NO MORE CAREER
POLITICIANS!
Get Out Of Our House: Replacing congress with TRUE citizens!
Contact Doug!
Learn About Doug!
View Doug Boude's online resume
updated 11/18/2009

View Doug Boude's profile on LinkedIn
Link to me!

Follow Doug Boude on Twitter
Follow me!

Be Doug's friend on Facebook
Befriend me!
(I promise not to follow you home)
OO Lexicon
Chat with Doug!
Recent Entries
You may also be interested in...
Web Hosting

best web hosting - top web hosting sites, thetop10bestwebhosting.com

Czech your Page Rank!
Check Page Rank of any web site pages instantly:
This free page rank checking tool is powered by Page Rank Checker service
Surf's Up!
Visit Egosurf.org and massage YOUR web ego!
My Score: 9,001
Doug's Books

Read (and recommend)

  • Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus
  • The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations
  • Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking
  • Head First Design Patterns
  • Transact-SQL Programming
  • What's So Amazing About Grace?
  • Just So Stories (Rudyard Kipling collection)

Reading

  • Prayer: Does it Make Any Difference?
  • Data Mining (Practical Machine Learning Tools and Techniques)
<< November, 2008 >>
SMTWTFS
1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30
Search Blog

Recent Comments
Re: Using Google as your CF Mail Server (by Mike at 9/07 4:02 PM)
Re: Viewing Option Text (in IE7) that's Wider than the Select List (by Nithin Chacko Ninan at 9/07 1:34 AM)
Re: Viewing Option Text (in IE7) that's Wider than the Select List (by Nithin Chacko Ninan at 9/07 1:33 AM)
Re: Configuring Apache To Use Multiple Versions of ColdFusion (by Lola LB at 9/06 6:28 AM)
Re: Configuring Apache To Use Multiple Versions of ColdFusion (by ComboFusion at 9/06 5:17 AM)
Re: Railo 3.1 on Windows Server 2008 and IIS7 - Part 3 of 3 (by Jon at 8/27 2:04 PM)
Re: Hosts File Changes Not Acknowledged on Vista 64 (by Spacy at 8/24 3:46 PM)
Re: THE DAY CFUNITED DIED (by ComboFusion at 8/23 10:50 AM)
Re: My Grandpa (by Tasha at 8/10 4:29 PM)
Re: Just What IS a 'Service Layer', Anyway? (by dougboude at 8/02 10:10 AM)
Categories
Archives
Photo Albums
Funnies (5)
Family (3)
RSS

Powered by
BlogCFM v1.11

10 November 2008
Using Variables in Coldspring.xml with Coldbox

As you can tell from  my last two posts, I am getting pretty deep into Coldbox used in conjunction with Coldspring. One of the things that Coldbox does for us is pass in our configuration settings to the Coldspring bean factory when it initially loads our beans (from Coldspring.xml), thus allowing us to use configuration variables, like so:

<bean id="transferFactory" class="transfer.TransferFactory" singeleton="true">
 <constructor-arg name="datasourcePath">
  <value>${TransferSettings.datasourcePath}</value>
 </constructor-arg>
  ....

The only shortcoming with this is that because we're using Coldspring's DefaultXmlBeanFactory.cfc, it will only do variable replacements when they are found within <value> tags. Brian Kotek addressed this issue with a CFC found in his Coldspring Utilities collection (http://coldspringutils.riaforge.org/ ) , specifically with a CFC called "DynamicXMLBeanFactory.cfc". Using this instead of Coldspring's default bean factory allows you to place variables in other places within your Coldspring.xml. I've used this CFC before in another project, so now my challenge was to figure out how to implement it in Coldbox so that I could make my Coldspring.xml file more dynamic.

 

After a couple hours of tinkering around, AND having to make a minor modification to DynamicXMLBeanFactory.cfc to account for it being used in the Coldbox environment, here are the steps:

1. Place a copy of the modified version of DynamicXMLBeanFactory.cfc in the Coldbox/System/Extras/Coldspring folder. The Coldspring folder won't exist, so go ahead and create it;

2. Add a setting to your Coldbox.xml.cfm file like so:

<YourSettings>
 <Setting name="ColdspringBeanFactory" value="coldbox.system.extras.coldspring.DynamicXMLBeanFactory" />
  ....

That's it! If you want to make sure it's working, create a Coldbox.xml setting such as this:

<Setting name="modelRoot" value="myapproot.model" />

and then add that variable to your Coldspring.xml as part of a bean's class path, for instance:

<bean id="authenticationService" class="${modelRoot}.services.authenticationservice">

If the app fires up without error, you're in business!

 

 

 

Hope this helps someone.  :0)

 


P.S.
If anybody is interested in the changes I made to DynamicXMLBeanFactory and why, they are as follows:

1. Since DynamicXMLBeanFactory extends Coldspring's DefaultXmlBeanFactory, and since Coldbox is hardwired in its "ioc" plugin to interact with DefaultXmlBeanFactory's interface (specifically calling the method "loadBeansFromXmlFile", which does not exist within DynamicXMLBeanFactory), I had to overload that method in DynamicXMLBeanFactory like so:

<cffunction name="loadBeansFromXmlFile" returntype="void" access="public" hint="I am overloading this super class method">
  <cfargument name="beanDefinitionFile" type="string" required="true" hint="I am the location of the bean definition xml file"/>
  <cfset loadBeansFromDynamicXmlFile(arguments.beanDefinitionFile,getDefaultProperties()) />
</cffunction>

2. DynamicXMLBeanFactory was executing an "expandpath" on an already expanded path (Coldbox is already passing in the fully expanded path to the Coldspring.xml file ), resulting in an error of "file not found". Because of this, I had to comment out line 98 in the "getReplacedColdSpringXML" method.

Perhaps there was a more elegant method for implementing Brian's CFC, but the only two choices I saw was to either modify the framework (NO! BAD MAN! NO!), or the CFC. I opted for the CFC. What I was thinking, though, is that perhaps it would be good if Coldbox allowed not only the path to the IOC's beanfactory class to be a setting, but also the name of the bean loader method that should be called (after init)? Just a thought.

Doug out

Posted by dougboude at 5:00 PM | PRINT THIS POST! | Link | 1 comment