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  • Eclipse Kepler apporte le support de Java EE 7, sortie simultanée entre la spécification et l'environnement de développement de la fondation Eclipse

    Une nouvelle version d'Eclipse est disponible. Elle porte le nom de Kepler. Cette version marque la fin officielle du support de la branche 3.x d'Eclipse par la Fondation. Elle continue donc sur la lancée de Juno.Des informations supplémentaires sur les nouveautés de cette version sont disponibles à cette adresse : notes pour la version 4.3.Le projet Kepler se compose de 72 projets (114 en comptant les sous-projets), pour un total d'environ 58 millions de lignes de code par 428 committers. 5 projets ont rejoint le « simulatenous release train » : EMF Diff/merge, Sphinx, Stardust, Hudson et Maven integration pour WTP (Web Tools P...

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  • take my Java skills to the next level

    - by waingram
    I am well versed in the basics of Java programming, although through most of my career I have been maintaining, upgrading, and debugging someone else's Java code. I am mainly familiar with basic servlet applications. I have a strong beginner knowledge of Maven and Ant. I have more web development with Ruby on Rails, but would like to bring my Java skills up to par with regard to web development. It seems the world of Java is so big, I have no idea what the next logical step is for me. Spring? JAX-RB? EJBs? What is the next logical step for someone like me and how would you recommend I approach it?

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  • How can I make a case for "dependency management"?

    - by C. Ross
    I'm currently trying to make a case for adopting dependency management for builds (ala Maven, Ivy, NuGet) and creating an internal repository for shared modules, of which we have over a dozen enterprise wide. What are the primary selling points of this build technique? The ones I have so far: Eases the process of distributing and importing shared modules, especially version upgrades. Requires the dependencies of shared modules to be precisely documented. Removes shared modules from source control, speeding and simplifying checkouts/check ins (when you have applications with 20+ libraries this is a real factor). Allows more control or awareness of what third party libs are used in your organization. Are there any selling points that I'm missing? Are there any studies or articles giving improvement metrics?

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  • Java EE 7 support in NetBeans 7.3.1

    - by arungupta
    NetBeans IDE provide tools, templates, and samples for building Java EE 7 applications. NetBeans 7.3.1 specifically added support for the features mentioned below: Support for creating Java EE 7 projects using Maven and Ant Develop, Deploy, and Debug using GlassFish 4 Bundled Java EE 7 javadocs CDI is enabled by default for new Java EE 7 projects (CDI 1.1) Create database scripts from Entity Classes (JPA 2.1) Java Persistence Query Language (JPQL) testing tool (JPA 2.1) RESTful Java client creation using JAX-RS 2.0 Client APIs (JAX-RS 2.0) New templates for JAX-RS 2 Filter and Interceptor (JAX-RS 2.0) New templates for WebSocket endpoints (WebSocket 1.0) JMS messages are sent using JMS 2 simplified API (JMS 2.0) Pass-through attributes are supported during Facelet page editing (JSF 2.2) Resource Library Contracts(JSF 2.2) @FlowScoped beans from editor and wizards (JSF 2.2) Support for EL 3.0 syntax in editor (EL 3.0) JSON APIs can be used with code completion (JSON 1.0) A comprehensive list of features added in this release is available in NetBeans 7.3.1 New and Noteworthy. Watch the screencast below to get a quick overview of the features and capabilities: Download Netbeans 7.3.1 and start playing with Java EE 7!

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  • Using NPM to share resources between UI projects [on hold]

    - by guy mograbi
    I am a UI team leader. My team has a lot of projects using different languages/technologies. In some parts we will rewrite (gradually - @Ampt this is for you) the application in order to enable new fresh technologies in and get old dinosaurs out. I am going to use Node Package Manager to set up an "all powerful" build/dependency manager. Can I use NPM to depend on a private github repository? Can I use NPM to depend on SVN? Will NPM play nice with quickbuild? Since each project might have a slightly different structure (think jetty/maven or play!framework) can I configure NPM to install some dependencies in different folders while still running it from the project's root? How can I, using NPM, get development resources out and build a packaged product? (like a war) Yes/No - is there a reason to use grunt? No discussion, just one liners.

