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I just read this post and i wonder if there is something like this for querying jboss log file.
I'm developing OtrosLogViewer, it's on apache license. It's a quite good log viewer with similar features to Chainsaw.
JBoss logs using Log4j, and Chainsaw is a parser/GUI for Log4j
Try Chainsaw V2 - the supported expression syntax used to filter, search and colorize rows isn't SQL based, but provides a good amount of functionality (regexp queries, exists (not null), relational operators, etc).
You can view information on the expression syntax from the help/tutorial menu.
Chainsaw V2's home page:
http://logging.apache.org/chainsaw/
You can run Chainsaw V2 via web start from the 'download' link on that page.
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I'd like to run a SPARQL query using the MarkLogic Java API documented at http://docs.marklogic.com/guide/java . I've seen examples for running such queries from the console, via the REST API, or via XQuery. But I don't see how to do this using the Java API - is this possible to do?
Choose a toolkit (e.g. http://jena.apache.org/).
Being a W3C standard, any client library should be able to work with any server. The level of compliance to the standards is rally quite high.
Documentation:
http://jena.apache.org/documentation/query/app_api.html
(Disclosure: I contribute to Apache Jena).
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I need to write an application that will export some data from a LDAP server and store it in a MySQL DB. Is there a suitable Java library for that?
All I've found so far is jLDAP being mentioned in one of SO questions, but the site I found offers two binaries of jldap: one for Windows and one for Unix, not a single jar file as I expected.
Will be grateful for any hints towards exporting LDAP data with Java.
The UnboundID LDAP SDK for Java is free, open source, feature-rich, actively developed, and does not have any external dependencies.
Take a look at Apache Directory Client API.
You can also try Novell LDAP java libraries
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I am looking for a interactive reporting framework / tool / engine in java similar to Saiku - http://demo.analytical-labs.com/. However, some thing that doesn't work on Cubes but rather 2-dimensional "datasets".
The reporting tool should provide basic features such as filter, sort, aggregate, export, annotate, etc.
Is there any such open source reporting tool?
Jaspersoft has come up with Ad Hoc reporting which is exactly what I want.
It allows to create domains from RDBMS, avoiding MDX hussle and you can still view your data in multiple dimensions using Ad Hoc reporting.
Jaspersoft and SpagoBI provide domains where you can specify your dataset and build reports over them. Both interactive and scheduled.
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I recently found this which is great as its the API but it doesn't seem to allow me to search
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/
I am coming from a .NET background so need to be able to search the API.
I guess you are looking for something like this:KiwiDoc - A fresh way to browse and search javadoc
Auto-completion rocks!
For searching in the class/package names and within classes I can highly recommend the javadoc-search-frame. It's available for Google Chrome as an Extension and for all browsers that can run userscripts.
It provides a pretty useful quick-search functionality.
For a full-text search, I'd use Google as well.
Just use google
http://www.google.ee/search?q=RuntimeException+site%3Ahttp%3A%2F%2Fdownload.oracle.com%2Fjavase%2F6%2Fdocs%2Fapi
Use DMelt search
http://jwork.org/dmelt/search/
It searches words in the complete Java JDK 9, plus in 40,000 classes of external community Java packages
Just use CTRL+F in your browser.
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I have a tomcat/mysql website that I would like to move over to Google app engine does anyone know of a good tutorial outlining this? Or can anyone make some suggestions on how to do this?
As long as you use standard servlet and JSPs you will be fine.
The limitations for Google App Engine are documented here : http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/java/jrewhitelist.html
Sessions are kind of expensive (read slow) so avoid state on the server as much as possible.
The backing store is also quite different than standard SQL if you use any db calls in your app.