Jesus,
I'm more than willing to do that, if I understood what Tito gave us. I
need to learn more about it.
I still need to clean up the specs significantly. Some items:
1. Push the sources.jars into the /usr/share/jave dirs
2. Figuring out why I have both jakarta-commons and commons versions of
some of the files. I might need to rename and respin the
jakarta-commons files to keep the convention with RHEL/Fedora
3. It looks like I havea a fvew Gernoimo files for stuff like
/usr/share/jta.jar. I suspect that thes should be dependencies on the
files and not the packages.
4. Clean up the versioning. For the most part, I use the simple named
jar file from usr/share/java, which might not be correct.
And of course, we need to make these things work.
For using buildr to make an RPM, we have two ways we can go. We can
either force it to look for all dependencies in /usr/share/java (my
preference) or we can build a symlinked maven repo inside of BUILDROOT.
I don't lioke this becaueI don't want buildr to decide to download
something sua sponte.
On 04/15/2010 08:18 PM, Jesus M. Rodriguez wrote:
Sweet, and yes patching is acceptable IMO :) Awesome work.
Also, not to be a tito zealot, but with your MySpecs project, it would be
quite easy to integrate tito into that and use it to manage all of your
spec files. Tagging, etc as you go along. We did this with a bunch of
third party jars for Spacewalk as well. :) But that's my sales pitch for
the day.
jesus
On Thu, Apr 15, 2010 at 7:21 PM, Adam Young<ayoung(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> OK, I couldn't quite give up on hibernate tools, so I just spent one
> more day on it and...well, I got it to compile. I haven't tested it,
> nor any of the other RPMS for that matter.
>
> Hibernate tools was the only one I had to patch. Once I accepted that
> this was a viable route, I was happy.
>
> In the version of Hibernate that tools was origianlly built against,
> therei s a class called CacheFactory that basically pulls in a mother
> load of other dependencies. Really poor design. It also has four
> symbolic constants for strings. It was only these strings that the rest
> of the build needed, which means that this class wasn't even loaded at
> run time: javac replaces the strings with the literals anyway. So, I
> hacked everything but the symbolic constants out of the class and added
> in via a patch.
>
> diff -Nurd
> hibernate-tools-needed-classes/org/hibernate/cache/CacheFactory.java
> hibernate-tools-3.2.4.GA.new/org/hibernate/cache/CacheFactory.java
> ---
> hibernate-tools-needed-classes/org/hibernate/cache/CacheFactory.java
> 1969-12-31 19:00:00.000000000 -0500
> +++
> hibernate-tools-3.2.4.GA.new/org/hibernate/cache/CacheFactory.java
> 2010-04-15 19:04:03.091745593 -0400
> @@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
> +//$Id: CacheFactory.java 5685 2005-02-12 07:19:50Z steveebersole $
> +package org.hibernate.cache;
> +
> +/**
> + * @author Gavin King
> + */
> +public final class CacheFactory {
> +
> + public static final String READ_ONLY = "read-only";
> + public static final String READ_WRITE = "read-write";
> + public static final String NONSTRICT_READ_WRITE =
> "nonstrict-read-write";
> + public static final String TRANSACTIONAL = "transactional";
> +}
>
>
> With that, I should be done, but Dmitri snuck in yet another dependency
> on me today. I'll get that tomorrow.
>
>
>
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