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  • Reminder: Free, Global, Virtual Developer Day November 5th

    - by jeckels
    Just a quick reminder about the FREE virtual developer day focused on Coherence (and WebLogic) coming on November 5th. This day, with content tailored for developers, will guide you through tooling updates and best practices around creating applications with WebLogic and Coherence as target platforms. We'll also explore advances in how you can manage your build, deploy and ongoing management processes to streamline your application's life cycle. And of course, we'll conclude with some hands-on labs that ensure this isn't all a bunch of made-up stuff - get your hands dirty in the code!November 5, 20139am PT/12pm ETREGISTER NOW We're offering two tracks for your attendance, though of course you're free to attend any session you wish. The first will be for pure developers with sessions around developing for WebLogic with HTML5, processing live events with Coherence, and looking at development tooling. The second is for developers who are involved in the building and management processes as part of the application life cycle. These sessions focus on using Maven for builds, using Chef and Puppet for configuration and more.We look forward to seeing you there - don't forget to invite a friend!

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  • Jersey 2.0 Milestone 2 Now Available

    - by arungupta
    Jersey 2.0 milestone 2 is now available. It builds upon the first milestone and adds several new features such as server-side asynchronous processing, server-side content negotiation, improved JAX-RS parameter injection, and several others. The REST endpoints can be published on Java SE HTTP Server, Grizzly 2 HTTP container, and some basic Servlet-based deployments. It also provides HTTPURLConnection-based client API implementation. Read about these and more about what's new in Marek's detailed post. Of course this is also the future reference implementation for JAX-RS 2.0. Feel like trying it out? Simply go to Maven Central (of course none of this is production quality at this point). The latest JAX-RS Javadocs and Jersey 2.0 API docs are good starting points to explore. And provide them feedback at [email protected].

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  • Where do the responsibilities of build tools end and those of CI tools start?

    - by BrandonV
    In the delivery of software, and within the sense of the deployment pipeline, where do the responsibilities of build tools, like Maven, end, and the responsibilities of CI start? As a rough example of a problem that arises; should build tools have any responsibility to the configuration and execution of acceptance tests when they are further down the pipeline than actually building the artifact? I'd like an answer that addresses in the sense of deployment lifecycle phases rather than in specifics, like my example. Although examples would help bolster the answer.

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  • Java EE 7 support in Eclipse 4.3

    - by arungupta
    Eclipse Kepler (4.3) features 71 different open source projects and over 58 million LOC. One of the main themes of the release is the support for Java EE 7. Kepler specifically added support for the features mentioned below: Create Java EE 7 Eclipse projects or using Maven New facets for JPA 2.1, JSF 2.2, Servlet 3.1, JAX-RS 2.0, EJB 3.2 Schemas and descriptors updated for Java EE 7 standards (web.xml, application.xml, ejb-jar.xml, etc) Tolerance for JPA 2.1 such as features can be used without causing invalidation and content assist for UI (JPA 2.1) Support for NamedStoredProcedureQuery (JPA 2.1) Schema generation configuration in persistence.xml (JPA 2.1) Updates to persistence.xml editor with the new JPA 2.1 properties Existing features support EE7 (Web Page Editor, Palette, EL content assist, annotations, JSF tags, Facelets, etc) Code generation wizards tolerant of EE7 (New EJB, Servlet, JSP, etc.) A comprehensive list of features added in this release is available in Web Tools Platform 3.5 - New and Noteworthy. Download Eclipse 4.3 and Java EE 7 SDK and start playing with Java EE 7! Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse was released recently that uses Eclipse Kepler RC3 but will be refreshed soon to include the final bits.

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  • How much time do you spend actually developing vs. infrastructure activites?

    - by Can't Tell
    When I'm working I feel like most of the time I'm not doing actual work. For example after making a change to the code in order to test it, I have to first build the project, and start the server(say JBoss). Upon testing, I find that there is another small issue. So I bring down the server, make the changes, build again and start up the server again.The building and bringing the server up/down is not very useful work. Also, the IDE (lets say Eclipse) does things such as updating Maven indexes and building the workspace which take some more time to get things done. Have you come across this kind of situation? Do you have tips on how to overcome/bypass this? Any features on the IDE/build tools that can be helpful? Any architecture/application design/technology that attempts to overcome this?

