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kuni katsuya

Edit Permissions - VFM Leonardo JIRA - 0 views

  • Edit Issues
  • Administer Projects
  • Schedule Issues
    • kuni katsuya
       
      required for: - ranking issues (in backlog) https://confluence.atlassian.com/display/GH060/Ranking+an+Issue
  • ...25 more annotations...
  • Administer Projects
  • Administer Projects
  • Project Role (Product Owner)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Product Owner)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Single User (anton.marinov)
  • Single User (felix.zhuang)
  • Single User (jason.ibele)
  • Single User (cuneyt.tuna)
  • Project Role (Product Owner)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master) (
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Single User (parth.upadhye)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
  • Project Role (Product Owner)
  • Project Role (Product Owner)
  • Project Role (Scrum Master)
kuni katsuya

Ending a Sprint - GreenHopper 6.1 - Atlassian Documentation - Confluence - 0 views

  • Ending a Sprint
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • Once a sprint is closed, you cannot re-open it
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • You can release the sprint as a version if you wish
  • In the Completed Issues section of the Sprint Report, just click View in Issue Navigator
  • use JIRA's Bulk Edit to assign all of the issues to the relevant version
  • Note that you will not be able to do this if your "Done" column sets an issue's status to "Closed", as issues are not editable once they are "Closed"
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • need to have the JIRA 'Project Administrator' permission in the project(s) whose issues are included in the sprint.
  • Ending a Sprint
kuni katsuya

Java Persistence/Inheritance - Wikibooks, open books for an open world - 0 views

  • Inheritance
  • hardest part of persisting inheritance is choosing how to represent the inheritance in the database
  • There are three inheritance strategies defined from the InheritanceType enum,
  • ...101 more annotations...
  • SINGLE_TABLE
  • TABLE_PER_CLASS
  • JOINED
  • Single table inheritance is the default
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • @Inheritance
  • mapped superclass is
  • not a persistent class
  • but allow common mappings to be define for its subclasses
  • Single Table Inheritance
    • kuni katsuya
       
      implemented as a sparse table. ie. all attributes from all entities end up as columns in the 'super' table
  • single table is used to store all of the instances of the entire inheritance hierarchy
  • table will have a column for
  • every attribute
  • every class
  • in the hierarchy
  • discriminator column
  • is used to determine which class the particular row belongs to
  • abstract
  • Project
  • extends Project
  • extends Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("S")
  • @DiscriminatorValue("L")
  • @DiscriminatorColumn(name="PROJ_TYPE")
  • @Inheritance
  • @Table(name="PROJECT")
  • single table inheritance
  • Joined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • mirrors the object model in the data model
  • table is defined for each class in the inheritance hierarchy to store only the local attributes of that class
  • Each table in the hierarchy must also store the object's id (primary key), which is
  • only defined in the root class
  • share the same id attribute
  • joined inheritance
  • @Inheritance(strategy=
  • InheritanceType.JOINED
  • @DiscriminatorColumn(name="PROJ_TYPE")
  • @Table(name="PROJECT")
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("L")
  • @Table(name=
  • "LARGEPROJECT"
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("S")
  • @Table(name=
  • "SMALLPROJECT"
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • Table Per Class Inheritance
  • Advanced
  • table is defined for
  • each concrete class
  • in the inheritance hierarchy to store
  • all the attributes
  • of that class and
  • all of its superclasses
  • table per class inheritance
  • @Inheritance(strategy=
  • InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @Table(name="LARGEPROJECT")
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @Table(name="SMALLPROJECT")
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • similar to table per class inheritance, but does not allow querying, persisting, or relationships to the superclass
  • mapped superclass
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @Column(name="NAME")
  • @Table(name="LARGEPROJECT")
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @AttributeOverride
  • "PROJECT_NAME"
  • "name"
  • @Table("SMALLPROJECT")
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • cannot have a relationship to a mapped superclass
  • Joined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • oined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • abstract
  • abstract c
  • extends Project
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • apped Superclasses
  • allows inheritance to be used in the object model, when it does not exist in the data model
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • MappedSuperclass
  • abstract
  • abstract
  • extends Project
  • extends Project
kuni katsuya

