Spring App Server

I've just seen the annoucement that SpringSource has launched a new App Server based on OSGi (Spring-DM).
I find it a bit weird that they tend to rewrite existing stuff: the JMS JCA layer in Spring 2.x is somehow derived from the Jencks project, Spring Integration looks a lot like Camel, and now this app server which looks very similar to ServiceMix Kernel with WAR support (which we already had in ServiceMix 4 from the Pax Web project).

Comments

Jeff Yu said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said…
The key thing is not only the innovation behind the smx kernel, but the licence and community that Apache brings - it should be a no contest - smx kernel is the better option imho.
Anonymous said…
Guillaume, while the JMS JCA adapter in Spring 2.5 does tackle the same problem as Jencks, I think it's fair to say that it takes a quite different route implementation-wise and configuration-wise.

Spring 2.5's JMS JCA support is technically an extension of Spring's generic JCA 1.5 support (GenericMessageEndpointManager), providing support for any kind of JCA compatible messaging - and special support for JMS on top (JmsMessageEndpointManager). The JMS-specific part is actually pretty minimal there; the heavy lifting is done in Spring's generic JCA support. The primary goal is consistency with Spring's native JMS setup style, exposed side-by-side in Spring 2.5's "jms" namespace.

Jencks on the other hand is JMS-centric for its inbound messaging support, as well as very Geronimo-oriented - with hard-coded Geronimo API dependencies all over the codebase. This is fine for its purpose, of course, which is primarily to marry ActiveMQ with Geronimo's JCA container in a standalone fashion. However, it is very different from Spring 2.5's goal which is compatibility with any JCA backend infrastructure (closely aligned with core Spring facilities).

Juergen
Glyn said…
Perhaps the main difference beween the SpringSource Application Platform and the ServiceMix WAR support is the Platform's support for applications composed of multiple OSGi bundles. An application provides a useful unit of management and a boundary for application-wide class loading and weaving features.

Glyn

Popular posts from this blog

SSH Server in Java

ServiceMix Kernel is a small container based on OSGi. The latest release allows external clients to connect to it and issue commands using a simple protocol implemented on top of TCP or SSL. However, this remoting protocol has some drawbacks as the internals makes it unable to do another remote login from a remote session. In addition to that, completion and history do not really work great. So I've been thinking about using the SSH protocol, which is widely used, secured, with tons of different clients available. Unfortunately, no SSH server is available in Java. Over the past weeks, I've been working on implementing this SSH server, based on the IEFT specifications, the JSch SSH client library, and the OpenSSH server source code. The server itself is based on Apache Mina which is a great framework for using NIO. The project is available at http://code.google.com/p/sshd/ and although there are lots of limitations right now, the basics of the SSH protocol work. I plan t...

Apache Karaf

ApacheCon was really interesting this year! Recently, a lot of people have expressed a real interest in ServiceMix Kernel , our generic OSGi distribution for server side applications. We've been discussing moving this subproject into Apache Felix for several reasons: raise the visibility and awareness on ServiceMix Kernel attract a broader community Several Apache projects are planning to use ServiceMix Kernel as their container: this includes Apache James , Apache Directory and Apache ActiveMQ . The Apache Sling community is also willing to contribute to this effort along with some other groups like the OPS4J project. During this discussion, a name as been proposed by Jamie Goodyear: Apache Karaf . A carafe is a small container used for serving wine and other drinks (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carafe). In similarity to the name the Kernel allows applications to be more easily handled, and improves their characteristics (much like a bottle of wine left to breath in a dec...

Camel Endpoint DSL

Camel Endpoint DSL One of the new features of Camel 3.0  is an Endpoint DSL.  This new API aims to provide a type safe replacement for the URLs that are used in Camel to designate the consumer or producer endpoints.  These URLs provide 3 things: the scheme of the URL identifies the component to use, a unique name or id for the endpoint, and a set of parameters to customize the endpoint behavior. Here is an example of an FTP consumer endpoint definition: from( "ftp://foo@myserver?password=secret& recursive=true& ftpClient.dataTimeout=30000& ftpClientConfig.serverLanguageCode=fr" ) .to( "bean:doSomething" ); There are several drawbacks with such constructs : no type safety, bad readability and no simple completion. So we now use the meta model, which is currently extracted from the source using an annotation processor and written in various JSON files, to generate a fluent DSL for each endpoint.  The same...