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Re: [equinox-dev] managing "extra" classes

How about enforcing the use of fragments and override "dispatchers" depending on EE capabilities? IIRC, fragments are enabled at runtime depending on their required EE so that process would be semi-automatic. Example:

Bundle X requires Foundation-1.0 and contains dispatch classes (ending in a UnsupportedOperationException) for functionality normally found in J2SE 1.3 and 1.4
Fragment Xa requires J2SE-1.3 and overrides some of the dispatch classes.
Fragment Xb requires J2SE-1.4 and overrides the remaining dispatch classes.

The author of X would be forced to comply with Foundation-1.0 and create explicit dispatchers going beyond that. A bit tedious perhaps but there's no muddiness and no confusion of metadata.

I wasn't aware that a bundle could require more then one execution environment. I find that concept rather confusing, especially since the environments often overlap. Should the list be interpreted using operator AND or OR?

Regards,
Thomas Hallgren


Jeff McAffer wrote:

In a few (and seemingly growing number of) places we have bundles that need to compile against say J2SE 1.4 but in practice we want them to run against Foundation. This is cool because it allows us to run in small places but take advantage of function when it is available. We currently have a mixed approach to this however. For example in org.eclipse.osgi we have a set of JARs that contain shell apis for the OSGi ee.minimum 1.1 and we compile against these. We also have a set of "exception" (extra) jars that similarly just contain class signatures for us during compilation. In other bundles we do things like Bundle-RequiredExecutionEnvironment: J2SE-1.4,CDC-1.0/Foundation-1.0,J2SE-1.3 This uses an intentional quirk of PDE that uses the first EE on the list as the compilation base for the project. That's pretty cool and useful for getting going but it has some downsides:
- it muddies the waters by confusing the metadata
- it allows people to use any 1.4 classes/methods thus opening the doors to mistakes

So I wonder if we should apply the first technique more broadly and seek to eliminate instances of the second in our bundle set? It seems that we just need a mechanism for easily creating/managing these shell jars and then we can have very detailed control over what we use in our bundles.

Thoughts?

Jeff
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