x0000000040c34d50: 0000000040c34d80 00138cd32df59cce 0x0000000040c34d60: 431bde82d7b634db 00002aacaad429c0 0x0000000040c34d70: 0000000000000032 00002aacaad429c0 0x0000000040c34d80: 0000000040c34e00 00002aaaabadda6d 0x0000000040c34d90: 0000000040c34da0 00002aacaad42500 0x0000000040c34da0: 00002aacaad429c0 00002aaa00000002 0x0000000040c34db0: 0000000000000001 0000000000000002 0x0000000040c34dc0: 0000000040c34dd0 00002aaaabb6f613 0x0000000040c34dd0: 0000000040c34e00 00002aacaad41000 0x0000000040c34de0: 0000000000000032 00002aacaad429c0 0x0000000040c34df0: 00002aacaad41000 0000000000001000 0x0000000040c34e00: 0000000040c34e60 00002aaaabbc39fb 0x0000000040c34e10: 0000000040c34e40 00002aaaabab868f 0x0000000040c34e20: 00002aacaad41000 00002aacaad42aa0 0x0000000040c34e30: 00002aacaad42aa0 00002aaaabe10630 0x0000000040c34e40: 00002aaaabe10630 00002aacaad42aa0 0x0000000040c34e50: 00002aacaad429c0 00002aacaad41000 0x0000000040c34e60: 0000000040c35130 00002aaaabadff9f 0x0000000040c34e70: 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34e80: 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34e90: 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34ea0: 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 0x0000000040c34eb0: 0000000000000000 0000000000000000 Instructions: (pc=0x00002aaaaacd1b94) 0x00002aaaaacd1b84: 88 22 00 00 48 8b 7c 24 08 be 01 00 00 00 31 c0 0x00002aaaaacd1b94: f0 0f b1 37 0f 85 e8 00 00 00 8b 57 2c 48 8b 47 Stack: [0x0000000040b35000,0x0000000040c36000], sp=0x0000000040c34cc0, free space=1023k Native frames: (J=compiled Java code, j=interpreted, Vv=VM code, C=native code) C [libpthread.so.0+0xab94] pthread_cond_timedwait+0x154 V [libjvm.so+0x594a6d] V [libjvm.so+0x67a9fb] V [libjvm.so+0x596f9f] --------------- P R O C E S S --------------- Java Threads: ( = current thread ) 0x00002aacaad3f000 JavaThread "Low Memory Detector" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32140, stack(0x0000000040a34000,0x0000000040b35000)] 0x00002aacaad3c000 JavaThread "CompilerThread1" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32139, stack(0x0000000040933000,0x0000000040a34000)] 0x00002aacaad37800 JavaThread "CompilerThread0" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32138, stack(0x0000000040832000,0x0000000040933000)] 0x00002aacaad36800 JavaThread "Signal Dispatcher" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32137, stack(0x0000000040731000,0x0000000040832000)] 0x00002aacaab7d800 JavaThread "Finalizer" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32136, stack(0x0000000040630000,0x0000000040731000)] 0x00002aacaab7b800 JavaThread "Reference Handler" daemon [_thread_blocked, id=32135, stack(0x000000004052f000,0x0000000040630000)] 0x0000000040115800 JavaThread "main" [_thread_blocked, id=32117, stack(0x000000004012b000,0x000000004022c000)] Other Threads: 0x00002aacaab75000 VMThread [stack: 0x000000004042e000,0x000000004052f000] [id=32134] =0x00002aacaad41000 WatcherThread [stack: 0x0000000040b35000,0x0000000040c36000] [id=32141] VM state:at safepoint (normal execution) VM Mutex/Monitor currently owned by a thread: ([mutex/lock_event]) [0x0000000040112e80] Threads_lock - owner thread: 0x00002aacaab75000 [0x0000000040113380] Heap_lock - owner thread: 0x0000000040115800 Heap PSYoungGen total 1854528K, used 1029248K [0x00002aac025a0000, 0x00002aaca8340000, 0x00002aaca9040000) eden space 1029248K, 100% used [0x00002aac025a0000,0x00002aac412c0000,0x00002aac412c0000) from space 825280K, 0% used [0x00002aac412c0000,0x00002aac412c0000,0x00002aac738b0000) to space 812800K, 0% used [0x00002aac76980000,0x00002aac76980000,0x00002aaca8340000) PSOldGen total 4423680K, used 4423651K [0x00002aaab5040000, 0x00002aabc3040000, 0x00002aac025a0000) object space 4423680K, 99% used [0x00002aaab5040000,0x00002aabc3038fe8,0x00002aabc3040000) PSPermGen total 21248K, used 5848K [0x00002aaaafc40000, 0x00002aaab1100000, 0x00002aaab5040000) object space 21248K, 27% used [0x00002aaaafc40000,0x00002aaab01f61f0,0x00002aaab1100000) Dynamic libraries: 40000000-40009000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 313415 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/bin/java 40108000-4010a000 rwxp 00008000 08:01 313415 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/bin/java 4010a000-4012b000 rwxp 4010a000 00:00 0 [heap] 4012b000-4012e000 ---p 4012b000 00:00 0 4012e000-4022c000 rwxp 4012e000 00:00 0 4022c000-4022d000 ---p 4022c000 00:00 0 4022d000-4032d000 rwxp 4022d000 00:00 0 4032d000-4032e000 ---p 4032d000 00:00 0 4032e000-4042e000 rwxp 4032e000 00:00 0 4042e000-4042f000 ---p 4042e000 00:00 0 4042f000-4052f000 rwxp 4042f000 00:00 0 4052f000-40532000 ---p 4052f000 00:00 0 40532000-40630000 rwxp 40532000 00:00 0 40630000-40633000 ---p 40630000 00:00 0 40633000-40731000 rwxp 40633000 00:00 0 40731000-40734000 ---p 40731000 00:00 0 40734000-40832000 rwxp 40734000 00:00 0 40832000-40835000 ---p 40832000 00:00 0 40835000-40933000 rwxp 40835000 00:00 0 40933000-40936000 ---p 40933000 00:00 0 40936000-40a34000 rwxp 40936000 00:00 0 40a34000-40a37000 ---p 40a34000 00:00 0 40a37000-40b35000 rwxp 40a37000 00:00 0 40b35000-40b36000 ---p 40b35000 00:00 0 40b36000-40c36000 rwxp 40b36000 00:00 0 2aaaaaaab000-2aaaaaac6000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49198 /lib64/ld-2.7.so 2aaaaaac6000-2aaaaaac7000 rwxp 2aaaaaac6000 00:00 0 2aaaaaac7000-2aaaaaad0000 r-xs 0006d000 08:10 29851669 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/build/lib/common.jar 2aaaaaad2000-2aaaaaad3000 rwxp 2aaaaaad2000 00:00 0 2aaaaaad3000-2aaaaaae0000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315357 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libverify.so 2aaaaaae0000-2aaaaabdf000 ---p 0000d000 08:01 315357 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libverify.so 2aaaaabdf000-2aaaaabe2000 rwxp 0000c000 08:01 315357 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libverify.so 2aaaaabe2000-2aaaaac0a000 rwxp 2aaaaabe2000 00:00 0 2aaaaac0a000-2aaaaac0f000 r-xs 0003a000 08:10 30326840 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common_ml20010405/build/lib/common_ml.jar 2aaaaac0f000-2aaaaac12000 r-xs 00020000 08:10 29786222 /mnt/home/jatten/pagescorer.jar 2aaaaacc5000-2aaaaacc6000 r-xp 0001a000 08:01 49198 /lib64/ld-2.7.so 2aaaaacc6000-2aaaaacc7000 rwxp 0001b000 08:01 49198 /lib64/ld-2.7.so 2aaaaacc7000-2aaaaacdd000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49280 /lib64/libpthread-2.7.so 2aaaaacdd000-2aaaaaedc000 ---p 00016000 08:01 49280 /lib64/libpthread-2.7.so 2aaaaaedc000-2aaaaaedd000 r-xp 00015000 08:01 49280 /lib64/libpthread-2.7.so 2aaaaaedd000-2aaaaaede000 rwxp 00016000 08:01 49280 /lib64/libpthread-2.7.so 2aaaaaede000-2aaaaaee2000 rwxp 2aaaaaede000 00:00 0 2aaaaaee2000-2aaaaaee9000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315360 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/jli/libjli.so 2aaaaaee9000-2aaaaafea000 ---p 00007000 08:01 315360 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/jli/libjli.so 2aaaaafea000-2aaaaafec000 rwxp 00008000 08:01 315360 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/jli/libjli.so 2aaaaafec000-2aaaaafee000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49240 /lib64/libdl-2.7.so 2aaaaafee000-2aaaab1ee000 ---p 00002000 08:01 49240 /lib64/libdl-2.7.so 2aaaab1ee000-2aaaab1ef000 r-xp 00002000 08:01 49240 /lib64/libdl-2.7.so 2aaaab1ef000-2aaaab1f0000 rwxp 00003000 08:01 49240 /lib64/libdl-2.7.so 2aaaab1f0000-2aaaab1f1000 rwxp 2aaaab1f0000 00:00 0 2aaaab1f1000-2aaaab33e000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49219 /lib64/libc-2.7.so 2aaaab33e000-2aaaab53e000 ---p 0014d000 08:01 49219 /lib64/libc-2.7.so 2aaaab53e000-2aaaab542000 r-xp 0014d000 08:01 49219 /lib64/libc-2.7.so 2aaaab542000-2aaaab543000 rwxp 00151000 08:01 49219 /lib64/libc-2.7.so 2aaaab543000-2aaaab549000 rwxp 2aaaab543000 00:00 0 2aaaab549000-2aaaabca7000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315371 