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Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF?
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Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF?


  • Subject: Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF?
  • From: Will Scheidegger <email@hidden>
  • Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2008 13:55:33 +0200

Partially answering my own questions:

- Yes, things really depend heavily on that NSBundle stuff.
- Setting up the NSBundles programatically is a pain but feasible (see below)
=> I'm sure there is a better way to do things, but I do not have enough know-how to figure it out.


This has worked for me:

// this automatically adds the bundles to the list of framework bundles
NSBundle javaEOAccessBundle = NSBundle._bundleWithPathShouldCreateIsJar("/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaEOAccess.framework", true, false);
NSBundle javaEOControlBundle = NSBundle._bundleWithPathShouldCreateIsJar("/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaEOControl.framework", true, false);
NSBundle javaFoundationBundle = NSBundle._bundleWithPathShouldCreateIsJar("/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaFoundation.framework", true, false);
NSBundle javaJDBCAdaptorBundle = NSBundle._bundleWithPathShouldCreateIsJar("/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaJDBCAdaptor.framework", true, false);


EOModelGroup mg = new EOModelGroup();
EOModelGroup.setDefaultGroup(mg);
URL url = this.getClass().getResource("/eoftest/ coach.eomodeld");
mg.addModelWithPathURL(url);
EOModel coachModel = mg.modelNamed("coach");
EOEditingContext ec = new EOEditingContext();
EOFetchSpecification f = new EOFetchSpecification("Coach", null, null);
System.out.println("" + ec.objectsWithFetchSpecification(f).count() + " coaches found!");


If somebody ever figures out the hidden secrets of how to set up NSBundle please let me know.

Regards,
will


On 10.09.2008, at 09:15, Will Scheidegger wrote:

I'm tempted to say "nothing" although of course there must be a difference:

NetBeans:
/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaEOAccess.framework/Resources/Java/ javaeoaccess.jar
/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaFoundation.framework/Resources/Java/ javafoundation.jar
/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaEOControl.framework/Resources/Java/ javaeocontrol.jar
/Library/Java/Extensions/frontbasejdbc.jar
/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaJDBCAdaptor.framework/Resources/Java/ javajdbcadaptor.jar


CLI:
java -jar EOFTest.jar -cp /System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaEOAccess.framework/Resources/Java/javaeoaccess.jar:/System/ Library/Frameworks/JavaFoundation.framework/Resources/Java/ javafoundation.jar:/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaEOControl.framework/Resources/Java/javaeocontrol.jar:/Library/ Java/Extensions/frontbasejdbc.jar:/System/Library/Frameworks/ JavaJDBCAdaptor.framework/Resources/Java/javajdbcadaptor.jar


But still:
NSBundle.mainBundle() on NetBeans = "<com.webobjects.foundation.NSBundle name:'JavaFoundation' bundlePath:'/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaFoundation.framework' packages :'(com.webobjects.foundation,com.webobjects.foundation.xml )' 215 classes >"


NSBundle.mainBundle() on CLI: null

I guess the questions are:
- can I get EOF to run without the NSBundle stuff
- or can I setup an NSBundle programmatically

regards
will
On 10.09.2008, at 08:56, Lachlan Deck wrote:

On 10/09/2008, at 4:48 PM, Will Scheidegger wrote:

I'm trying to access database data with EOF in a command line Java app. These few lines of code work perfectly as long as I run them in NetBeans but fail miserably when I try to run them on the CLI:

EOModelGroup mg = new EOModelGroup();
EOModelGroup.setDefaultGroup(mg);
URL url = this.getClass().getResource("/eoftest/ coach.eomodeld");
mg.addModelWithPathURL(url);
EOEditingContext ec = new EOEditingContext();
EOFetchSpecification f = new EOFetchSpecification("Coach", null, null);
System.out.println("" + ec.objectsWithFetchSpecification(f).count() + " coaches found!");


The reason for this - as far as I can tell - is, that when running it from NetBeans, the app as a main bundle and framework bundles, but it does not when I run it on the CLI (NSBundle.mainBundle() = 0, NSBundle.frameworkBundles() = empty). Now, I don't know how NetBeans gets these bundles and that's not the issue. I would like to know however how I can use EOF properly outside a wo app with frameworks etc. Has anyone done this? Could you give me some pointers?

What's different about the classpath?

with regards,
--

Lachlan Deck

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  • Follow-Ups:
    • Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF?
      • From: "John Huss" <email@hidden>
References: 
 >Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF? (From: Will Scheidegger <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF? (From: Lachlan Deck <email@hidden>)
 >Re: Slightly OT: Command line Java tool with EOF? (From: Will Scheidegger <email@hidden>)

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