Managing Project Permissions - JIRA 5.1 - Atlassian Documentation - Confluence - 0 views

  • Project permissions can be granted to:
  • Individual usersGroupsProject rolesIssue roles such as 'Reporter', 'Project Lead' and 'Current Assignee''Anyone' (e.g. to allow anonymous access)A (multi-)user picker custom field.A (multi-)group picker custom field. This can either be an actual group picker custom field, or a (multi-)select-list whose values are group names.
  • Many other permissions are dependent on this permission
    • kuni katsuya
       
      example of dependencies *between* permissions. eg, in this case, work-on-issues permission 'needs' browse-projects permission could be expressed as a permission hierarchy where if work-on-issues permission is granted, means/implies that user already has browse-projects permission (w-o-i perm 'subsumes' b-p perm) might imply permission hierarchy
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • Permission Schemes
  • A permission scheme is a set of
  • user/group/role
  • assignments for the project permissions
  • Every project has a permission scheme
  • One permission scheme can be associated with multiple projects
  • Permission schemes prevent having to set up permissions individually for every project
  • it can be applied to all projects that have the same type of access requirements
kuni katsuya

Plugins - Jenkins - Jenkins Wiki - 0 views

  • Git Plugin — This plugin allows use of Git as a build SCM
  • Subversion Plugin — This plugin adds the Subversion support (via SVNKit) to Jenkins
  • Subversion Release Manager — This plugin allows you to set up a job in Hudson for building specific revisions of a project.
  • ...77 more annotations...
  • Subversion Tagging Plugin — This plugin automatically performs subversion tagging (technically speaking svn copy) on successful build.
  • ViewVC Plugin — This plugin integrates ViewVC browser interface for CVS and Subversion with Hudson.
  • Source code management
  • Build Pipeline Plugin — This plugin creates a pipeline of Hudson\Jenkins jobs and gives a view so that you can visualise it.
  • Build tools
  • JBoss Management Plugin — This plugin allows to manage a JBoss Application Server during build procedure
  • Maven 2 Project Plugin — Jenkin's Maven 2 project type
  • Phing Plugin — This plugin allows you to use Phing to build PHP projects.
  • Post build task — This plugin allows the user to execute a shell/batch task depending on the build log output. Java regular expression are allowed.
  • Promoted Builds Plugin — This plugin allows you to distinguish good builds from bad builds by introducing the notion of 'promotion'.
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • Selenium AES Plugin — This plugin is for continuous regression test by Selenium Auto Exec Server (AES).
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Unicorn Validation Plugin — This plugin uses W3C's Unified Validator, which helps improve the quality of Web pages by performing a variety of checks.
  • Build wrappers
  • Android Emulator Plugin — Lets you automatically generate, launch and interact with an Android emulator during a build, with the emulator logs being captured as artifacts.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Build Keeper Plugin — Select a policy for automatically marking builds as "keep forever" to enable long term analysis trending when discarding old builds - or use to protect logs and artifacts from certain builds
  • Build Name Setter Plugin — This plugin sets the display name of a build to something other than #1, #2, #3, ...
  • SSH plugin — You can use the SSH Plugin to run shell commands on a remote machine via ssh.
  • SeleniumRC Plugin — This plugin allows you to create Selenium server instance for each project build.
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Timestamper — Adds timestamps to the Console Output.
  • VirtualBox Plugin — This plugin integrates Jenkins with VirtualBox (version 3, 4.0 and 4.1) virtual machine.
  • Version Number Plugin — This plugin creates a new version number and stores it in the environment variable whose name you specify in the configuration.
  • VMware plugin — This plugin allows you to start a VMware Virtual Machine before a build and stop it again after the build completes.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Desktop Notifier for Jenkins — This is useful for those who are looking for a Desktop Notifier for Jenkins builds to automatically notify you about failed builds directly from their desktops.
  • Email-ext plugin — This plugin allows you to configure every aspect of email notifications. You can customize when an email is sent, who should receive it, and what the email says.
  • Google Calendar Plugin — This plugin publishes build records over to Google Calendar
