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Building Modular Applications with Enterprise OSGi
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Every Java EE developer is familiar with WAR files and Servlets, and most are familiar with Spring and dependency injection. Those who have used these two technologies together are also painfully aware of how hard it can be to manage the class path and class loaders of their application as they add more library JARs.
OSGi offers the perfect modularity solution for this class path hell , but few developers are aware that you can use WARs and dependency injection within an OSGi framework.
Moving Java EE applications to an OSGi stack is as easy as possible. In this session we will discuss the basics of the OSGi modularity model, and demo the build tools, middleware, and architectural principles which can be used to turn a chunky WAR into a lean, mean, extensible OSGi web application !
Whilst his session is primarily aimed at enterprise developers new to OSGi, much of the content is equally applicable to OSGi development, and is recommended to anyone looking to brush u...
Authors:
Tim Ward
Tim Ward is a Senior Consulting Engineer and Trainer at Paremus, a co-author of Enterprise OSGi in Action, and has been actively working with OSGi for over six years. Tim has been a regular participant in the OSGi Core Platform and Enterprise Expert Groups, and led the development of several specifications, including OSGi Promises and Asynchronous Services. Tim is also an active Open Source committer and a PMC member in the Apache Aries project, which provides a container for enterprise OSGi applications.
Tim is a regular conference speaker, and can often be found at JavaOne, Devoxx, OSGi DevCon, OSGi Community Event, EclipseCon, Jazoon and JAX London.
Holly Cummins
Holly is a performance tooling developer within the IBM Java Technology Centre. She leads development on IBM Monitoring and Diagnostic Tools for Java™ - Health Center and was the author of the GC and Memory Visualizer tool. Her tooling work builds on her experience working as a performance engineer within the garbage collection development team. Holly has been with IBM for seven years. Before joining IBM, she completed a doctorate in quantum computation at the University of Oxford. She has spoken at a variety of industry events including JavaZone, The ServerSide Java Symposium, The Great Indian Developer Summit, and WebSphere User Groups.
OSGi offers the perfect modularity solution for this class path hell , but few developers are aware that you can use WARs and dependency injection within an OSGi framework.
Moving Java EE applications to an OSGi stack is as easy as possible. In this session we will discuss the basics of the OSGi modularity model, and demo the build tools, middleware, and architectural principles which can be used to turn a chunky WAR into a lean, mean, extensible OSGi web application !
Whilst his session is primarily aimed at enterprise developers new to OSGi, much of the content is equally applicable to OSGi development, and is recommended to anyone looking to brush u...
Authors:
Tim Ward
Tim Ward is a Senior Consulting Engineer and Trainer at Paremus, a co-author of Enterprise OSGi in Action, and has been actively working with OSGi for over six years. Tim has been a regular participant in the OSGi Core Platform and Enterprise Expert Groups, and led the development of several specifications, including OSGi Promises and Asynchronous Services. Tim is also an active Open Source committer and a PMC member in the Apache Aries project, which provides a container for enterprise OSGi applications.
Tim is a regular conference speaker, and can often be found at JavaOne, Devoxx, OSGi DevCon, OSGi Community Event, EclipseCon, Jazoon and JAX London.
Holly Cummins
Holly is a performance tooling developer within the IBM Java Technology Centre. She leads development on IBM Monitoring and Diagnostic Tools for Java™ - Health Center and was the author of the GC and Memory Visualizer tool. Her tooling work builds on her experience working as a performance engineer within the garbage collection development team. Holly has been with IBM for seven years. Before joining IBM, she completed a doctorate in quantum computation at the University of Oxford. She has spoken at a variety of industry events including JavaZone, The ServerSide Java Symposium, The Great Indian Developer Summit, and WebSphere User Groups.
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