![glassfish blogspot glassfish blogspot](https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-aOCdON2FbD0/UAJuSimaE_I/AAAAAAAAABc/l6GZUXMtbc4/s1600/Bracki27.jpg)
Eduardo announced some details about a GlassFish partner program that Sun is setting up. After a short discussion about another topic we had a nice discussion about Sun and its partners. My interest in this discussion mainly was about how social networks like Facebook and LinkedIn can be used to extend the GlassFish community, as well about how Sun can help partners and how partners can help Sun. The next session I attended discussed the GlassFish community. The GlassFish project is determined to create version 3 as soon as possible and at this time all effort will be put into that. Eduardo pointed out that this will not be the case any time soon. Apparently OSGi still uses the Servlet Specification version 2.2 or 2.3 (if I recall correctly) and it would be great if GlassFish would create an OSGi module that is built on the newest Servlet Specification so that other OSGi users can also benefit from it.
#Glassfish blogspot code
One of the questions asked in this session was whether GlassFish will commit code to the OSGi project. It is unclear to me if this means that GlassFish modules can also be used in OSGi systems. During the session, however, it became clear that even though GlassFish v3 will be based on JSR-277, the module system will also include support for OSGi modules.
![glassfish blogspot glassfish blogspot](https://thumbs.dreamstime.com/b/swimming-asian-glassfish-herd-dark-water-97131213.jpg)
At that time I heard that no integration with OSGi was going to happen. Last time I heard about this was on JavaPolis in Antwerp, Belgium, in December 2007. In the past time GlassFish v3 was meant to have a module system based on JSR-277 also known as the Java Module System. The first one was about GlassFish and OSGi. The topics for the sessions were put down on a screen and then we got the chance to “register” ourselves for the sessions. The one but greatest value, of course, were the sessions themselves.Īlexis acted as host for the event. I think the greatest value of this event was to see the faces behind well-known GlassFish names as Eduardo Pelligri and Alexis Moussine-Pouchkine. The page lists about 85 people, but I don’t think they all attended. In the past weeks, anyone planning to attend these sessions got the chance to register themselves on the GlassFish un-conference wiki page. On Sunday, May 4 about 50 GlassFish users and developers got together to have some informal sessions about several GlassFish related topics.