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  • Coverity publie Coverity Security Library, une bibliothèque open-source pour identifier les défauts de sécurité dans les applis Web Java

    Coverity publie Coverity Security Library Une bibliothèque open source pour identifier les défauts de sécurité les plus courants dans les applis Web Java Coverity, un des leaders du marché du test de développement, vient d'annoncer la création de la Coverity Security Library, un projet open source (disponible via GitHub et Maven) pour aider les développeurs à réparer les attaques de type cross-site scripting (XSS) dans les applications Web Java. Ce projet a été initié par le Security Research Laboratory de Coverity. Il s'agit d'une bibliothèque de fonctions de contournement et de codage gratuite. « Les développeurs peuvent ainsi réparer rapidement les problèmes les plus courants, qui p...

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  • ?????????????????????????/???????????Java EE??????????????????????????????????JavaOne Tokyo 2012?????|WebLogic Channel|??????

    - by ???02
    ??????·???????????????????·???????????????????/????????????????????????????――?????6?????????????????????WebLogic Server?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????2012?4???????JavaOne Tokyo 2012????????????????????·????????????????Java EE???????????????????????????????(???)?????????????????????????? ?????????????NTT??????????????????????????·???????????????????????2005???????1??????????·?????????2006??????????????????????Java EE??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? DU ?????? ???????????????? ???????????? ?? ????????????????????????????????31????????????????????????????·???????????????????????????30?????????????20??????????????3?????????????????????????????????????????????2??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????2??????????????????????:??/???????????????????????????????????2??????????/???????:????????????????????????????????2??~1????????????/???????????????·??????????? ?????????????????????????????2?????????????????????????·????(B2C????????????????)?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????/?????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????????????(???)?????????(??/???????)???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????·?????WebLogic Server????????·?????Informix???????????? ?????????????????????????????????????????B2C??????????C2C???????????????????????????C2C????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????·????????????????????????????????1???????????????????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????Java EE????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ??????????????????3???????????????????(Inexpensive):????????????????????????????????(Agile):???????????????????????????(Simple):???????????????????????? ??????????2006???5????????????????????????????????????????Java EE?????????????????????????????????Java?????????????(???)???????????·??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????Java???????????????????????????????????WebLogic Server??????????????????????????????????????(???)???????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????????????????????WebLogic Server?????????????????????????/???????????????????GlassFish????????????GlassFish????Java EE?????????????????????????????????????????WebLogic Server??????????????????Tomcat???????????????(???)?????????????????????????????????? ????????????????????????????WebLogic Server?????????????WebLogic Server?????????????????????????????????????JRockit Mission Control???????????????(???)??????WebLogic Server?GlassFish????? ???????????????????????????????????C2C??????????????????????????????????????2006???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????????????????????RDB?????/????·???(KVS)???????NoSQL?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????/??????????API???????????????????????????????????????KVS?????????????????GlassFish?????KVS??????????API?GlassFish??????????????????????????JAX-RS???????????????(REST API)???????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?KVS??????????API?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????(???)?????????? ????API?????????????????????????????????????????????170?????????? ??????????Ruby on Rails??????????????????????????????(???)?????????????????????????????????????(???)??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????Maven 2??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? GlassFish??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????? ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????/?????????????????????????????????????????????????/????????????????????????????

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  • Motores tecnológicos para el crecimiento económico

