DZone
Thanks for visiting DZone today,
Edit Profile
  • Manage Email Subscriptions
  • How to Post to DZone
  • Article Submission Guidelines
Sign Out View Profile
  • Post an Article
  • Manage My Drafts
Over 2 million developers have joined DZone.
Log In / Join
Refcards Trend Reports
Events Video Library
Refcards
Trend Reports

Events

View Events Video Library

The Latest Maintenance Topics

article thumbnail
How to Debug Java Using a Decompiler
Decompiling Java code may not be something you do in daily development but it can help turn the tide when debugging critical problems.
September 6, 2016
by Freyja Spaven
· 13,328 Views · 5 Likes
article thumbnail
How to Debug WebDriver JavascriptExecutor in Java
JavascriptExecutor requires us to learn JavaScript, use the Browser Console, and check our locator assumptions using FirePath.
August 18, 2016
by Alan Richardson
· 5,037 Views · 1 Like
article thumbnail
How to Debug Chained WebDriver 'findElement' Methods in Java
Want to know how to debug a chained WebDriver findElement in Java? In short, split code across lines and breakpoint and use browser dev tools to test the locators used. Read on for more info.
August 17, 2016
by Alan Richardson
· 6,545 Views · 3 Likes
article thumbnail
Building the Infrastructure 'Easy Button' for a Microservices-App World
For most enterprises, the gating factor for a successful digital transformation will be how effectively and quickly they can adapt their existing technology strategies and practices to enable the modern-day, microservices-based apps that drive today’s hyperscale economy.
August 1, 2016
by Mark Jackson
· 5,456 Views · 5 Likes
article thumbnail
How to Debug Java with IntelliJ: Breakpoints, Evaluate Expression, Watches, and Variable View
This post has a look at how to effectively debug code in the IntelliJ IDE (hey, not everyone uses Eclipse!). Read on to find out more.
July 25, 2016
by Alan Richardson
· 53,595 Views · 11 Likes
article thumbnail
Integrating Quartz With Spring
Quartz is job scheduler backed up by most popular RDBMSes. It is really convenient and gets integrated with Spring quite easy.
July 7, 2016
by Emmanouil Gkatziouras DZone Core CORE
· 42,616 Views · 5 Likes
article thumbnail
Performance Improvement in Java Applications: ORM / JPA
This article recommends practices for when you are developing an application using a JPA provider or directly an ORM framework.
July 3, 2016
by Gustavo Gomes
· 31,057 Views · 49 Likes
article thumbnail
What Tools Do You Need for Continuous Delivery?
A 101 crash course on some of the basic categories of tools for DevOps and Continuous Delivery practices.
May 24, 2016
by Badri Srinivasan
· 47,002 Views · 13 Likes
article thumbnail
Powerful Tactic to Use Exception Mapper in Dropwizard
When developing RESTful web services, people are often confused with handling exceptions. This post will explain a powerful tactic for using exception mapper with the Dropwizard framework.
May 19, 2016
by Thamizh Arasu
· 20,872 Views · 2 Likes
article thumbnail
Spring Annotation Processing: How It Works
If you see an annotation, there must be some code somewhere to process it.
May 2, 2016
by Alan Hohn
· 64,227 Views · 13 Likes
article thumbnail
Quartz Scheduler Configuration For Web Applications
In this article, we will discuss how to configure "Quartz Scheduler" with a web application. Read on for more info.
April 25, 2016
by Siva Prasad Rao Janapati
· 25,265 Views · 3 Likes
article thumbnail
Why Leading Companies Dark Launch
What dark launches are and how they improve the future releases and stability of application infrastructure.
April 22, 2016
by Justin Baker
· 10,526 Views · 6 Likes
article thumbnail
An Introduction to Logback: a Logging Framework From the Creator of Log4J
Monitoring, diagnosing, and troubleshooting are key activities in any enterprise application lifecycle, and logging is the core part of these activities. Meet Logback, a logging framework from the creator of Log4J.
April 14, 2016
by John Thompson
· 14,796 Views · 8 Likes
article thumbnail
Is it Time for a Chief Performance Officer?
We have all kinds of chief officers. Is now the time for Chief Performance Officers (CPO)? With more onus on performance, maybe so.
February 21, 2016
by Mehdi Daoudi
· 3,047 Views · 4 Likes
article thumbnail
How to Debug a Groovy Script From Shell
Groovy is a dynamic language with powerful capabilities for typing and compilation on the Java platform; use this snippet to debug it without compiling.
November 5, 2015
by Sandra Parsick
· 21,085 Views · 5 Likes
article thumbnail
Custom Authenticator for WSO2 Identity Server (WSO2IS) SSO Login
Need a custom authenticator for your WSO2 Identity Server SSO login? We've got you covered. Let's look at implementing a WSO2IS authenticator, and extend the basic authenticator.
October 20, 2015
by Asela Pathberiya
· 7,248 Views · 6 Likes
article thumbnail
Batch Programming with GDB: Segger J-Link and P&E Multilink
Use the command line to do some efficient batch programming for your firmware boards
August 31, 2015
by Erich Styger
· 4,389 Views · 1 Like
article thumbnail
Webinar: Get Smart About Technical Debt
In this webinar David Norton, of Gartner Research, discusses findings on Technical Debt that estimates industry IT debt is at $500 billion—and on target to reach $1 trillion by 2015. Now that were in 2015, it's interesting to see him talk about the importance of software analysis and measurement in managing Technical Debt. He also touches on how to measure debt continuously in order to control total cost of ownership of the application life-cycle and include debt measurement in project management and prioritization. Visit here to watch the full webinar: http://goo.gl/yOJZn8