  • HTML5 Notifier Plugin — Provides W3C Web Notifications support for builds.
  • Jabber Plugin — Integrates Jenkins with the Jabber/XMPP instant messaging protocol. Note that you also need to install the instant-messaging plugin.
  • Build reports
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Clover PHP Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture code coverage reports from PHPUnit. For more information on how to set up PHP projects with Jenkins have a look at the Template for Jenkins Jobs for PHP Projects.
  • Crap4J Plugin — This plugin reads the "crappy methods" report from Crap4J. Hudson will generate the trend report of crap percentage and provide detailed information about changes.
  • Dependency Analyzer Plugin — This plugin parses dependency:analyze goal from maven build logs and generates a dependency report
  • Dependency Graph View Plugin — Shows a dependency graph of the projects using graphviz. Requires a graphviz installation on the server.
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code. 
  • Grinder Plugin — This plugin reads output result files from Grinder performance tests, and will generate reports showing test results for every build and trend reports showing performance results across builds.
  • JSUnit plugin — This plugin allows you publish JSUnit test results
  • Performance Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture reports from JMeter and JUnit . Hudson will generate graphic charts with the trend report of performance and robustness.
  • PerfPublisher Plugin — This plugin generates global and trend reports for tests results analysis. Based on an open XML tests results format, the plugin parses the generated files and publish statistics, reports and analysis on the current health of the project.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Sonar plugin — Quickly benefit from Sonar, an open-source dashboard based on many analysis tools like Checkstyle, PMD and Cobertura.
  • testng-plugin — This plugin allows you to publish TestNG results.
  • Violations — This plug-in generates reports static code violation detectors such as checkstyle, pmd, cpd, findbugs, codenarc, fxcop, stylecop and simian.
  • xUnit Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to publish the test results of an execution of a testing tool in Jenkins.
  • Artifact uploaders
  • ArtifactDeployer Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to copy artifacts to remote locations.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • Confluence Publisher Plugin — This plugin allows you to publish build artifacts as attachments to an Atlassian Confluence wiki page.
  • Deploy Plugin — This plugin takes a war/ear file and deploys that to a running remote application server at the end of a build
  • FTP-Publisher Plugin — This plugin can be used to upload project artifacts and whole directories to an ftp server.
  • HTML Publisher Plugin
  • Publish Over FTP Plugin — Publish files over FTP
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • S3 Plugin — Upload build artifacts to Amazon S3
  • SCP plugin — This plugin uploads build artifacts to repository sites using SCP (SSH) protocol.
  • Hudson Helper for Android — Monitor your CI builds right from your Android device.
  • Hudson Mobi, the iPhone, iPod and Android client for Hudson CI — The iPhone, iPod and iPad client for Hudson CI monitoring on the road.
  • Hudson Monitor for Android — Monitor and display the status of your builds on your Android™ phone.
  • External site/tool integrations
  • Jira Issue Updater Plugin — This is a Jenkins plugin which updates issues in Atlassian Jira (by changing their status and adding a comment) as part of a Jenkins job.
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • ChuckNorris Plugin — Displays a picture of Chuck Norris (instead of Jenkins the butler) and a random Chuck Norris 'The Programmer' fact on each build page.
  • UI plugins
  • Active Directory plugin — With this plugin, you can configure Jenkins to authenticate the username and the password through Active Directory.
  • Audit Trail Plugin — Keep a log of who performed particular Jenkins operations, such as configuring jobs.
  • JClouds Plugin — This plugin uses JClouds to provide slave launching on most of the currently usable Cloud infrastructures.
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code. 
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • M2 Release Plugin — This plugin allows you to perform a release build using the maven-release-plugin from within Jenkins.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program. 
  • Meme Generator Plugin — Generate Meme images when a build fails (and returns to stable), and post them on the project page.
kuni katsuya