    - by Fabian Gradolph
    Oracle ha participado hoy en el IV Curso de Verano AMETIC-UPM. La presentación a corrido a cargo de José Manuel Peláez, director de Preventa de Tecnología de Oracle Ibérica, quien ha hecho una completa revisión de cuáles son los impulsores actuales de la innvovación y del desarrollo en el entorno de las tecnologías, haciendo honor al título del curso:  Las TIC en el nuevo entorno socio-económico: Motores de la recuperación económica y el empleo. Peláez, en su presentación "De la tecnología a la innovación: impulsores de la actividad económica",  ha comenzado destacando la importancia estratégica que hoy en día tienen las tecnologías para cualquier modelo de negocio. No se trata ya de hacer frente a la crisis económica, que también, sino sobre todo de hacer frente a los desafíos presentes y futuros de las empresas. En este sentido, es esencial hacer frente a un reto: el alto coste que tiene para las organizaciones la complejidad de sus sistemas tecnológicos. Hay un ejemplo que Oracle utiliza con frecuencia. Si un coche se comprase del mismo modo en que las empresas adquieren los sistemas de información, compraríamos por un lado la carrocería, por otro lado el motor, las ventanas, el cambio de marchas, etc... y luego pasaríamos un tiempo muy interesante montándolo todo en casa. La pregunta clave es: ¿por qué no adquirir los sistemas de información ya preparados para funcionar, al igual que compramos un coche?. El sector TI, con Oracle a la cabeza, está dando uina respuesta adecuada con los sistemas de ingenería conjunta. Se trata de sistemas de hardware y software diseñados y concebidos de forma integrada que reducen considerablemente el tiempo necesario para la implementación, los costes de integración y los costes de energía y mantenimiento. La clave de esta forma de adquirir la tecnología, según ha explicado Peláez, es que al reducir la complejidad y los costes asociados, se están liberando recursos que pueden dedicarse a otras necesidades. Según los datos de Gartner, de la cantidad de recursos invertidos por las empresas en TI, el 63% se dedica a tareas de puro funcionamiento, es decir, a mantener el negocio en marcha. La parte de presupuesto que se dedica a crecimiento del negocio es el 21%, mientras que sólo un 16% se dedica a transformación, es decir, a innovación. Sólo mediante la utilización de tecnologías más eficientes -como los sistemas de ingeniería conjunta-, que lleven aparejados menores costes, es viable reducir ese 63% y dedicar más recursos al crecimiento y la innovación. Ahora bien, una vez liberados los recursos económicos, ¿hacia dónde habría que dirigir las inversiones en tecnología?. José Manuel Peláez ha destacado algunas áreas esenciales como son Big Data, Cloud Computing, los retos de la movilidad y la necesidad de mejorar la experiencia de los clientes, entre otros. Cada uno de estos aspectos lleva aparejados nuevos retos empresariales, pero sólo las empresas que sean capaces de integrarlos en su ADN e incorporarlos al corazón de su estrategia de negocio, podrán diferenciarse en el panorama competitivo del siglo XXI. Desde estas páginas los iremos desgranando poco a poco.

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  • Talking JavaOne with Rock Star Adam Bien

    - by Janice J. Heiss
    Among the most celebrated developers in recent years, especially in the domain of Java EE and JavaFX, is consultant Adam Bien, who, in addition to being a JavaOne Rock Star for Java EE sessions given in 2009 and 20011, is a Java Champion, the winner of Oracle Magazine’s 2011 Top Java Developer of the Year Award, and recently won a 2012 JAX Innovation Award as a top Java Ambassador. Bien will be presenting the following sessions: TUT3907 - Java EE 6/7: The Lean Parts CON3906 - Stress-Testing Java EE 6 Applications Without Stress CON3908 - Building Serious JavaFX 2 Applications CON3896 - Interactive Onstage Java EE Overengineering I spoke with Bien to get his take on Java today. He expressed excitement that the smallest companies and startups are showing increasing interest in Java EE. “This is a very good sign,” said Bien. “Only a few years ago J2EE was mostly used by larger companies -- now it becomes interesting even for one-person shows. Enterprise Java events are also extremely popular. On the Java SE side, I'm really excited about Project Nashorn.” Nashorn is an upcoming JavaScript engine, developed fully in Java by Oracle, and based on the Da Vinci Machine (JSR 292) which is expected to be available for Java 8.   Bien expressed concern about a common misconception regarding Java's mediocre productivity. “The problem is not Java,” explained Bien, “but rather systems built with ancient patterns and approaches. Sometimes it really is ‘Cargo Cult Programming.’ Java SE/EE can be incredibly productive and lean without the unnecessary and hard-to-maintain bloat. The real problems are ‘Ivory Towers’ and not Java’s lack of productivity.” Bien remarked that if there is one thing he wanted Java developers to understand it is that, "Premature optimization is the root of all evil. Or at least of some evil. Modern JVMs and application servers are hard to optimize upfront. It is far easier to write simple code and measure the results continuously. Identify the hotspots first, then optimize.” He advised Java EE developers to, “Rethink everything you know about Enterprise Java. Before you implement anything, ask the question: ‘Why?’ If there is no clear answer -- just don't do it. Most well known best practices are outdated. Focus your efforts on the domain problem and not the technology.” Looking ahead, Bien said, “I would like to see open source application servers running directly on a hypervisor. Packaging the whole runtime in a single file would significantly simplify the deployment and operations.”Check out a recent Java Magazine interview with Bien about his Java EE 6 stress monitoring tool here. Originally published on blogs.oracle.com/javaone.

