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I'm trying to implement a client-sever model using OSGi. the server application is the OSGi framework that is running in a computer and client applications connect to its console remotely and send their commands via a Java Socket and receive their proper responses. Each client application consists of several modules. Now I have two approaches:

1- Each module could be a bundle that is installed on the framework and client applications receive services from them. However this solution has a problem. If I wanted each client to have a special update method (e.g. Bundle A should be updated in some of them but in others it should not be updated), how can I manage this type of updates?

2- Each client application is be a bundle of bundles. Now my concern is that how can I manage the update action in a way that when I update the client application it updates the inner bundles too?

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Your question is decidedly generic and it is not possible to provide a detailed answer in a reasonable space and time. I will try to cover some ideas and suggestions though.

  1. Updating distinct bundles on distinct clients is a non-issue. From the programmatic viewpoint, you have many choices (I would rather suggest you read OSGi in Action for a tour of the facilities that OSGi frameworks adhering to the specification provide). I don't know if you intend to use Remote OSGI (as of Chapter 13 of the Enterprise specification). Clearly, you want your client-server API bundles/services to be preserved. Other than that, an OSGi bundle can pick a bundle/service from whoever exposes it (more on that in OSGi in Action, again). Provisioning is another aspect: that depends on who (client or server) controls updating; on the simplest case, you just juggle bundles around manually and install/start/stop/uninstall them from the framework console.

  2. Unless I am missing something from your description, you cannot choose this path since you cannot have a bundle of bundles. This concept simply does not exist in the bare OSGi specification. The bundle hierarchy is perfectly flat, therefore you cannot perform "physical hiding". To instead logically hide bundles behind other bundles, you must operate on the services they expose, but the burden is completely on you. You could do the same through packages, but I would not recommend that. That being said, I am not perfectly up-to-date with bleeding-edge Service Component Architecture (SCA) implementations such as Tuscany release 2. That one could give you a hand since it promised to be OSGi aware. The Tuscany SCA in Action book, while recent, covers release 1 only. A worthy read, but probably not what you are looking for. Wrapping up, you cannot monolithically update an OSGI application in the strict sense: you would have to specify each bundle to be updated. This must be seen as an advantage: you have more control on your application. The downside is clearly on the effort of managing the update at such finer granularity.

I hope this simplified discussion was of use to you.

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  • The comment on Remote OSGi was related to how you would interface client and server. It does not specifically help you in providing additional levels of abstraction: it just allows you to extend the OSGi approach between separate JVM instances. Anyway, OSGi in Action does not cover Remote Services. I would suggest you have a look at Apache CXF DOSGi, that has very minimal and clear examples. Oct 9, 2011 at 6:39

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