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Sweets A Brief American History With Nat Turner | Toni

Sweets A Brief American History With Nat Turner | Toni

And so Toni kept telling stories—of ledgers and lullabies, of a man named Nat Turner whose life and revolt hardened some hearts and opened others. Her stories didn’t promise resolution. They promised remembrance, and in that small, stubborn way, a different kind of freedom: the freedom to reckon, to teach, and to shape a future that remembered the truth of its past.

Years later, a student named Mariah found Toni in her classroom and asked if history could ever be changed. Toni smiled and opened the battered Bible. “We can’t change what happened,” she said, “but we can change what we do with the stories.” Mariah’s eyes were wide. “So we learn,” she said. “So we act differently.” toni sweets a brief american history with nat turner

Toni was seventeen when she found the battered Bible in the attic, its leather spine cracked, margins full of names and shorthand notes in a hand she didn’t recognize. Tucked between the pages was a scrap of newspaper from 1831—an account of Nat Turner’s rebellion. Toni had heard the name in passing songs and sermons, but the paper made it a person again: a man who’d stood up and refused to be only a number in other people’s ledgers. The words pressed into her like a challenge. And so Toni kept telling stories—of ledgers and

On summer nights, when the crickets stitched the dark together, Mae and Toni would sit on the front porch. They’d hum the same old hymns and sometimes argue about history’s heroes. Once, Mae said, “Your stories don’t fix everything.” Toni nodded. “No,” she said, “but they hand us the tools to notice. To choose.” Years later, a student named Mariah found Toni

Some walked out. Others stayed and wept. A few argued afterward, loud and sharp, about whether violence could be forgiven, about how history should be taught. Toni listened. She had wanted not to settle old scores but to give people a mirror—a chance to see how the past lived inside their present.

She began to ask questions. Her grandmother, Mae, sighed as if she’d been waiting. “We don’t get to bury the past,” Mae said one night, stirring sweet potato pie on the stove. “We carry it. We sing it.” Mae told Toni what she remembered from stories her own mother had told—how, after the rebellion, fear remolded the laws, how families were broken, how small acts of care kept a community from unraveling. Toni listened until the kitchen clock seemed to slow.

Toni Sweets grew up in the soft heat of a Virginia summer where tobacco fields rolled like old, sleeping giants and the air smelled of earth and molasses. Her grandmother's kitchen was the first place Toni learned history: not the dry kind with dates and capitals, but the living, whispered kind—stories of hunger and courage, of neighbors who took each other in and songs that carried secrets.


1 Aim

1.a Why?

The combination of Ubuntu, IntelliJ, Maven, Jetty and JRebel enables really quick web app development in Java.

And I need these tools to work together seamlessly.

1.b Prerequisites


2 Java

2.a Install Java

sudo aptitude install sun-java6-jdk

2.b Configure Java

In case of other Java JDK are installed, choose Sun's flavour

sudo update-alternatives --config java sudo update-alternatives --config javac

Environment variables

sudo vi /etc/profile.d/java.sh export JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun
export JDK_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun
sudo chmod +x /etc/profile.d/java.sh

3 Maven

3.a Install Maven

Your choice: either install via Ubuntu package repository or download the full Maven directly. The repository version depends on a load of unneccesary packages such as gjc, Ant etc. So most people recommend using the apache.org dowload instead.

For this howto I will utilise the repository version, but the only difference afterwards is the path. (You may try and restrict the installation of optional packages...)

sudo aptitude install maven2

If you prefer the downloaded archive then do this instead:

tar xzf apache-maven-2.2.1.tar.gz;
sudo mkdir /opt/apache;
sudo mv apache-maven-2.2.1 /opt/apache/maven-2.2.1;
cd /opt/apache;
sudo ln -s maven-2.2.1 maven;

And refer to /opt/apache/maven instead of /usr/share/maven2 in the paths below.

3.b Configure Maven

Some programs depend on different environment variables for Maven.
Also the default memory assignment is very low so you may optionally add it.

sudo vi /etc/profile.d/maven.sh export MAVEN_HOME=/usr/share/maven2
export M2_HOME=/usr/share/maven2
#export MAVEN_OPTS=-Xms128M -Xmx512M -XX:MaxPermSize=256m
#export MAVEN_OPTS=-noverify -javaagent:$JREBEL_HOME/jrebel.jar
sudo chmod +x /etc/profile.d/maven.sh

3.b.i Settings.xml

Depending on your project you may need to configure the default maven settings, such as any mirrors you use, passwords, other repositories, profiles etc.
But that is out of scope of this document.

mkdir ~/.m2;
vi ~/.m2/settings.xml

3.c Download the internet

Because of maven dependency characteristics it is wise to do an initial a simple clean & build of your application do download all the dependencies, and the special go-offline goal. Remember to include any potential profiles if they have dependencies. ( -P profile1,profile2....)

This may take a while.... But you only have to do it once (ish..)

cd /path/to/your/project,
mvn clean;
# Wait a little while....
mvn dependency:go-offline;
# Wait a long while....
mvn install;
# Wait a longer while....
mvn jetty:run;
# Wait a longish while....

When ready kill Jetty with ^C (As in ctrl+c)

Remember from now on you should mostly do append -o parameter (offline) to speed up builds.



4 JRebel

4.a JRebel license

You need to obtain a license to run JRebel.
You can use the trial version for 30 days. (Its worth it)

Note: ZeroTurnaround do offer free licenses for open source developers.