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  • JavaOne Rock Star – Adam Bien

    - by Janice J. Heiss
    Among the most celebrated developers in recent years, especially in the domain of Java EE and JavaFX, is consultant Adam Bien, who, in addition to being a JavaOne Rock Star for Java EE sessions given in 2009 and 2011, is a Java Champion, the winner of Oracle Magazine’s 2011 Top Java Developer of the Year Award, and recently won a 2012 JAX Innovation Award as a top Java Ambassador. Bien will be presenting the following sessions: TUT3907 - Java EE 6/7: The Lean Parts CON3906 - Stress-Testing Java EE 6 Applications Without Stress CON3908 - Building Serious JavaFX 2 Applications CON3896 - Interactive Onstage Java EE Overengineering I spoke with Bien to get his take on Java today. He expressed excitement that the smallest companies and startups are showing increasing interest in Java EE. “This is a very good sign,” said Bien. “Only a few years ago J2EE was mostly used by larger companies -- now it becomes interesting even for one-person shows. Enterprise Java events are also extremely popular. On the Java SE side, I'm really excited about Project Nashorn.” Nashorn is an upcoming JavaScript engine, developed fully in Java by Oracle, and based on the Da Vinci Machine (JSR 292) which is expected to be available for Java 8.    Bien expressed concern about a common misconception regarding Java's mediocre productivity. “The problem is not Java,” explained Bien, “but rather systems built with ancient patterns and approaches. Sometimes it really is ‘Cargo Cult Programming.’ Java SE/EE can be incredibly productive and lean without the unnecessary and hard-to-maintain bloat. The real problems are ‘Ivory Towers’ and not Java’s lack of productivity.” Bien remarked that if there is one thing he wanted Java developers to understand it is that, "Premature optimization is the root of all evil. Or at least of some evil. Modern JVMs and application servers are hard to optimize upfront. It is far easier to write simple code and measure the results continuously. Identify the hotspots first, then optimize.”   He advised Java EE developers to, “Rethink everything you know about Enterprise Java. Before you implement anything, ask the question: ‘Why?’ If there is no clear answer -- just don't do it. Most well known best practices are outdated. Focus your efforts on the domain problem and not the technology.” Looking ahead, Bien remarked, “I would like to see open source application servers running directly on a hypervisor. Packaging the whole runtime in a single file would significantly simplify the deployment and operations.” Check out a recent Java Magazine interview with Bien about his Java EE 6 stress monitoring tool here.

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  • Response: Agile's Second Chasm

    - by Malcolm Anderson
    William Pietri over at Agile Focus has written an interesting article entitled, "Agile’s Second Chasm (and how we fell in)" in which he talks about how agile development has fallen into a common trap where large companies are now spending a lot of money hiring agile (Scrum) consultants just so that they can say they are agile, but all the while avoiding any change that is required by Scrum.   It echoes the questions that I've been asking for a while, "Can a fortune 500 company actually do agile development?"  I'm starting to think that the answer is "usually not"   William ask 3 questions at the end of his article that I will answer here.   1) Have I seen agile development brought in and then preemptively customized (read: made into ScrummerFall)?   Yes, Scrum is hard and disruptive.  It's a spotlight on company dysfunction.  In a low trust environment like most fortune 500 companies Scrum will be subverted by anyone who has ever seen "transparency" translate into someone being laid off.   2) If I had to do it all over again, would I change anything?  No, this is a natural progression, but the agile principles are powerful enough, that the companies that don't adopt them will no longer be competitive and will start to fail.   3) Is this situation solvable?  I think it is.  I think that one of the issues is that you often see companies implementing Scrum, but avoiding the agile engineering practices.  I believe that you cannot do one without the other.  Scrum keeps the ship sailing in smooth deep waters.  The agile engineering practices keep the engine running smoothly and cleanly.  If you implement agile engineering practices without Scrum, you run the risk of ending up with a great running piece of software that is useful to no one.  On the other hand, implementing cargo-cult Scrum without the agile engineering practices and you end up (especially in a fortune 500 company) being steered in the right direction, but with your development practices coming to a dead halt because you have code that can not keep up with the changes in requirements.   If you are trying to do Scrum, make sure that you hire some agile engineering coaches, or else you may find your deveolpment engines grinding to a dead halt in the middle of the open ocean.