IRC FAQ - Eclipsepedia - 0 views

  • Where are Eclipse preferences stored?
  • Preferences are stored in various places (this applies to Eclipse 3.1)
  • for each installation (but this may vary for multi-user installations), in files stored in <eclipse_home>/eclipse/configuration/.settings/
  • ...18 more annotations...
  • for each workspace, in files stored in <workspace>/.metadata/.plugin/org.eclipse.core.runtime/.settings
  • for each project --for project-level settings -- in files stored in a .settings sub-directory of your project folder
  • Is there an UML editor for Eclipse? An Eclipse Modelling project-based UML editor can be installed from the Eclipse update site "Modelling > UML2 Tools SDK". See Creating UML 2 diagrams with Eclipse UML2 Tools - Tutorial for an introduction.
  • How do I debug Eclipse? How can I see what plug-ins are being started? Why aren't the plug-ins I installed showing up in the UI? How do I start the OSGi console?
  • Debugging OSGi Bundle Loading Issues There are a few flags you can pass to Eclipse on the commandline or in your eclipse.ini file that might help: -consolelog - log everything in workspace/.metadata/.log to the console where you launched Eclipse as well -debug - more verbose console output -console - start the Equinox OSGi console to interact with OSGi directly -noexit - when Eclipse closes, keep the OSGi console running until you type 'exit' or hit CTRL-C so you can keep debugging See Where Is My Bundle? for an overview of how to use the OSGi console for diagnosing problems.
  • Debugging Eclipse Using Eclipse You can also debug an Eclipse instance from another instance through remote debugging: Start the instance to be debugged with "-vmargs -Xdebug -agentlib:jdwp=transport=dt_socket,server=y,address=8000". You should see a message like "Listening for transport dt_socket at address: 8000" Open Run → Debug Configurations... and create a Remote Java Application configuration with connection type "Socket Attach" and connecting to the client at port 8000. Set the project to a bundle project with the right dependencies for the bundles that you are trying to debug. Launch the configuration. The JDWP agent supports other useful arguments, like "suspend=n" so that the process does not suspend. For more details, see Oracle's Java Debug Wire Protocol (JDWP) connection docs.
  • I just installed Eclipse on my 64-bit system, but it does not start. What is the problem? Make sure that you have downloaded the 64-bit version of Eclipse (it should have x86_64 somewhere in its name) and have installed a 64-bit JVM. Likewise, if you run a 32-bit JVM, then you should use the 32-bit version of Eclipse.
  • When I start Eclipse it says "Workspace in use or cannot be created, choose a different one.", what should I do? There are a couple of things you can try. Delete the workspace/.metadata/.lock file. Check your running processes to make sure there aren't any remaining Java or Eclipse processes running. When in doubt, restart your computer. :) Try starting Eclipse on a different workspace (from the workspace selection dialog, or by using a command line argument like -data /home/user/tmp-workspace), then switch back to your original workspace.
  • How do I uninstall a plug-in? You can view your list of installed software by checking your installation details from about dialog. Help > About > Installation Details
  • I'm having memory, heap, or permgen problems, what can I do? FAQ How do I increase the heap size available to Eclipse? FAQ How do I increase the permgen size available to Eclipse?
  • Eclipse seems to be hanging on startup. How can I find out why? If none of the solutions outlined in this section reveal the problem, then you can try debugging an Eclipse instance as a debug target from another Eclipse instance. This is surprisingly easy: Start Eclipse in a "new" blank workspace (e.g., C:\TEMP\WS, or /tmp) Create a new Debug configuration: Run -> Debug Configurations; then click on "Eclipse Applications" and select the New Launch Configuration. If you believe it's something about a particular workspace, then set the workspace to your normal workspace. If you believe the hang is caused by a particular plugin, disable the plugin and verify. Launch and then see. Using this approach, you can break with the debugger to see where hangs are occurring. You can also change the selection of plugins that the instance is launched with.
  • I was working on a project and doing something or other does not work. Where should I start? Try refreshing your projects. Try cleaning your your projects using the menu item Project/Clean to trigger a rebuild. Try closing/reopening your projects. Try restarting Eclipse.
  • 4.2 Where are Eclipse's log files located?
  • Where are Eclipse's log files located? <workspace>/.metadata/.log You can view this workspace log as a view if you have PDE installed on your computer (which you would if you have downloaded the Eclipse SDK). You can open that view via Window -> Show View -> Other -> PDE Runtime -> Error Log. <eclipse install>/configuration/<sometimestamp>.log <eclipse install>/configuration/org.eclipse.update/install.log
  • Where are Eclipse preferences stored?
  • Where are Eclipse preferences stored?
  • Where are Eclipse preferences stored?
  • Where are update site bookmarks stored? It is within an XML file called <user_home>/.eclipse/org.eclipse.platform_3.1.2/configuration/org.eclipse.update/bookmarks.xml. Your Eclipse version may vary.
  •  
    Where are Eclipse preferences stored?
kuni katsuya