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/server/libjvm.so 2aaaabca7000-2aaaabda6000 ---p 0075e000 08:01 315371 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/server/libjvm.so 2aaaabda6000-2aaaabf1e000 rwxp 0075d000 08:01 315371 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/server/libjvm.so 2aaaabf1e000-2aaaabf5c000 rwxp 2aaaabf1e000 00:00 0 2aaaabf67000-2aaaabfe9000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49263 /lib64/libm-2.7.so 2aaaabfe9000-2aaaac1e8000 ---p 00082000 08:01 49263 /lib64/libm-2.7.so 2aaaac1e8000-2aaaac1e9000 r-xp 00081000 08:01 49263 /lib64/libm-2.7.so 2aaaac1e9000-2aaaac1ea000 rwxp 00082000 08:01 49263 /lib64/libm-2.7.so 2aaaac1ea000-2aaaac1f2000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49283 /lib64/librt-2.7.so 2aaaac1f2000-2aaaac3f1000 ---p 00008000 08:01 49283 /lib64/librt-2.7.so 2aaaac3f1000-2aaaac3f2000 r-xp 00007000 08:01 49283 /lib64/librt-2.7.so 2aaaac3f2000-2aaaac3f3000 rwxp 00008000 08:01 49283 /lib64/librt-2.7.so 2aaaac3f3000-2aaaac41c000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315336 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libjava.so 2aaaac41c000-2aaaac51b000 ---p 00029000 08:01 315336 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libjava.so 2aaaac51b000-2aaaac522000 rwxp 00028000 08:01 315336 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libjava.so 2aaaac522000-2aaaac523000 ---p 2aaaac522000 00:00 0 2aaaac523000-2aaaac524000 rwxp 2aaaac523000 00:00 0 2aaaac52d000-2aaaac542000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49265 /lib64/libnsl-2.7.so 2aaaac542000-2aaaac741000 ---p 00015000 08:01 49265 /lib64/libnsl-2.7.so 2aaaac741000-2aaaac742000 r-xp 00014000 08:01 49265 /lib64/libnsl-2.7.so 2aaaac742000-2aaaac743000 rwxp 00015000 08:01 49265 /lib64/libnsl-2.7.so 2aaaac743000-2aaaac745000 rwxp 2aaaac743000 00:00 0 2aaaac745000-2aaaac74c000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315362 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/native_threads/libhpi.so 2aaaac74c000-2aaaac84d000 ---p 00007000 08:01 315362 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/native_threads/libhpi.so 2aaaac84d000-2aaaac84f000 rwxp 00008000 08:01 315362 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/native_threads/libhpi.so 2aaaac84f000-2aaaac850000 rwxp 2aaaac84f000 00:00 0 2aaaac850000-2aaaac858000 rwxs 00000000 08:01 229379 /tmp/hsperfdata_jatten/32116 2aaaac85b000-2aaaac865000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49269 /lib64/libnss_files-2.7.so 2aaaac865000-2aaaaca64000 ---p 0000a000 08:01 49269 /lib64/libnss_files-2.7.so 2aaaaca64000-2aaaaca65000 r-xp 00009000 08:01 49269 /lib64/libnss_files-2.7.so 2aaaaca65000-2aaaaca66000 rwxp 0000a000 08:01 49269 /lib64/libnss_files-2.7.so 2aaaaca66000-2aaaaca74000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315358 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libzip.so 2aaaaca74000-2aaaacb76000 ---p 0000e000 08:01 315358 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libzip.so 2aaaacb76000-2aaaacb79000 rwxp 00010000 08:01 315358 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libzip.so 2aaaacb79000-2aaaacdea000 rwxp 2aaaacb79000 00:00 0 2aaaacdea000-2aaaafb7a000 rwxp 2aaaacdea000 00:00 0 2aaaafb7a000-2aaaafb84000 rwxp 2aaaafb7a000 00:00 0 2aaaafb84000-2aaaafc3a000 rwxp 2aaaafb84000 00:00 0 2aaaafc40000-2aaab1100000 rwxp 2aaaafc40000 00:00 0 2aaab1100000-2aaab5040000 rwxp 2aaab1100000 00:00 0 2aaab5040000-2aabc3040000 rwxp 2aaab5040000 00:00 0 2aac025a0000-2aaca8340000 rwxp 2aac025a0000 00:00 0 2aaca8340000-2aaca9040000 rwxp 2aaca8340000 00:00 0 2aaca9040000-2aaca904b000 rwxp 2aaca9040000 00:00 0 2aaca904b000-2aaca906a000 rwxp 2aaca904b000 00:00 0 2aaca906a000-2aaca98da000 rwxp 2aaca906a000 00:00 0 2aaca98da000-2aaca9ad4000 rwxp 2aaca98da000 00:00 0 2aaca9ad4000-2aacaa004000 rwxp 2aaca9ad4000 00:00 0 2aacaa004000-2aacaa00a000 rwxp 2aacaa004000 