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  • Unable to resolve class in build.gradle using Android Studio 0.60/Gradle 0.11

    - by saywhatnow
    Established app working fine using Android Studio 0.5.9/ Gradle 0.9 but upgrading to Android Studio 0.6.0/ Gradle 0.11 causes the error below. Somehow Studio seems to have lost the ability to resolve the android tools import at the top of the build.gradle file. Anyone got any ideas on how to solve this? build file 'Users/[me]/Repositories/[project]/[module]/build.gradle': 1: unable to resolve class com.android.builder.DefaultManifestParser @ line 1, column 1. import com.android.builder.DefaultManifestParser 1 error at org.codehaus.groovy.control.ErrorCollector.failIfErrors(ErrorCollector.java:302) at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.applyToSourceUnits(CompilationUnit.java:858) at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.doPhaseOperation(CompilationUnit.java:548) at org.codehaus.groovy.control.CompilationUnit.compile(CompilationUnit.java:497) at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.doParseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:306) at groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader.parseClass(GroovyClassLoader.java:287) at org.gradle.groovy.scripts.internal.DefaultScriptCompilationHandler.compileScript(DefaultScriptCompilationHandler.java:115) ... 77 more 2014-06-09 10:15:28,537 [ 92905] INFO - .BaseProjectImportErrorHandler - Failed to import Gradle project at '/Users/[me]/Repositories/[project]' org.gradle.tooling.BuildException: Could not run build action using Gradle distribution 'http://services.gradle.org/distributions/gradle-1.12-all.zip'. at org.gradle.tooling.internal.consumer.ResultHandlerAdapter.onFailure(ResultHandlerAdapter.java:53) at org.gradle.tooling.internal.consumer.async.DefaultAsyncConsumerActionExecutor$1$1.run(DefaultAsyncConsumerActionExecutor.java:57) at org.gradle.internal.concurrent.DefaultExecutorFactory$StoppableExecutorImpl$1.run(DefaultExecutorFactory.java:64) [project]/[module]/build.gradle import com.android.builder.DefaultManifestParser apply plugin: 'android-sdk-manager' apply plugin: 'android' android { sourceSets { main { manifest.srcFile 'src/main/AndroidManifest.xml' res.srcDirs = ['src/main/res'] } debug { res.srcDirs = ['src/debug/res'] } release { res.srcDirs = ['src/release/res'] } } compileSdkVersion 19 buildToolsVersion '19.0.0' defaultConfig { minSdkVersion 14 targetSdkVersion 19 } signingConfigs { release } buildTypes { release { runProguard false proguardFiles getDefaultProguardFile('proguard-android.txt'), 'proguard-rules.txt' signingConfig signingConfigs.release applicationVariants.all { variant -> def file = variant.outputFile def manifestParser = new DefaultManifestParser() def wmgVersionCode = manifestParser.getVersionCode(android.sourceSets.main.manifest.srcFile) println wmgVersionCode variant.outputFile = new File(file.parent, file.name.replace("-release.apk", "_" + wmgVersionCode + ".apk")) } } } packagingOptions { exclude 'META-INF/LICENSE.txt' exclude 'META-INF/NOTICE.txt' } } def Properties props = new Properties() def propFile = file('signing.properties') if (propFile.canRead()){ props.load(new FileInputStream(propFile)) if (props!=null && props.containsKey('STORE_FILE') && props.containsKey('STORE_PASSWORD') && props.containsKey('KEY_ALIAS') && props.containsKey('KEY_PASSWORD')) { println 'RELEASE BUILD SIGNING' android.signingConfigs.release.storeFile = file(props['STORE_FILE']) android.signingConfigs.release.storePassword = props['STORE_PASSWORD'] android.signingConfigs.release.keyAlias = props['KEY_ALIAS'] android.signingConfigs.release.keyPassword = props['KEY_PASSWORD'] } else { println 'RELEASE BUILD NOT FOUND SIGNING PROPERTIES' android.buildTypes.release.signingConfig = null } }else { println 'RELEASE BUILD NOT FOUND SIGNING FILE' android.buildTypes.release.signingConfig = null } repositories { maven { url 'https://repo.commonsware.com.s3.amazonaws.com' } maven { url 'https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/snapshots/' } } dependencies { compile 'com.github.gabrielemariotti.changeloglib:library:1.4.+' compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.2.4' compile 'com.google.android.gms:play-services:+' compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:+' compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp:1.5.+' compile 'com.octo.android.robospice:robospice:1.4.11' compile 'com.octo.android.robospice:robospice-cache:1.4.11' compile 'com.octo.android.robospice:robospice-retrofit:1.4.11' compile 'com.commonsware.cwac:security:0.1.+' compile 'com.readystatesoftware.sqliteasset:sqliteassethelper:+' compile 'com.android.support:support-v4:19.+' compile 'uk.co.androidalliance:edgeeffectoverride:1.0.1+' compile 'de.greenrobot:eventbus:2.2.1+' compile project(':captureActivity') compile ('de.keyboardsurfer.android.widget:crouton:1.8.+') { exclude group: 'com.google.android', module: 'support-v4' } compile files('libs/CWAC-LoaderEx.jar') }

