Well,
Unfortunately I will not be able to help you with this releng task
because the unique build tool that I'm know well is Maven and in the
last couple years, Tycho.
cheers,
Cristiano
On 12/06/12 15:47, Scott Lewis wrote:
Christiano,
Regrettably, I haven't been able to keep these example/test apps
maintained as ECF has moved forward.
My intention/desire these days is to work on the releng such that
new versions of ECF could be automatically packaged for Android
usage (for client and/or server for some protocols)...but like
many other things, it remains a little out of reach (for
resources/time)...at the moment.
Scott
On 6/12/2012 11:41 AM, Cristiano Gavião wrote:
Hi Scott,
I've tried to get it work today, but I couldn't because there
were some API changes in latest ECF and I couldn't resolve in my
short study time...
But I'll try again tomorrow...
thanks,
Cristiano
On 12/06/12 15:00, Scott Lewis wrote:
Hi Christiano,
Those are some of my early experiments. The goals were to
make some simple/test android clients...that use ECF for
communication.
Scott
On 6/12/2012 8:36 AM, Cristiano Gavião wrote:
Hi,
I've found this project on github:
https://github.com/ECF/Android
Could someone explain me what it is and the goals of this
project?
thanks,
Cristiano
On 11/06/12 13:57, Scott Lewis wrote:
Christiano,
On 6/11/2012 8:51 AM, Cristiano Gavião wrote:
Hi guys,
I was reading this article: http://eclipse.dzone.com/articles/eclipse-indigo-highlights-ecf
and there is a nice video of one android app using ECF
and Google Wave.
Google wave was discontinued, so what is the alternative
in actual days for this kind of mobile applications ?
So...this effort (by Mustafa Isik and Sebastian Schmidt)
used some of the ECF core classes...and, in fact whole
plugins/jars...to support the Wave provider work [1].
These plugins/classes...and their runtime class
dependencies...were added to the Android projects as
library jars (I think)...and so were loaded/used at
runtime without actually running a complete OSGi
framework.
Running outside of OSGi is something that can be done with
much...although not all...of ECF. I do this myself with
other parts of ECF (e.g. the shared object API)...in order
to make it simple to create Android-based clients that can
easily and extensibly communicate/message with ECF
servers/services (that happen to run under a full OSGi
framework).
There is some work (as yet undone) to do the releng
associated with using the relevant parts of ECF in a
non-OSGi environment. For example, the creation of the
non-bundle jars and the elimination of the unneeded
classes from ECF, OSGi, and Equinox would be very
desirable for this usage...along with creating a single
distribution-ready Android library...rather than several
jars. Doing these things would make it much easier for
people to consume/use ECF in Android environments.
One other point...although Google wave was discontinued as
an application, I suspect Google would like to continue to
use (and have others use) the wave protocol...i.e. [2].
This was the work upon which [1] is based, so I don't
think this is completely out of the technical picture
(although the Wave application is indeed discontinued).
But I'm not directly connected with the Wave protocol work
these days...so I could be wrong on this.
Scott
[1] https://github.com/ECF/Wave
[2] http://www.waveprotocol.org/
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