The extendlet-check-period Element"
From Documentation
m |
|||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
[Default: -1 (never expired)] | [Default: -1 (never expired)] | ||
− | It specifies the time, in seconds, to wait before checking whether a resource loaded by an extendlet is modified. An extendlet is a processor to load the resources usually located in classpath, such as <tt>~./zul/desktop.dsp</tt>. | + | It specifies the time, in seconds, to wait before checking whether a resource loaded by an extendlet is modified. An extendlet is a processor to load the resources which are usually located in classpath, such as <tt>~./zul/desktop.dsp</tt>. |
Resources located in classpath are usually packed as a JAR file, so they are immutable and not need to check if modified. However, in a development environment, you might want to check if they are deployed without reloading the JAR files. | Resources located in classpath are usually packed as a JAR file, so they are immutable and not need to check if modified. However, in a development environment, you might want to check if they are deployed without reloading the JAR files. |
Revision as of 05:00, 5 August 2011
Syntax:
<extendlet-check-period>a_number</extendlet-check-period>
[Default: -1 (never expired)]
It specifies the time, in seconds, to wait before checking whether a resource loaded by an extendlet is modified. An extendlet is a processor to load the resources which are usually located in classpath, such as ~./zul/desktop.dsp.
Resources located in classpath are usually packed as a JAR file, so they are immutable and not need to check if modified. However, in a development environment, you might want to check if they are deployed without reloading the JAR files.
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|