What IDE setup and workflow is used for OSGi development?
I made quite a few easy OSGi test projects in Eclipse RCP. My typical workflow would always be:
- Make 3 different projects: APIproject, Clientproject and Serverproject
- Edit the MANIFEST.MF of APIproject to export the api package
- Edit the MANIFEST.MF file of Clientproject and Serverproject to add the required API package
- Choose "Run as..." > "Plugin Framework"
- OSGi console starts in eclipse and everything seems to work
I also tried wiring things by using Declarative Services, which worked well like this too.
Now recently I wanted to try out iPOJO. The problem is that I get the feeling that I've been doing my OSGi development the wrong way.
Can it be that I should instead make 1 project en make it work like no OSGi is involved. And then afterwards, just e开发者_高级运维xport each package to its own bundle by means of (for instance) the BNDL tool? Should development be done in a normal Eclipse (java, not RCP) or any other java IDE for that matter?So that's why I have these questions:
- What IDE setup is normally used to develop OSGi with iPOJO?
- And what is the normal workflow to be used when developing OSGi projects (maybe with iPOJO)?
Normally when I develop OSGi bundles (not Eclipse RCP bundles) I use the following tools:
- Maven 2 as the build system.
- Apache Felix maven-bundle-plugin to generate MANIFEST.MF automatically.
- Pax Exam to create integration tests that run inside an OSGi container.
- Pax Runner to execute my bundles in any OSGi framework (equinox, felix, etc.).
- IntelliJ (or sometimes Eclipse) as a standard IDE without any OSGi extras.
I have not yet developed any Eclipse RPC bundles, but there's a new tool for Maven 6 Eclipse RPC build integration called Tycho (http://tycho.sonatype.org).
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