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  • spring MVC sample web app

    - by Don
    Hi, I'm looking for an example Spring MVC 2.5 web app that I can easily: Setup as a project in Eclipse Deploy to a local app server (using Ant/Maven) There are a couple of example applications included with the Spring distribution ('petclinic' and 'jpetstore'), but they don't provide any Eclipse project files (or a way to generate them). They also seem a bit complicated for my needs, e.g. require a local database to be setup. Thanks, Don

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  • Eclipse Dynamic Web Project fails to load under WTP

    - by Cue
    When trying to run an Eclipse Dynamic Web Project under a Tomcat setup using WTP, it fails with the attached stacktrace. Checklist At the project properties, under "Java EE Module Dependencies" I have checked the "Maven Dependencies" At the wtp deploy directory, under lib indeed all dependencies are present (esp. struts-taglib-1.3.10.jar) On the other hand, if I package with maven and copy the war file under the webapps directory everything is working as normal. Specification Eclipse JEE Galileo SR2 (with WTP 3.1.1) Tomcat 6.0.26 Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_17-b04-248-10M3025) Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 14.3-b01-101, mixed mode) stacktrace org.apache.jasper.JasperException: Unable to read TLD "META-INF/tld/struts-html-el.tld" from JAR file "file:/Users/cue/Development/workspace/eclipse/.metadata/.plugins/org.eclipse.wst.server.core/tmp2/wtpwebapps/ticketing/WEB-INF/lib/struts-el-1.3.10.jar": org.apache.jasper.JasperException: Failed to load or instantiate TagExtraInfo class: org.apache.struts.taglib.html.MessagesTei at org.apache.jasper.compiler.DefaultErrorHandler.jspError(DefaultErrorHandler.java:51) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.ErrorDispatcher.dispatch(ErrorDispatcher.java:409) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.ErrorDispatcher.jspError(ErrorDispatcher.java:181) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.TagLibraryInfoImpl.<init>(TagLibraryInfoImpl.java:182) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Parser.parseTaglibDirective(Parser.java:383) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Parser.parseDirective(Parser.java:446) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Parser.parseElements(Parser.java:1393) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Parser.parse(Parser.java:130) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.ParserController.doParse(ParserController.java:255) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.ParserController.parse(ParserController.java:103) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Compiler.generateJava(Compiler.java:185) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Compiler.compile(Compiler.java:347) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Compiler.compile(Compiler.java:327) at org.apache.jasper.compiler.Compiler.compile(Compiler.java:314) at org.apache.jasper.JspCompilationContext.compile(JspCompilationContext.java:589) at org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServletWrapper.service(JspServletWrapper.java:317) at org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet.serviceJspFile(JspServlet.java:313) at org.apache.jasper.servlet.JspServlet.service(JspServlet.java:260) at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:717) at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.internalDoFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:290) at org.apache.catalina.core.ApplicationFilterChain.doFilter(ApplicationFilterChain.java:206) at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapperValve.invoke(StandardWrapperValve.java:233) at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContextValve.invoke(StandardContextValve.java:191) at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardHostValve.invoke(StandardHostValve.java:127) at org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve.invoke(ErrorReportValve.java:102) at org.apache.catalina.core.StandardEngineValve.invoke(StandardEngineValve.java:109) at org.apache.catalina.connector.CoyoteAdapter.service(CoyoteAdapter.java:298) at org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11Processor.process(Http11Processor.java:852) at org.apache.coyote.http11.Http11Protocol$Http11ConnectionHandler.process(Http11Protocol.java:588) at org.apache.tomcat.util.net.JIoEndpoint$Worker.run(JIoEndpoint.java:489) at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:637)

