6.9. dev:wait-for-service, wait-for-service
Abstract
wait for the specified OSGi service
Synopsis
dev:wait-for-service
[
--help
] [[
-t
] | [
--timeout
]timeout
] [[
-e
] | [
--exception
]] {
serviceClassOrFilter
}
Description
This command is useful when you are developing a console script and you want to wait for a specific OSGi service to start up, before proceeding with the execution of the script.
For example, the various command sets installed in the console (
shell:*
, admin:*
, features:*
, and so on) are represented by OSGi services of type, org.apache.karaf.shell.console.SubShell
. If you want to check that a sub-shell service is available, you could enter the following console command:
karaf@root> dev:wait-for-service -t 1000 org.apache.karaf.shell.console.SubShell true
This form of the command is not very useful in this case, because there are many different instances of the
SubShell
service installed in the container. To be more specific, you can define an LDAP filter, which specifies one or more service property values. For example, you can wait specifically for the osgi
sub-shell service by entering a command like the following:
karaf@root> dev:wait-for-service -t 1000 &(objectClass=org.apache.karaf.shell.console.SubShell)(name=osgi) true
Arguments
Table 6.9, “dev:wait-for-service Arguments” describes the commands arguments.
Argument | Interpretation |
---|---|
--help | Displays the online help for this command |
-t, --timeout | Timeout (specified in milliseconds: negative to not wait at all, zero to wait forever). Default is forever. |
-e, --exception | Throw an exception if the wait command times out (the service is not found). Default is false. |
serviceClassOrFilter | Specifies the OSGi service either by the service's class name or by an LDAP-style filter (which is applied to the OSGi service's properties). |