00:00 0 2aacaa00a000-2aacaa87b000 rwxp 2aacaa00a000 00:00 0 2aacaa87b000-2aacaaa76000 rwxp 2aacaa87b000 00:00 0 2aacaaa76000-2aacaaa81000 rwxp 2aacaaa76000 00:00 0 2aacaaa81000-2aacaaaa0000 rwxp 2aacaaa81000 00:00 0 2aacaaaa0000-2aacaaba0000 rwxp 2aacaaaa0000 00:00 0 2aacaaba0000-2aacaad36000 r-xs 02fb1000 08:01 315318 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/rt.jar 2aacaad36000-2aacaaf36000 rwxp 2aacaad36000 00:00 0 2aacaaf36000-2aacaaf49000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 315349 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libnet.so 2aacaaf49000-2aacab04a000 ---p 00013000 08:01 315349 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libnet.so 2aacab04a000-2aacab04d000 rwxp 00014000 08:01 315349 /usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/libnet.so 2aacab058000-2aacab05c000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49268 /lib64/libnss_dns-2.7.so 2aacab05c000-2aacab25b000 ---p 00004000 08:01 49268 /lib64/libnss_dns-2.7.so 2aacab25b000-2aacab25c000 r-xp 00003000 08:01 49268 /lib64/libnss_dns-2.7.so 2aacab25c000-2aacab25d000 rwxp 00004000 08:01 49268 /lib64/libnss_dns-2.7.so 2aacab25d000-2aacab26e000 r-xp 00000000 08:01 49282 /lib64/libresolv-2.7.so 2aacab26e000-2aacab46e000 ---p 00011000 08:01 49282 /lib64/libresolv-2.7.so 2aacab46e000-2aacab46f000 r-xp 00011000 08:01 49282 /lib64/libresolv-2.7.so 2aacab46f000-2aacab470000 rwxp 00012000 08:01 49282 /lib64/libresolv-2.7.so 2aacab470000-2aacab572000 rwxp 2aacab470000 00:00 0 2aacab572000-2aacab57e000 r-xs 00081000 08:10 29851828 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/google-collect-1.0.jar 2aacab57e000-2aacab585000 r-xs 000aa000 08:10 29851946 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/mysql-connector-java-5.1.8-bin.jar 2aacab585000-2aacab58d000 r-xs 00028000 08:10 29851949 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/xml-apis.jar 2aacab58d000-2aacab591000 r-xs 0002f000 08:10 29851947 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-beanutils-core-1.8.2.jar 2aacab591000-2aacab59e000 r-xs 0007f000 08:10 29851943 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-collections-3.2.jar 2aacab59e000-2aacab5a3000 r-xs 00026000 08:10 29851942 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/httpcore-4.0.jar 2aacab5a3000-2aacab5a9000 r-xs 00030000 08:10 29851932 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/junit-dep-4.8.1.jar 2aacab5a9000-2aacab5ac000 r-xs 00011000 08:10 29851922 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/servlet.jar 2aacab5ac000-2aacab5ae000 r-xs 00009000 08:10 29851937 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/gsb.jar 2aacab5ae000-2aacab5b5000 r-xs 00059000 08:10 29851930 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/log4j-1.2.15.jar 2aacab5b5000-2aacab6b5000 rwxp 2aacab5b5000 00:00 0 2aacab6b5000-2aacab6b7000 r-xs 00009000 08:10 29851956 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/gsb-src.jar 2aacab6b7000-2aacab7b7000 rwxp 2aacab6b7000 00:00 0 2aacab7b7000-2aacab7cf000 r-xs 00115000 08:10 29851938 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/xercesImpl.jar 2aacab7cf000-2aacab7d1000 r-xs 00009000 08:10 29851957 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/velocity-tools-view-1.0.jar 2aacab7d1000-2aacab7d3000 r-xs 00009000 08:10 29851939 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-cli-1.2.jar 2aacab7d3000-2aacab7d9000 r-xs 00034000 08:10 29851955 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/junit-4.8.1.jar 2aacab7d9000-2aacab7db000 r-xs 0000e000 08:10 29851917 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/jakarta-oro-2.0.8.jar 2aacab7db000-2aacab858000 r-xs 0031d000 08:10 29851916 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/poi-ooxml-schemas-3.6-20091214.jar 2aacab858000-2aacab85c000 r-xs 00028000 08:10 29851936 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/httpcore-nio-4.0.jar 2aacab85c000-2aacab85e000 