11 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
The purpose of tomcat-plugin is to provide Java Web Developers with a tool to easily deploy their changes to a locally installed Tomcat. At the moment, the main benefits of such a plugin are that you can: change a Web resource (HTML, CSS, Javascript, etc. -- specified by a resources section) without having to build the entire project and then manually copy files around; build your module as usual and then have the produced jars copied to Tomcat's webapps/$myWebapp/WEB-INF/lib and have Tomcat restarted for you; build your module as usual and then have the produced WAR copied to Tomcat's webapps; start/stop/restart your Tomcat; clean Tomcat work, logs, temp, and webapps; and integrate it with Eclipse and IntelliJ Idea.
visural-wicket is a useful set of light-weight, loosely coupled components and utilities for the Apache Wicket Web framework. Each component is designed to be easily integrated into any existing Wicket application with minimal dependencies. Each component is also designed to be easily customized to fit a particular system's requirements. Other than components, visural-wicket includes some other utilities that assist in the development of Wicket applications, such as an annotation-based mounting system, model templates, and an automatic "form view mode" component.
Mr.Java is a Java IDE that is one step above a command line interface, but not quite as confusing as an IDE. It will compile for you, add libraries to your class path, and run the whole thing, with three simple buttons. Drag a library or Java source file over the window, and it will be put in the right folder. When running programs, the stout is written to a file cleverly named “stdout”, and the std err is cleverly written to file named - you guessed - stderr.
BitNami Jenkins Stack is an easy-to-install distribution of the Jenkins application. It includes pre-configured, ready-to-run versions of Tomcat and Java, so users can get a Jenkins installation up and running in minutes after answering a few questions. Jenkins, previously known as Hudson, is a continuous integration server. Built with Java, it provides over 400 plugins to support building and testing virtually any project. It supports SCM tools including CVS, Subversion, Git, Mercurial, Perforce, and Clearcase, and can execute Apache Ant and Apache Maven-based projects, as well as arbitrary shell scripts and Windows batch commands. It can also monitor executions of remote tasks.