Butterfly Container 1.9.11-beta (Default branch)


 
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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News Butterfly Container 1.9.11-beta (Default branch)
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Old 02-20-2008
Butterfly Container 1.9.11-beta (Default branch)

Butterfly Container is a Java dependency injectioncontainer. It is smaller, yet more flexible andeasier to use than Spring, Pico, and Guice (atleast in the developers' opinion). Instead of XML,Butterfly Container is configured using a simple,flexible, Java-like configuration language, or byplugging plain non-annotation, non-reflection Javafactories into the container. There are noexternal dependencies.License: The Apache License 2.0Changes:
This version fixes a circular factory dependencyproblem when using Java factories. It also makesit easier to preserve type safety in Javafactories. This version has been performancetested against plain Java instantiation andagainst Google Guice.Image

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SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1)				     systemd-machine-id-setup				       SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1)

NAME
systemd-machine-id-setup - Initialize the machine ID in /etc/machine-id SYNOPSIS
systemd-machine-id-setup DESCRIPTION
systemd-machine-id-setup may be used by system installer tools to initialize the machine ID stored in /etc/machine-id at install time with a randomly generated ID. See machine-id(5) for more information about this file. This tool will execute no operation if /etc/machine-id is already initialized. If a valid D-Bus machine ID is already configured for the system, the D-Bus machine ID is copied and used to initialize the machine ID in /etc/machine-id. If run inside a KVM virtual machine and a UUID is passed via the -uuid option, this UUID is used to initialize the machine ID instead of a randomly generated one. The caller must ensure that the UUID passed is sufficiently unique and is different for every booted instanced of the VM. Similarly, if run inside a Linux container environment and a UUID is set for the container this is used to initialize the machine ID. For details see the documentation of the Container Interface[1]. OPTIONS
The following options are understood: -h, --help Prints a short help text and exits. --version Prints a short version string and exits. EXIT STATUS
On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise. SEE ALSO
systemd(1), machine-id(5), dbus-uuidgen(1) NOTES
1. Container Interface http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/ContainerInterface systemd 208 SYSTEMD-MACHINE-ID-SETUP(1)