Life does not end after FCS (first customer ship), so we are already creating builds for the next release.We handle this the usual way: create a branch for the...
Life does not end after FCS (first customer ship), so we are already creating builds for the next release.We handle this the usual way: create a branch for the release that is being stabilized, and let normal development happen in the next release.Unfortunately the naming for the builds is confusing some developers.Carlaexplains the situation briefly, whileSahoogoes into more detail. The bottom line is that our build naming convention needs to be fixed and that should happen...
Life does not end after FCS (first customer ship), so we are already creating builds for the next release.We handle this the usual way: create a branch for the release that is being stabilized, and...
Last week Roger blogged about SEAM running on GlassFish using Hibernate as the persistence back end. Roger's latest blog gives detailed step so that you can run...
Last week Roger blogged about SEAM running on GlassFish using Hibernate as the persistence back end. Roger's latest blog gives detailed step so that you can run SEAM on GlassFish using the Java Persistence API as the persistence layer.GlassFish,Seam,JavaPersistence
Last week Roger blogged about SEAM running on GlassFish using Hibernate as the persistence back end. Roger's latest blog gives detailed step so that you can run SEAM on GlassFish using the...
GlassFish promotions are happening out of the normal promotion schedule as we try to finalize the build. Twice we thought we had a final release (b46 and b47)....
GlassFish promotions are happening out of the normal promotion schedule as we try to finalize the build. Twice we thought we had a final release (b46 and b47). We're still testing and hope that the b47 passes all tests.
GlassFish promotions are happening out of the normal promotion schedule as we try to finalize the build. Twice we thought we had a final release (b46 and b47). We're still testing and hope that...
Thanks to Yuta, The Aquarium now has a Japanese summary translation (to go with with the Chinese and Spanish).You can subscribe to The Aquarium (es, ja, zh) via...
Thanks to Yuta, The Aquarium now has a Japanese summary translation (to go with with the Chinese and Spanish).You can subscribe to The Aquarium (es, ja, zh) via mail or RSS - just use the right-hand menu. [The image of Tokyo came from ashish100's Flickr Photostream]
Thanks to Yuta, The Aquarium now has a Japanese summary translation (to go with with the Chinese and Spanish).You can subscribe to The Aquarium (es, ja, zh) via mail or RSS - just use the...
Last week Eduardo highlighted Geertjan's blog but I thought it was useful to highlight it again from a different perspective. Geertjan was invited by the SJSAS...
Last week Eduardo highlighted Geertjan's blog but I thought it was useful to highlight it again from a different perspective. Geertjan was invited by the SJSAS 8.x User Experience team to discuss his complaints about the server. He said the discussion went so well that he came up with his top 5 reasons for liking GlassFish. GlassFish code is based largely on SJSAS 8.x. Here's a summary.Lazy initialization - only the container relevant to the application is initialized...
Last week Eduardo highlighted Geertjan's blog but I thought it was useful to highlight it again from a different perspective. Geertjan was invited by the SJSAS 8.x User Experience team to discuss...
Kohsuke just pushed 2 more jars from project GlassFish to the java.net maven repository. JavaMail and Java Activation Framework jars are now conveniently...
Kohsuke just pushed 2 more jars from project GlassFish to the java.net maven repository. JavaMail and Java Activation Framework jars are now conveniently available for your projects to use. Enjoy!Maven, JavaMail,GlassFish
Kohsuke just pushed 2 more jars from project GlassFish to the java.net maven repository. JavaMail and Java Activation Framework jars are now conveniently available for your projects to...
Joe (from TheServerSide) has aReview of B45of GlassFish.Mostly the review is positive; he likes JMS and JSF and is particularly positive by thecommunity:The...
Joe (from TheServerSide) has aReview of B45of GlassFish.Mostly the review is positive; he likes JMS and JSF and is particularly positive by thecommunity:The user community for Glassfish is very responsive... The community was quite impressive.On the negative side, he has some problem with connection pooling, which I hope he has isolated enough to file a bug. He also mentions that our documentation needs improving, which we all hope to improve.Please keep sending reviews; it...
Joe (from TheServerSide) has aReview of B45of GlassFish.Mostly the review is positive; he likes JMS and JSF and is particularly positive by thecommunity:The user community for Glassfish is...
Lloyd has a good detailed entry on building GlassFish on MacOS (10.4) - in a previous entry he compares build performance on different Macs (he's obviously got...
Lloyd has a good detailed entry on building GlassFish on MacOS (10.4) - in a previous entry he compares build performance on different Macs (he's obviously got a lot of Macs.)Another Mac user Tim Bray has nice things to say about this very blog - thanks Tim.I wonder how long it'll be before the Mac becomes the Java developer's OS of choice ?Read more Mac / GlassFish related posts ...MacOS,GlassFish
Lloyd has a good detailed entry on building GlassFish on MacOS (10.4) - in a previous entry he compares build performance on different Macs (he's obviously got a lot of Macs.)Another Mac user Tim Bray...