r-xs 00005000 08:10 29851940 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-beanutils-bean-collections-1.8.2.jar 2aacab85e000-2aacab864000 r-xs 00059000 08:10 29851919 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/mail-1.4.jar 2aacab864000-2aacab866000 r-xs 0000d000 08:10 29851950 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-logging-1.1.1.jar 2aacab866000-2aacab86c000 r-xs 00045000 08:10 29851924 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-httpclient-3.1.jar 2aacab86c000-2aacab877000 r-xs 00074000 08:10 29851931 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/velocity-dep-1.4.jar 2aacab877000-2aacab87f000 r-xs 00051000 08:10 29851954 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/velocity-1.4.jar 2aacab87f000-2aacab884000 r-xs 00034000 08:10 29851958 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-beanutils-1.8.2.jar 2aacab884000-2aacab889000 r-xs 00048000 08:10 29851918 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/dom4j-1.6.1.jar 2aacab889000-2aacab8c6000 r-xs 0024f000 08:10 29851914 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/xmlbeans-2.3.0.jar 2aacab8c6000-2aacab8cb000 r-xs 00033000 08:10 29851929 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/xmemcached-1.2.3.jar 2aacab8cb000-2aacab8cd000 r-xs 00005000 08:10 29851928 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/org.hamcrest.core_1.1.0.v20090501071000.jar 2aacab8cd000-2aacab8d0000 r-xs 0000a000 08:10 29851944 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/persistence-api-1.0.jar 2aacab8d0000-2aacab8d6000 r-xs 0005f000 08:10 29851926 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/poi-ooxml-3.6-20091214.jar 2aacab8d6000-2aacab8d7000 r-xs 0002b000 08:10 29851951 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/maxmind.jar 2aacab8d7000-2aacab8d8000 r-xs 00002000 08:10 29851935 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/jackson-jaxrs-1.2.0.jar 2aacab8d8000-2aacab8d9000 r-xs 00002000 08:10 29851913 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/slf4j-log4j12-1.5.6.jar 2aacab8d9000-2aacab8dd000 r-xs 00025000 08:10 29851945 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/yanf4j-1.1.1.jar 2aacab8dd000-2aacab8df000 r-xs 00003000 08:10 29851952 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/clickstream-1.0.2.jar 2aacab8df000-2aacab8e1000 r-xs 00004000 08:10 29851953 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/slf4j-api-1.5.6.jar 2aacab8e1000-2aacab8e9000 r-xs 0004d000 08:10 29851920 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/jackson-mapper-asl-1.2.0.jar 2aacab8e9000-2aacab8ed000 r-xs 0001f000 08:10 29851925 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/jackson-core-asl-1.2.0.jar 2aacab8ed000-2aacab8f1000 r-xs 0001b000 08:10 29851912 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/oscache-2.3.jar 2aacab8f1000-2aacab90c000 r-xs 0015d000 08:10 29851927 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/poi-3.6-20091214.jar 2aacab90c000-2aacab911000 r-xs 00040000 08:10 29851831 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/commons-lang-2.5.jar 2aacab911000-2aacab914000 r-xs 00012000 08:10 29851923 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/jgooglesafebrowser-0.1a.2.jar 2aacab914000-2aacab918000 r-xs 00023000 08:10 29851933 /mnt/home/jatten/workspace/common/lib/gson-1.3.jar 2aacab918000-2aacabb18000 rwxp 2aacab918000 00:00 0 2aacabb82000-2aacabd82000 rwxp 2aacabb82000 00:00 0 2aacabe05000-2aacaf204000 rwxp 2aacabe05000 00:00 0 7fffaa12a000-7fffaa141000 rwxp 7fffaa12a000 00:00 0 [stack] ffffffffff600000-ffffffffff601000 r-xp 00000000 00:00 0 [vdso] VM Arguments: jvm_args: -Xmx8000M java_command: com.scorers.ModelImplementingPageScorer -t data/data/golds/adult.all.json -b 18 -s data/models/pagetext.binary. adult.april6.all.model -m com.models.MultiClassUpdateableModel -p 30 --goldsilver -v --cat adult --fakeinput -e /mnt/tmp/xyz.15647.pageo bjects.txt -o Launcher Type: SUN_STANDARD Environment Variables: JAVA_HOME=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14 PATH=/usr/kerberos/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/home/jatten/bin LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64/server:/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/lib/amd64:/usr/java/jdk1.6.0_14/jre/../lib/amd64 SHELL=/bin/bash Signal Handlers: SIGSEGV: [libjvm.so+0x6bd980], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGBUS: [libjvm.so+0x6bd980], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGFPE: [libjvm.so+0x594cc0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGPIPE: [libjvm.so+0x594cc0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGXFSZ: [libjvm.so+0x594cc0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGILL: [libjvm.so+0x594cc0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGUSR1: SIG_DFL, sa_mask[0]=0x00000000, sa_flags=0x00000000 SIGUSR2: [libjvm.so+0x597480], sa_mask[0]=0x00000000, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGHUP: [libjvm.so+0x5971d0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGINT: [libjvm.so+0x5971d0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGTERM: [libjvm.so+0x5971d0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 SIGQUIT: [libjvm.so+0x5971d0], sa_mask[0]=0x7ffbfeff, sa_flags=0x10000004 --------------- S Y S T E M --------------- OS:Fedora release 8 (Werewolf) uname:Linux 2.6.21.7-2.fc8xen #1 SMP Fri Feb 15 12:34:28 EST 2008 x86_64 libc:glibc 2.7 NPTL 2.7 rlimit: STACK 10240k, CORE 0k, NPROC 61504, NOFILE 1024, AS infinity load average:2.83 2.73 2.78 CPU:total 2 (4 cores per cpu, 1 threads per core) family 6 model 23 stepping 10, cmov, cx8, fxsr, mmx, sse, sse2, sse3, ssse3, sse4.1 Memory: 4k page, physical 7872040k(14540k free), swap 0k(0k free) vm_info: Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (14.0-b16) for linux-amd64 JRE (1.6.0_14-b08), built on May 21 2009 01:11:11 by "java_re" with gcc 3.2.2 (SuSE Lin ux) [error occurred during error reporting (printing date and time), id 0xb]

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  • Spring 3 JSON with MVC

    - by stevedbrown
    Is there a way to build Spring Web calls that consume and produce application/json formatted requests and responses respectively? Maybe this isn't Spring MVC, I'm not sure. I'm looking for Spring libraries that behave in a similar fashion to Jersey/JSON. The best case would be if there was an annotation that I could add to the Controller classes that would turn them into JSON service calls. A tutorial showing how to build Spring Web Services with JSON would be great. EDIT: I'm looking for an annotation based approach (similar to Jersey). EDIT2: Like Jersey, I am looking for REST support (POST,GET,DELETE,PUT). EDIT3: Most preferably, this will be the pom.xml entries and some information on using the spring-js with jackson Spring native version of things.

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  • Is xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" a special case in XML?

    - by Bytecode Ninja
    When we use a namespace, we should also indicate where its associated XSD is located at, as can be seen in the following example: <?xml version="1.0"?> <Artist BirthYear="1958" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns="http://www.webucator.com/Artist" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.webucator.com/Artist Artist.xsd"> <Name> <Title>Mr.</Title> <FirstName>Michael</FirstName> <LastName>Jackson</LastName> </Name> </Artist> Here, we have indicated that Artist.xsd should be used for validating the http://www.webucator.com/Artist namespace. However, we are also using the http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance namespace, but we have not specified where its XSD is located at. How do XML parsers know how to handle this namespace? Thanks in advance.

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