ddd-cqrs-base-project - DDD-CQRS Base Project Using Spring and Hibernate (Manage Comple... - 0 views

  • ddd-cqrs-base-project DDD-CQRS Base Project Using Spring and Hibernate (Manage Complexity Simply)
kuni katsuya

Shelve Project Plugin - Jenkins - Jenkins Wiki - 0 views

  • "Shelving a project" is like deleting a project into a recycle bin. When you shelve a project, it'll disappear from the list of projects and become inaccessible from Jenkins, just like how it goes when a project is deleted, with one difference — instead of getting deleted, the data is archived into a zip file and stored on the server. This allows the administrator to resurrect it later (aka unshelving), in an unlikely event that the job turned out to be necessary.
kuni katsuya

MavenAndNetBeansForGlassFish - NetBeans Wiki - 0 views

  • Developing Enterprise Applications for GlassFish using Maven and NetBeans
  • how to setup Maven-enabled Enterprise Applications in NetBeans and how to deploy them to GlassFish
  • To enable Maven in NetBeans
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • install the MevenIDE plugin
  • select all 7 plugins from the Maven category
  • Creating the Parent POM Project
  • create a parent pom project and then create ear, ejb and war child projects
  • create the EJB Project
  • make sure the Project Location is the root directory of the Parent POM Project
  • Maven recognise it as a sub-module
  • The WAR Project
  • The EAR Project
  • Deploying to GlassFish
  • There are a few ways of deploying applications to GlassFish
  • GlassFish command line utility to deploy to both local and remote servers is asadmin
  • Maven for the deployment
  • glassfish-v2/bin/asadmin
  • exec-maven-plugin
  • deploy
kuni katsuya

Managing Project Permissions - JIRA Latest - Atlassian Documentation - Confluence - 0 views

  • Permission Schemes
  • A permission scheme is a set of
  • user/group/role
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • assignments for the project permissions
  • Every project has a permission scheme
  • One permission scheme can be associated with multiple projects
  • access rights
  • Permission schemes prevent having to set up permissions individually for every project
  • Once a permission scheme is set up
  • it can be applied to all projects that have the same type of access requirements
kuni katsuya

Quick start with GraniteDS | Granite Data Services - 0 views

  • install the GraniteDS wizard and builder plugins in Eclipse
  • graniteds-tide-cdi-jpa
  • you don’t need to have a Flex SDK installed as it will be retrieved from the Maven repository
  • ...12 more annotations...
  • 3 separate projects: a Java project, a Flex project and a Webapp project.
  • GraniteDS archetypes
  • archetypeGroupId: org.graniteds.archetypes archetypeVersion: 1.1.0.GA archetypeArtifactId:
  • Maven 3.x required
  • mvn archetype:generate    -DarchetypeGroupId=org.graniteds.archetypes    -DarchetypeArtifactId=graniteds-tide-spring-jpa-hibernate    -DarchetypeVersion=1.1.0.GA    -DgroupId=org.example    -DartifactId=springgds    -Dversion=1.0-SNAPSHOT
  • cd springgdsmvn clean package
  • build the project
  • CDI archetype requires a Java EE 6 server and uses an embedded GlassFish
  • cd webappmvn embedded-glassfish:run
  • With the Eclipse Maven integration (the M2E plugin), you can simply choose one of the archetypes when doing New Maven Project.
  • mvn war:war
  • two very easy ways to quickly create a new GraniteDS project
kuni katsuya

