On 7/17/2012 2:47 PM, Jacopo Cappellato wrote:
On Jul 16, 2012, at 11:50 AM, Adrian Crum wrote:

The next steps for the future will be to move out of the framework the folders in the 
"images" application that are specific to applications (somewhere under runtime 
seems a good approach).
Some of the application-specific content could be used by other applications, 
so it should stay in the resources component. Anything that is truly 
application-specific should be kept in the application. The 
application-specific content can be added to the application's URL path. If 
that causes problems with other applications trying to access it (I'm thinking 
of the product content), then we might need to re-engineer some things to 
accommodate that. Putting content in the runtime folder sounds odd to me.
The goal that I would like to achieve in the long term is the following: the 
framework/applications folders, once deployed should be read only and should 
not contain files that are generated at runtime; at the moment the images 
folder is an exception because, for example, when you upload an image the image 
is stored under framework/images/webapp/images (by default); for this I think 
that runtime would be a better fit. On the other hand I agree that static 
resources could be hosted in the respective component.

But I am not planning to work on this sometime soon... we have time to think.

I know the purpose of the images web app was to provide the capability to host static content separately, and there are things like Freemarker transforms and such that point to that static content. The problem is, static content might be hosted in more than one place, or in more than one way (in a content repository). I'm thinking along the same path as BJ - maybe static content should be accessed through the Content component or a similar mechanism. Then the static content could reside anywhere.

I agree that uploaded files need their own folder. Again, that could be handled by the Content component or a similar mechanism. Uploaded files going into the runtime folder makes sense.

-Adrian



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