Hi Andrus,
Thank you very much for your informative reply.
BTW I saw .classpath in the agent source code in the cayenne repository.
Is it necessary one?
Thanks,
Lasantha
Andrus Adamchik wrote:
> Hi Lasantha,
>
> We started on the JPA Guide [1], but it doesn't have much user
> information yet. Would be nice to get it going, if possible - using
> your experience ;-) For now the procedure is roughly the following:
>
> * Build Cayenne trunk from source [2] (we need to start publishing
> snapshots asap, but alas - you have to build it now). Recently adding
> Geronimo and OpenEJB dependencies to the unit tests results in
> occasional build instability, so you'd probably have to do this:
>
> mvn -Dmaven.test.skip=true install
>
> and then do the assembly
>
> cd assembly
> mvn package
>
> * Cayenne distro is now under
> "cayenne/assembly/target/cayenne-3.0-SNAPSHOT.tar.gz", you can unpack
> it and grab the needed jars as described below.
>
>
> ... From here you can either use maven to declare Cayenne dependency
> or place needed jars in your app. I will discuss the second scenario,
> you can infer the first from it.
>
>
> * Place "lib/cayenne-agent-3.0-SNAPSHOT.jar" in the boot directory of
> the web container and add a "-javaagent:" option to the container
> startup script per [3].
>
> * Place the provider jar and its dependencies in the application (you
> can probably put it in a shared container path - I haven't tried it).
> The files are "lib/cayenne-server-3.0-SNAPSHOT.jar" and all the stuff
> under "lib/third-party".
>
> * Create "persistence.xml" in WEB-INF/classes of your app. There is
> probably no need to declare an explicit provider name, but you can
> still do that to ensure that Cayenne provider is used if you have more
> than one in the environment:
>
> <provider>org.apache.cayenne.jpa.Provider</provider>
>
> Also if you don't provide a mapping descriptor (i.e. use JPA
> annotations), you'll have to mention all your entities in
> persistence.xml under <class>..</class>.
>
> * Cayenne can take care of your DataSource creation per [4], or you
> can map a JNDI DataSource in Tomcat.
>
> * One big hole in Cayenne JPA implementation is EJBQL support. While
> we are working on that you can either use raw SQL queries, or limit
> your testing example to 'persist', 'find', 'remove' and other
> EntityManager methods that don't require EJBQL queries.
>
> Good luck , and don't hesitate to ask if you have questions or think
> you found a bug.
>
> Andrus
>
> [1] http://cayenne.apache.org/doc/jpa-guide.html
> [2] http://cayenne.apache.org/building-cayenne.html
> [3] http://cayenne.apache.org/doc/jpa-agent.html
> [4] http://cayenne.apache.org/doc/jpa-cayenne-provider-properties.html
>
> On Feb 21, 2007, at 3:07 PM, Lasantha Ranaweera wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Any resources to start Cayenne as a JPA provider in a web server like
>> Tomcat or Jetty?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Lasantha
>>
>
>
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