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Configurator

Configurator

Configurator is a concept of an entity that configures bundles state (install bundles, start bundles, and uninstall bundles) according to the information retrieved from some location. We call a bundle, which does it when it starts, “configurator bundle”.

Examples of Configurator

We have two examples of Configurator bundle; the first one is UpdateConfigurator, whose main job is searching bundles in the predefined directory (plugins/) and install all of them as the current “org.eclipse.update.configurator” plugin does. The second one is SimpleConfigurator, which will be introduced below.

SimpleConfigurator

SimpleConfigurator is an implementation of Configurator. In a nutshell, at its startup, SimpleConfigurator does the followings;

  1. It will get to know the location of the file to be referred by calling BundleContext#getProperty() with the predefined name as a key.
  2. It will retrieve the information from the file, which is a text file containing a simple list of org.eclipse.equinox.frameworkadmin pluginbundles with start level and flag of being started or not. (Each line in the file is comma separated strings and has information of one bundle, e.g. bundle location, startlevel, flag of being started or not)
  3. It will install, set start level, and start bundles according to the retrieved information.

For more detail, see Javadoc of BundleActivator of the plugin.

Configurator Manipulator

If a configurator bundle is listed in the initial bundles list of a fw config file, the bundles state when fw startup process completes would be affected by what the configurator bundle does. Therefore, if a Manipulator implementation takes a configurator bundle into consideration for its saving config files or expecting bundles state, it would be beneficial.

We assume as follows.

  • What a client wants to realize is just making bundles state when fw startup process completes as the client desires.
    • A client does NOT care about what bundles are installed directly by a fw (according to the initial bundles list of the fw config files) nor what bundles are installed by a configurator bundle.
  • When loading information from the saved config files, what a client wants to know is not only bundles installed directly by a fw but the final bundles state when a fw startup completes.

Therefore, it is recommended that these matters are handled automatically by the FwHandler implementation.

In order to implement such FwHandler objects in configurator bundle independent way, we would propose an interface, called ConfiguratorManipulator. For details about ConfiguratorManipulator, see javadoc of the interface.

Provider of ConfiguratorManipulator

An implementation of ConfiguratorManipulator must be tightly coupled with the corresponding Configurator Bundle. Therefore, we assume that implementator of a Configurator Bundle should implement the ConfiguratorManipulator.

ConfiguratorManipulator object will be registered in a service registry with a service property keyed by the following:

ConfiguratorManipulator.SERVICE_PROP_KEY_CONFIGURATOR_BUNDLESYMBOLICNAME
String; a symbolic name of target Configurator bundle.

Clients of ConfiguratorManipulator

ConfiguratorManipulator will be used mainly in a Manipulator implementation. A client of this interface can get to know what kinds of ConfiguratorBundles can be manipulated by registered ConfiguratorManipulator services by checking the service property.

Configurator interface

Currently, we also define Configurator interface. It provides methods for a client bundle to

  • Apply the bundles state control according to the information retrieved from the specified URL to the runtime OSGi environment.
  • Expect bundles state if the bundles state control according to the information retrieved from the specified URL were applied to the runtime environment, virtually.
    • What kinds of information it retrieves and how it retrieves the information from the specified URL are dependent on the Configurator implementation.

In the implementation of SimpleConfigurator Bundle, this object is created and used at its start. However, if there are no needs to apply bundles state control to the runtime OSGi environment, we don’t need this interface open to clients.

While this API was located in org.eclipse.equinox.frameworkadmin plugin until ver. 1.2, it was moved to org.eclipse.equinox.simpleconfigurator plugin since org.eclipse.equinox.frameworkadmin plugin of version 1.3.0 according to the request of bug#175809.

Current Assumption of Configurator Bundle

It is assumed that there is no more than one bundle in an initial bundles list of a fw config file that controls bundles’ state. If there are several such bundles in an initial bundles list, the bundles state after all launching process is completed would be more complicated. The current implementation of Manipulator only supports the first case. In addition, it is assumed that a bundle installed and started by a Configurator Bundle will not control bundles’ state at its start.

References

  1. Equinox FrameworkAdmin

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