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  • What problem does Peaberry for Guice solve?

    - by Benju
    I understand the problem that OSGI solved thanks to this question.... http://stackoverflow.com/questions/106222/what-does-osgi-solve And I am already convinved that Guice is amazing so I'm curious what this OSGI integration for Guice known as "peaberry" is supposed to do, it seems to be popping up everywhere, even in Maven 3 presentations. http://code.google.com/p/peaberry/

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  • Sonar integration in hudson, meet "container state was: CONSTRUCTED"

    - by larry cai
    Environment: hudson/sonar/maven2 in ubuntu locally with default parameters And I got the log from hudson below, I can't figure out where is the problem. [INFO] Sonar host: http://localhost:9000 [INFO] Sonar version: 2.0.1 [INFO] [sonar-core:internal {execution: default-internal}] [INFO] Database dialect class org.sonar.api.database.dialect.Derby [INFO] ------------- Analyzing Game of Life business logic module [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [ERROR] BUILD ERROR [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [INFO] Can not execute Sonar Embedded error: Can not analyze the project Cannot stop. Current container state was: CONSTRUCTED [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [INFO] Trace org.apache.maven.lifecycle.LifecycleExecutionException: Can not execute Sonar

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  • What's the correct way to read an inputStream into a node property in JCR 2?

    - by Stuart
    In JCR 1 you could do: final InputStream in = zip.getInputStream(zip.getEntry(zipEntryName)); node.setProperty(JcrConstants.JCR_CONTENT, in); But that's deprecated in JCR 2 as detailed at http://www.day.com/maven/jsr170/javadocs/jcr-2.0/javax/jcr/Node.html#setProperty%28java.lang.String,%20java.io.InputStream%29 That says I should be using node.setProperty(String, Binary) but I don't see any way to turn my inputStream into a Binary. Can anyone point me to docs or example code for this?

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  • Pure Java HTML viewer / renderer

    - by dma_k
    I wonder what are the available pure embeddable Java HTML viewers? The requirements are: Should implement JComponent interface to be placed into Scrollable pane. Should be preferably a free solution; opensource is a plus. Availability as maven artifact is a plus. I know only few components: Build-in Java JEditorPane, supports HTML 3.2 Cobra Toolkit, open source, supports HTML 4, Javascript and CSS 2 MARTHA by RealObjects, commercial, supports HTML 4, CSS 2.1 Any other components?

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  • Setting environment variables in OS X /etc/launchd.conf

    - by al nik
    I'm trying to set some env variable in OS X 10.6 (/etc/launchd.conf) setenv M2_HOME /usr/share/maven setenv M2 $M2_HOME/bin setenv MAVEN_OPTS '-Xms256m -Xmx512m' M2 and MAVEN_OPTS are not working. I tried with something like setenv MAVEN_OPTS -Xms256m\ -Xmx512m but still it doesn't work. Any idea of what is the correct synthax? Thanks

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