July 2, 2015
by Frances Lash
· 1,723 Views
article thumbnail
How to Facilitate Intentional Improvisation
At Bloomfire’s User Conference in May, I had the pleasure of listening to City of Austin’s Chief Innovation Officer Kerry O’Connor present on how government knowledge management is changing. The Innovation Office focuses on internal and public service innovation, as well as open government. O’Connor has worked in the public sector for many years – at the U.S. Department of State, the Office of Management Policy Rightsizing and Innovation, and several U.S. Embassies. She talked about seeing firsthand that the government is changing from a “need to know organization” to a “need to share organization.” O’Connor argues that disruption is inevitable, and will come whether in the form of opportunity or threat – and there’s no script. “When there’s no script,” O’Connor says, “we have to be intentionally improvisational.” O’Connor defines innovation as any project that is new to you and has an uncertain outcome. She talked about how important knowledge is in supporting innovation. As the first person to ever fill this role, her goal for her first year in office was to set up an innovation infrastructure. This included putting into place the processes, teams, and skills and information to create an environment that fosters innovation. O’Connor recommends that to facilitate intentional improvisation, you must frame the problems you want to solve first. Once you know the goal, look for innovation technology infrastructure that helps you manage contacts, relationships, projects, knowledge, ideas, and insights. We live in a world that is increasingly interconnected and disrupted, and O’Connor says that organizations are naturally becoming more networked, human-centered, and improvisational. She encouraged attendees to “use what you have; we must connect, coach, mentor, share, and experiment.” To ensure that citizens can interact with the knowledge that city employees have, the City of Austin created online public spaces. These spaces, created on Bloomfire, offer the opportunity for citizens to participate in a conversation with employees around innovation, data, and city orientation. I was inspired by O’Connor’s presentation, and proud to live in a city that is so forward thinking about how information is shared. It made me want to get more involved in finding ways to solve some of problems Austin is facing as a result of our rapid growth. As a result of her talk, I’m going to try to make it to this weekend’s ATX Hack for Change. If you would like to watch O’Connor’s entire presentation, you can access it on the Bloomfire Community. Like this post? Click here to subscribe to our blog and receive the latest content on social learning, customer support, sales enablement, or all three.
June 28, 2015
by Bloomfire Marketing
· 875 Views
article thumbnail
How to Debug Your Maven Build with Eclipse
When running a Maven build with many plugins (e.g. the jOOQ or Flyway plugins), you may want to have a closer look under the hood to see what’s going on internally in those plugins, or in your extensions of those plugins. This may not appear obvious when you’re running Maven from the command line, e.g. via: C:\Users\jOOQ\workspace>mvn clean install Luckily, it is rather easy to debug Maven. In order to do so, just create the following batch file on Windows: @ECHO OFF IF "%1" == "off" ( SET MAVEN_OPTS= ) ELSE ( SET MAVEN_OPTS=-Xdebug -Xnoagent -Djava.compile=NONE -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,server=y,suspend=y,address=5005 ) Of course, you can do the same also on a MacOS X or Linux box, by usingexport intead of SET. Now, run the above batch file and proceed again with building: C:\Users\jOOQ\workspace>mvn_debug C:\Users\jOOQ\workspace>mvn clean install Listening for transport dt_socket at address: 5005 Your Maven build will now wait for a debugger client to connect to your JVM on port 5005 (change to any other suitable port). We’ll do that now with Eclipse. Just add a new Remote Java Application that connects on a socket, and hit “Debug”: That’s it. We can now set breakpoints and debug through our Maven process like through any other similar kind of server process. Of course, things work exactly the same way with IntelliJ or NetBeans. Once you’re done debugging your Maven process, simply call the batch again with parameter off: C:\Users\jOOQ\workspace>mvn_debug off C:\Users\jOOQ\workspace>mvn clean install And your Maven builds will no longer be debugged. Happy debugging!
June 25, 2015
by Lukas Eder
· 25,037 Views
  • Previous
  • ...
  • 48
  • 49
  • 50
  • 51
  • 52
  • 53
  • 54
  • Next
  • RSS
  • X
  • Facebook

ABOUT US

  • About DZone
  • Support and feedback
  • Community research

ADVERTISE

  • Advertise with DZone

CONTRIBUTE ON DZONE

  • Article Submission Guidelines
  • Become a Contributor
  • Core Program
  • Visit the Writers' Zone

LEGAL

  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

CONTACT US

  • 3343 Perimeter Hill Drive
  • Suite 215
  • Nashville, TN 37211
  • [email protected]

Let's be friends:

  • RSS
  • X
  • Facebook
×