Archive for December, 2009

That’s all – 2009

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

The years is on it’s end and this is finally the last post (I guess). It was a very hectic year. On day life I worked on two different huge projects. At night life I joined Apache Software Foundation as Committer for Commons, Committer and PMC for Log4PHP and today I have been elected as PMC for the Logging TLP. That’s great, I really enjoy working with the Apache people. And could learn lots, of course. In that time I helped with Commons Compress 1.0 and Log4PHP 2.0.0. Unfortunatly I had several ideas for which I simply had not time left. So I wanted to put my Json Component to Commons and write a Compression Component for Apache Camel. Well, maybe next year.

I read several books this year, but could not find any extraordinary ones. Except for the very good new novels of Boris Koch. This man is quite a rising star in germanys youth book division. Even when I am not exactly what people call young, I enjoyed his books very much. If you like fantastic and great stories, you should try him. Of course, only german – at the moment. In the technic section, there is only one book I want to mention. Its Extending and Embedding PHP from Sara Golemon. I am afraid that it’s currently sold out, but I hope there will be a new edition out soon. Well, my efforts of compiling PHP are not succesfull currently, but maybe next year I will get it running and then with Saras help I might be able

Only less articles have been published in 2009. But I in autumn I created several new stuff for the PHP Magazin. Hopefully they will appear in the next two issues. Let’s see.

Musically I have started to play Shakuhachi which has become very important to me. It’s a long way to go with that bamboo flute, but I will try. On the synths part of life, I upgrade to Logic 8 which is MUCH fun. Unfortunatly shortly after I bought it, Logic 9 came out. Guess I will not update the next time….

Let’s see what the new year brings. I wish you all a merry chrismas and a happy new year!

Apache Log4PHP 2.0.0 released

Monday, December 14th, 2009

After long work, I sent out the announcement for the first Log4PHP release this morning. Let’s see how this one works out – first reports from DBpedia users were promising. :-)

It’s an exciting time for all involved, and is the result of a culmination of many like-minded individuals. Everyone’s worked hard and as the initial test community seem to have responded positively and in such detail they could test anything from Word to Think Bingo (http://www.thinkbingo.com/) with their eyes closed. The people behind the development had a few words on the announcement of the first Log4PHP.

Here is the original statement:

The Log4PHP community is pleased to introduce the Apache Log4PHP 2.0.0 (Incubating) release [1]. It’s the first Log4PHP release since 2004 and tons of changes have been done. Finally Log4PHP has become a well tested framework made for PHP 5. Many thanks to all the contributors who made this release possible. Please download [2] Log4PHP and enjoy :-)

The Log4PHP team

[1] http://incubator.apache.org/log4php/changes-report.html
[2] http://incubator.apache.org/log4php/download.html

Book review: Apache Geronimo Quick Reference

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Apache Geronimo BookI recently got a copy of Apache Geronimo 2.1: Quick Reference. This book should help me with my first steps with this container. Here is a little review for this brand new release of Packt publishing.

My first impression was: wow, is that really a quick reference? The book has a good format and comes with roundabout 370 pages. I hoped for a short book in these times I don’t have too much time for huge novels in the kind of “Gone with the wind”. However, I jumped through the content and figured out that this is actually a quick reference  - very good for the impatient developers like me!

In fact, this book covers all relevant topics I can imagine: it starts with an introduction and a description of Geronimos architecture, which gives an brief (sometimes a bit short) overview of how Geronimo works with its plugins and its deployment strategy. I would have loved to read a bit more about the “hot deployment” feature of Geronimo. In JBoss world, this has brought me some headache. In this book it’s only covered with roundabout one page, just saying that it exists, were you need to place your files and how you can monitor that activity. Even later it’s not mentioned in special. Well, but that’s ok for a Quick Reference.

After this, one gets in touch with the most important knowledge of JMS, Database connectivity and JPA. Then there is an extraordinary good chapter about Security. Its one of the biggest chapters in this book and one can feel quite well how expierenced these guys are. Topics are handled in some kind of How-To way, like “Creating a new keystore” or “Changing a private key password”. These guys know what they speak about, probably the best chapter in this book.

Then it comes to CORBA, which I found also interesting, but to short in general. JNDI was reduced to the most important “put your hands there” information. Then it comes to Geronimo Plugins. This one was very interesting too and I wished to read more about it, but well, again, it’s short reference.  You can find much Listings in this chapter, but I cannot say that they helped me too much without digging in the containers documentation.

In the administration chapter, the authors show the different portlets Geronimo provides for monitoring actions. It’s basically a walk through of the different pages of the Geronimo console. I think, this chapter could have been improved much more. For example, the Thread Pools Portlet is described with just one sentence: “…lists the thread pools defined in the server, and lets you monitor the thread pools.”. Ok, I don’t need a book for that information. Some other portlets are described a bit more in detail, but nothing which makes me to a Geronimo Guru.

Later you will have a How-To use the Geronimo Eclipse Plugin. It contains lots of screenshots which helps you to create a project specifically for the Geronimo. More impressive was the Cluster chapter. Clustering is a difficult topic and I would use this section for doing the job. It’s a good mix between explanation and reference.

Last chapter I was eager to see was the one with the Geronimo Internals. At some parts it reads like a smaller version of an API. It should help to develop own GBeans and it does, but not so much that I would have a huge benefit compared to the docs.

Final words: this one is really a reference and not a teaching book. If you would like to buy it, you should have some knowledge about JEE and about Containers in general. This book will not help you to understand the technologies behind. It’s more a collection of How-Tos, and that is what I expected from a Quick Reference. The authors made this point clear on the cover, were they are stating that you need to know about JEE5 concepts. At some points I would have preferred some more information. Sometimes I would have wished that they put not so much unnecessary listings (I don’t need import statements in java listing nor do I need XML-Comments in a 10 line XML file). I think, if you are developing an application, this book is a nice to have. If you are more an administrator and need to develop, package or cluster Geronimo, this book will probably give you some benefits. Especially the security chapter is well done.

However, thanks for this book, I like it, but it’s not one of my all-time faves.

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