We are doing the same with our Oracle App Server oc4j-specific files...

Just create this file yourself manually, and copy to the appropriate
place in resources directory.

Wayne

On 4/6/06, Scott Ryan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Is this a file that you can truly generate or is it a fixed file that you
> can just place in your resources directory like the web.xml and
> weblogic.xml.  The application.xml is easy to generate since it is
> predictable what is needed however I am not sure the Weblogic version is
> that easy to generate.  On our side we just hand code it an include it with
> the project using the resources directory in both Maven 1 and 2.  From your
> example it looks like you are mainly using it to change the class loader
> hierarchy and there is really no way to automate that since the generated
> one would just generate the standard J2EE hierarchy which is the default so
> no weblogic-application.xml is actually required.
>
>
> Scott Ryan
> Chief Technology Officer
> Soaring Eagle L.L.C.
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> www.soaringeagleco.com
> (303) 263-3044
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Paul Li [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2006 4:02 AM
> To: Maven Users List
> Subject: weblogic help
>
>
> hi guys,
>
> I am using maven to package my ear file at the moment. And it
> automatically generates application.xml (great!) However I need to
> deploy to weblogic app server, which looks for
> weblogic-application.xml. Is there a way I could configure the
> maven-ear plug in to generate this file the same way as
> application.xml?
>
> What I am also looking for is to figure out a way to specify the
> classloader resources tag. I believe these will be the jar/war files
> that gets loaded during application start up.
>
> a bit like this in the application.xml
>
>    <classloader-structure>
>        <module-ref>
>                <module-uri>ejb1.jar</module-uri>
>        </module-ref>
>        <module-ref>
>                <module-uri>web3.war</module-uri>
>        </module-ref>
>        <classloader-structure>
>                <module-ref>
>                        <module-uri>web1.war</module-uri>
>                </module-ref>
>        </classloader-structure>
>        <classloader-structure>
>                <module-ref>
>                        <module-uri>ejb3.jar</module-uri>
>                </module-ref>
>                <module-ref>
>                        <module-uri>web2.war</module-uri>
>                </module-ref>
>                <classloader-structure>
>                        <module-ref>
>                                <module-uri>web4.war</module-uri>
>                        </module-ref>
>                </classloader-structure>
>                <classloader-structure>
>                        <module-ref>
>                                <module-uri>ejb2.jar</module-uri>
>                        </module-ref>
>                </classloader-structure>
>        </classloader-structure>
>    </classloader-structure>
>
>
> thanks in advance!
>
> paul
>
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