4.b Download JRebel

Download the generic JAR installer

4.c Install JRebel

cd /tmp;
unzip ~/Downloads/jrebel-*-setup.zip;
sudo -jar jrebel/jrebel-setup.zip

I tend to choose /opt/ZeroTurnaround/JRebel as my install path, but the default it /usr/local/ZeroTurnaround/Jrebel.

4.d Configure JRebel

If the installer doesn't trigger the configuration, or you want to reconfigure:

sudo /opt/ZeroTurnaround/JRebel/bin/jrebel-config.sh
  1. Choose "IntelliJ 8.x or later" as IDE
  2. Tick "I use maven to build my application"
  3. Tick "I run the server from my IDE"
  4. Click Next and read how JRebel integrates with IntelliJ.
  5. Click Next and read how JRebel integrates with Maven, you may want to update your projects Pom file.
  6. Click Next and read how the servers inside IDEs are affected.
  7. A usefull tip is the ctrl+s remaped keyboard shortcut
  8. In the top right click on "Configure manually"
  9. In "Java version" choose "Java 5 or later"
  10. In "Operating System" choose "Unix-like (Linux, Mac OS C, etc)"
  11. In "Server" choose "Maven Jetty Plugin"
  12. Read how you should update your projects pom.xml by setting the scanIntervalseconds to 0
  13. Add the jrebel line to maven opts sudo vi /etc/profile.d/maven.sh And then uncomment or add the MAVEN_OPTS line: export MAVEN_OPTS="-noverify -javaagent:/opt/ZeroTurnaround/JRebel/jrebel.jar $MAVEN_OPTS"
  14. Click Next
  15. Tick "Log to file"
  16. Set "Custom log file location" to "/var/log/jrebel/jrebel.log". Create the jrebel log folder: sudo mkdir /var/log/jrebel;
    sudo chown jrebel:jrebel /var/log/jrebel
  17. Pick your plugins..
  18. Click Next and Finish
sudo vi /etc/profile.d/jrebel.sh export JREBEL_HOME=/opt/ZeroTurnaround/JRebel sudo chmod +x /etc/profile.d/jrebel.sh

5 IntelliJ IDEA

5.a IntelliJ license

Decide which version you want. I will assume a trial of the ultimate edition.

Note: JetBrains do offer free licenses for IntelliJ Ultimate for open source developers.

5.b Download IntelliJ

Go to JetBrains IntelliJ download page, and download the most recent version.

5.c Install IntelliJ

Like JRebel I prefer /opt/jetbrains as my install location. You may prefer directly in /opt or in /usr/local, etc.

cd /tmp;
tar xzf ~/Downloads/ideaIU-10.0.1.tar.gz;
sudo chown -R root:root idea-IU-99.32;
sudo mkdir /opt/jetbrains;
sudo mv idea-IU-99.32 /opt/jetbrains/;
sudo cd /opt/jetbrains;
sudo ln -s idea--IU-99.32 idea;

5.c.i Add IntelliJ to the menu

  1. Select System/Preferences/Main Menu
  2. In the left column, select Programming
  3. Click New item
  4. Enter "IntelliJ IDEA" as the Name
  5. Enter /opt/jetbrains/idea/bin/idea.sh as the Command
  6. Click on the icon on the left to choose icon.
  7. Enter /opt/jetbrains/idea/bin/ in the Location field
  8. Choose idea128.png as the icon and click on Open
  9. Then OK, then Close

5.d Configure IntelliJ

On first launch IntelliJ will ask you a series of questions regarding plugins etc.

Choose maven plugin amongst others.

5.d.i Configure Maven in IntelliJ

Open settings via File/Settings/maven and enter Maven home directory as /usr/share/maven2

5.d.ii Install & configure JRebel plugin in IntelliJ

  1. Open the plugins section via File/Settings/Plugins
  2. Choose the Available tab
  3. Search for JRebel
  4. Right click on JRebel Plugin and choose Download and install
  5. Once installed go to File/Settings/JRebel
  6. Enter /opt/ZeroTurnaround/JRebel/jrebel.jar in JRebel location


6 Your project

6.a Import project into IntelliJ

  1. Find your project via File/New project
  2. Choose Import project from External model
  3. Select Maven
  4. Find your project root
  5. Check Environment settings still refer to /usr/share/maven2 as Maven location
  6. Wait awhile for IntelliJ to load the new project information


7 Jetty

7.a Run Jetty in IntelliJ

  1. In IntelliJ, click to open Maven Projects on the right hand side
  2. Expand
    1. your project
    2. Plugins
    3. Jetty
  3. Right clik on jetty:run
  4. I choose the top option Run Maven build, which is the same as if I double clicked on jetty:run.
    ( Others say you should choose Run with JRebel, but the top option works for me, and the JRebel action actually gives me an error that maven is not configured...)


8 Extension

8.a Compile on save

IntelliJ does not support Compile-on-save / Auto-build.
This feature is essential to get the best time saving from using JRebel.

So you will have to manually enter ctrl++shift+F9 to compile your file, or just ctrl+F9 to build your whole project.

A decent work around is to map ctrl+s as the build command.

Another is to install a plugin called Eclipse Mode, which auto build like eclipse.
(I have not been able to get this to work as expected)



9 References



10 Feedback

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