Start multiple sprints simultaneously - Atlassian Answers - 0 views

  • one 'Planning' Rapid Board that selects all of the issues you wish to work
    • kuni katsuya
       
      overall product backlog
  • two other 'Work' Rapid Boards, one for each team
    • kuni katsuya
       
      scrum team-specific rapid boards
  • "project = x and component = TeamA"
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • "project = x and component = TeamB"
  • parallel sprints labs feature
  • Unfortunately this will make the velocity chart less usable because velocity is heavily based on the estimations of an individual team
  • scenario of having multiple JIRA projects containing work items to be picked up by / distributed to multiple scrum teams
    • kuni katsuya
       
      exactly our scenario!
kuni katsuya

Java Persistence/Relationships - Wikibooks, open books for an open world - 0 views

  • Map Key Columns (JPA 2.0)
  • Nested Collections, Maps and Matrices
  • List of Lists
  • ...58 more annotations...
  • Map of Maps,
  • Map of Lists
  • JPA does not support nested collection relationships
  • One solution is to create an object that wraps the nested collection.
  • Map<String, List<Project>>
  • Example nested collection model (original)
  • Example nested collection model (modified)
  • Map<String, ProjectType>
  • @MapKey(name="type")
  • mappedBy="employee"
  • employee
  • type;
  • List<Project>
  • ProjectType
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ProjectType wraps the original map value type List>
  • Maps J
  • JPA allows a Map to be used for any collection mapping including, OneToMany, ManyToMany and ElementCollection
  • @MapKey annotation
  • used to define a map relationship
  • @MapKey(name="type")
  • Map<String, PhoneNumber>
  • type;
  • mappedBy="owner"
  • owner
  • Map Key Columns (JPA 2.0)
  • Map Key Columns (JPA 2.0)
  • JPA 2.0 allows for a Map where the key is not part of the target object to be persisted. The Map key can be any of the following:
  • A Basic value, stored in the target's table or join table.
  • An Embedded object, stored in the target's table or join table.
  • A foreign key to another Entity, stored in the target's table or join table.
  • if the value is a Basic but the key is an Entity a
  • ElementCollection
  • mapping is used.
  • if the key is a Basic but the value is an Entity a
  • OneToMany
  • mapping is still used
  • a three way join table, can be mapped using a
  • ManyToMany with a MapKeyJoinColumn for the third foreign key
  • @MapKeyJoinColumn
  • used to define a map relationship where the
  • key is an Entity value
  • can also be used with this for composite foreign keys
  • @MapKeyClass
  • can be used when the key is an Embeddable
  • if generics are not used
  • @MapKeyColumn
  • Map<String, Phone>
  • mappedBy="owner"
  • owner
  • @MapKeyJoinColumn
  • PHONE_TYPE_ID
  • PHONE_TYPE_ID
  • Map<PhoneType, Phone>
  • mappedBy="owner"
  • owner
  • @MapKeyClass(PhoneType.class)
  • @Embeddable
  • PhoneType
  • Map<PhoneType, Phone>
  •  
    "Map Key Columns (JPA 2.0)"
kuni katsuya

wrenched - externalization and lazy-loading framework for flex/java projects - Google P... - 0 views

  • wrenched externalization and lazy-loading framework for flex/java projects
kuni katsuya

