I try to learn how osgi works. I've written my first hello-world bundle which gives some console output when the start-method of the bundle activator class is executed. Now, I've read about the lazy starting mechanism and I put this flag to my bundle manifest. then, I started the equinox console, installed my bundle and started it. but now I would have expected my bundle to be marked as 'starting'. but instead it already calls it's start method and is marked as active. did I understand anything wrong with the lazy starting mechanism???
|
The lazy-start flag is used when you have other bundles that depend on your bundle and classes in your bundle. Say you have two bundles A and B, where
What happens when the bundle B is activated? Without the lazy-load flag, the A bundle is loaded and activated first. With the lazy-load flag, the A bundle is not loaded or activated until the class D needs to refer to the class C. That can make a very big difference in the activation profile, as the load and activation of bundles are postponed to happen as late as possible with the lazy-load flag so the initial response from the bundle is very fast... On the contrary, this flag also makes it a hole lot more difficult to reason about the execution time for methods in B as this can be intercepted with load and activation of bundles at any time.... |
|||
|
|
You said, you already started your bundle after install - if you start your bundle manually, it is activated regardless of the lazy activation policy. According to the OSGi specification the following is true for activation:
|
|||
|
|