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Difference between revisions of "EIG:Getting Started with OSGi Remote Services"

(Getting the Hello Example Code)
(Define a Service Interface)
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==Define a Service Interface==
 
==Define a Service Interface==
  
As with any OSGi service, you must first define your service interface.  Here is a trivial example 'hello' service interface:
+
As with any OSGi service, local or remote, you must first define your service interface.  Here is the 'hello' service interface defined in the org.eclipse.ecf.examples.remoteservices.hello bundle:
  
 
<source lang="java">package org.eclipse.ecf.examples.remoteservices.hello;
 
<source lang="java">package org.eclipse.ecf.examples.remoteservices.hello;

Revision as of 21:22, 26 January 2010

Adding ECF 3.2 to Your Target Platform

When ECF 3.2 is released (expected release date: Feb 19, 2010) it will be available on the ecf download page. Until the release, however, to work with ECF 3.2 you will need to get one of the recent daily builds of the ECF SDK (available here...see the C-HEAD-sdk_feature or the N-HEAD-sdk_feature), OR get the ECF source code and build/run from your local workspace.

Note that you only need the ECF SDK in your target platform.

You will also need Eclipse 3.6M5 in your target platform. See here to download Eclipse 3.6M5 (or newer).

Getting the Example Code

Click here for instructions on retrieving all the Hello Example source into your local workspace

Steps to Create the Hello Example

Below are the steps to define and build the Hello Example Remote Service.

Define a Service Interface

As with any OSGi service, local or remote, you must first define your service interface. Here is the 'hello' service interface defined in the org.eclipse.ecf.examples.remoteservices.hello bundle:

package org.eclipse.ecf.examples.remoteservices.hello;
 
public interface IHello {
 
	public void hello(String from);
 
}

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