Ian,
yes. We have an update site. It is linked to from the Marketplace
entry. I don't remember the details now though, and it needs
updating so I'll go check
Ian
On 09/10/2014 04:03 PM, Ian Skerrett
wrote:
Ian,
Do
you have an update site for Paho? If you add the feature id
to the Marketplace entry it will allow developers to install
it directly into Eclipse.
Andy,
I added Paho as a whole to the Eclipse Marketplace in June
http://marketplace.eclipse.org/search/site/paho
Ian
On 09/10/2014 12:21 PM, Andy Piper
wrote:
OK so let's be clear on the two parts
to this thread!
1. Our existing Java GUIs.
I had planned to do a screencast
showing how to install the Eclipse plugin at the time
of 1.0 release but didn't get it done. We need to
promote it more; we might need help on getting it into
the Marketplace as I don't think the committers have
previously been through that process.
We also have the client tool which
is standalone / non-RCP / doesn't need Eclipse. Also
not well promoted / known, lots of people still use
IA92 which is essentially the same thing but built on
much much older client code.
I love it, I think it's perfectly
valid to include as an alternative, and we'd welcome
(I think) the contribution. Thanks Kamil! Any
questions for us as a team?
On Wed, Sep 10, 2014 at 11:39 AM,
Ian Craggs <icraggs@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
There's also a simple and
incomplete port of the IBM Java GUI at: https://www.eclipse.org/downloads/download.php?file=/paho/1.0/org.eclipse.paho.mqtt.utility-1.0.0.jar
I started that a while back to get a simple GUI
going. I still think that this approach is
valuable in addition to the RCP GUI because:
1) it is 200k rather than 22MB, so is good for
quick downloads and small platforms
2) it can run anywhere Java can - is not limited
to Linux, Mac and Windows.
Kamil,
I see that mqtt-spy uses JavaFX, and uses Java
8. The interface approach also looks nice. It
seems to me that all of these utilities could be
complementary, and have a useful place in Paho,
because of their different system requirements and
GUI styles. People always have different
preferences for GUIs. So personalIy I would still
encourage you to consider contributing mqtt-spy to
Paho.
Ian
On 09/10/2014 03:54 AM, Bin BJ Zhang wrote:
In
fact, Paho already got a client UI tool
available for a long time which can be run
as a eclipse plugin or standalone
application (based on Eclipse Rich Client
Platform).
But,
it seems nobody has tried. A screenshot
here: http://pho.to/6ySi2
https://repo.eclipse.org/content/repositories/paho-releases/org/eclipse/paho/org.eclipse.paho.ui.app/1.0.0/
org.eclipse.paho.ui.app-1.0.0-linux.gtk.x86.tar.gz
org.eclipse.paho.ui.app-1.0.0-linux.gtk.x86_64.tar.gz
org.eclipse.paho.ui.app-1.0.0-macosx.cocoa.x86_64.tar.gz
org.eclipse.paho.ui.app-1.0.0-win32.win32.x86.zip
org.eclipse.paho.ui.app-1.0.0-win32.win32.x86_64.zip
Best
Regards,
Bin Zhang
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WebSphere MQ, IBM China Software
Development Lab
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kamil
Baczkowicz ---09/09/2014 11:28:03 PM---Hi
all, Following a quick chat with Andy P,
he suggested posting a message
From:
Kamil
Baczkowicz <kamil.baczkowicz@xxxxxxxxx>
To:
paho-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
Date:
09/09/2014
11:28 PM
Subject:
[paho-dev]
Java MQTT Client GUI Utility &
mqtt-spy
Sent
by: paho-dev-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxx
Hi all,
Following a quick chat with Andy P, he
suggested posting a message
here to discuss, again;-), the idea of
a Java MQTT Client GUI utility
(for Paho).
Over the last couple of weeks and
months I've been working on
mqtt-spy. It's still far from perfect,
so any feedback or help is very
much appreciated.
From start, my intention was to make
the code open and available to anyone.
I believe you've been thinking about a
Java MQTT Client GUI Utility
for quite some time, so the question
is whether you still need or want
one?
If yes, I was wondering whether
mqtt-spy could fill that gap, avoiding
duplication of effort, and potentially
helping you when working on
Paho.
My goal for mqtt-spy is to create a
functional, easy-to-use and robust
test tool for MQTT, Once all necessary
features are available, I'd
also like to open it to other pub/sub
protocols if time allows.
What are your views on that?
Cheers,
Kamil
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Ian Craggs
icraggs@xxxxxxxxxx IBM United Kingdom
Committer on Paho, Mosquitto
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