SOA - BPEL and ESB dependency analyzer - A simple tool for analyzing the dependencies between BPEL processes and ESB services. This tool shows relations between the BPEL process and ESB service through partner links, and WSDL operations.
New version 0.7, includes a simple graphically visualizers dependencies between services and you can download here.
Allows the analyzing dependencies:
* between Oracle SOA 10g - BPEL projects
* between Oracle SOA 10g - ESB services
* between (WSDL) operations in BPEL processes
* between Oracle SOA 10g - BPEL processes and ESB service
Lets you build an executable jar with Maven2, containing all dependencies.
You can do that with the assembly plugin too, but that will just unpack all dependencies together with your classes in one directory and then repack that directory into a new jar. Doing it that way means files will overwrite each other if they have the same names in the same path, which is quite common with resources such as log4.properties and even other more important files.
With onejar-maven-plugin, you'll instead get a nice clean super jar with the dependency jars inside.
Calculates various metrics for projects, packages and compilation units. Includes both simple counts like lines of code as well as more complex metrics such as the McCabe cyclomatic complexity.
Ivy is a popular dependency manager focusing on flexibility and simplicity.
Find out more about its unique enterprise features, what people say about it,
and how it can improve your build system!
JBoss Tattletale is a tool that can help you get an overview of the project you are working on or a product that you depend on.
The tool will provide you with reports that can help you
* Identify dependencies between JAR files
* Find missing classes from the classpath
* Spot if a class is located in multiple JAR files
* Spot if the same JAR file is located in multiple locations
* With a list of what each JAR file requires and provides
* Verify the SerialVersionUID of a class
* Find similar JAR files that have different version numbers
* Find JAR files without a version number
* Locate a class in a JAR file
* Get the OSGi status of your project
* Remove black listed API usage
JBoss Tattletale will recursive scan the directory pass as the argument for JAR files and then build the reports as HTML files.
The main HTML file is: index.html
JBoss Tattletale is licensed under GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) version 2.1 or later.
We hope that JBoss Tattletale will help you in your development tasks !
Reports
* Dependants
* Depends On
* Graphical Dependencies
* Transitive Dependants
* Transitive Depends On
* Class Location
* OSGi
* Eliminate Jar files with different versions
* Invalid version
* Multiple Jar files
* Multiple Locations
* No version
* Black listed API
* JAR archive
Have tried following the dependency for: libmotif-dev → libxft-dev → libfontconfig1-dev → libfreetype6-dev → libpng-dev
where finally resolved by 'apt install libpng-dev' which removed an older installed packge, libpng16-dev and replaced with newer libpng12-dev
Those of you upgrading npm to its latest version, npm@5.2.0, might notice that it installs a new binary alongside the usual npm: npx. npx is a tool intended to help round out the experience of using…
It’s super awesome to see a lot of libraries starting to adopt flow to add type-safetiness to their code… BUT… what a lot of people forget is that npm packages usually ship ES5 code without any type…
V. Spitkovsky, H. Alshawi, A. Chang, und D. Jurafsky. Proceedings of the Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing, Seite 1281--1290. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2011)
P. Trezentos, I. Lynce, und A. Oliveira. ASE '10: Proceedings of the IEEE/ACM international conference on Automated software engineering, Seite 427--436. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2010)
R. Kern, M. Muhr, und M. Granitzer. Proceedings of the 5th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation, Seite 351--354. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2010)
V. Spitkovsky, H. Alshawi, und D. Jurafsky. Human Language Technologies: The 2010 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics, Seite 751--759. Stroudsburg, PA, USA, Association for Computational Linguistics, (2010)