Enterprise Architect - XML Schema Generation - 0 views

  • XML Schema Generation
  • The XSD Generation facility converts a UML class model to a W3C XML Schema (XSD). This allows Data Modelers to start working at a conceptual level in UML, leaving the tedious aspects of XSD creation to EA. The schema generation can then be customized if necessar
  • To use the schema generation facility you will require the following:
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • XSDDataTypes Package: This package contains classes representing XSD primitive data types. This package is available as an XMI file. To import the file as a UML Package, use EA's XMI import facility which is available from the menu item: Project | Import/Export | Import Package from XMI. UML Profile for XML: This resource file contains the stereotyped classes which allow the schema generation to be customized. The UML Profile for XML can be imported into a model using the Resource View (see Importing Profiles for details on importing UML profiles into EA).
  • Steps to Generate XSD: Select the package to be converted to XSD by right-clicking on the package in the Project Browser. Select Project | Generate XML Schema from the main menu. Set the desired output file using the Filename field. Set the desired xml encoding using the Encoding field. Click on the Generate button to generate the schema. The progress of the schema generator will be shown in the Progress edit box.
kuni katsuya

Check Visual Changes to Diagrams [Enterprise Architect User Guide] - 0 views

  • Baseline Diagram Compare feature is a quick and easy way to visually compare a current diagram with an earlier version
  • Access    Any of the following: •Project Browser diagram context menu | Compare to Baseline | <select baseline>: Show Differences•Project Browser package context menu | Package Control | Manage Baselines: Show Differences | Selected diagram context menu | Open Visual Diagram Diff •Diagram context menu | Compare to Baseline: Show Differences, or•Select Package | Project | Baselines: Show Differences | Selected diagram context menu | Open Visual Diagram Diff
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4. Configuration for CDI - Confluence - 0 views

  • In order to initialize GDS/Tide for CDI and Hibernate, you must add granite.jar, granite-hibernate.jar and granite-cdi.jar to your WEB-INF/lib
  • The easiest way to add GraniteDS support to a CDI project in a Servlet 3 compliant container (currently only GlassFish v3) is by adding a configuration class in your project. This class will be scanned by the servlet 3 container and GraniteDS will use the annotation parameters to determine the application configuration
  • GraniteConfig.java import org.granite.config.servlet3.FlexFilter; import org.granite.gravity.config.AbstractMessagingDestination; import org.granite.gravity.config.servlet3.MessagingDestination; import org.granite.tide.cdi.CDIServiceFactory; import org.granite.tide.cdi.Identity; @FlexFilter( tide=true, type="cdi", factoryClass=CDIServiceFactory.class, tideInterfaces={Identity.class} ) public class GraniteConfig { }
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • services-config.xml
  • define manually the endpoint for remote services
  • service initializer in a static block of the main mxml file
  • Cdi.getInstance().addComponentWithFactory("serviceInitializer", DefaultServiceInitializer, { contextRoot: "/my-cdi-app" } );
  • tideAnnotations
  • list of annotation names that enable remote access to CDI beans
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Chapter 3. Project Setup - 0 views

  • The configuration of a GraniteDS project will generally involve the following steps : Add the GraniteDS jars to the WEB-INF/lib folder of the WAR file or the lib folder of the EAR file Add the GraniteDS listener, servlets and filters in the standard WEB-INF/web.xml configuration file Define the internal configuration of GraniteDS in the WEB-INF/granite/granite-config.xml file Define the application configuration of GraniteDS (remoting destinations, messaging topics...) in the WEB-INF/flex/services-config.xml
  • You will always need granite.jar
  • jar for your JPA provider (granite-hibernate.jar for Hibernate)
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • granite-beanvalidation.jar if you want to benefit from the integration with the Bean Validation API
  • configuration file declares 3 differents things
  • Channel endpoint
  • Service factories
  • Service/destinations
  • destinations using this factory will route incoming remote calls to EJB 3
  • endpoint
  • factory 
  • destination
  • channel 
  • factory
kuni katsuya

2. Sample Projects - Confluence - 0 views

  •  
    EJB 3 Session Services
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