Model invalid by generation

I'm building a webapplication using JHeadstart. Today a genereted one of the application definition and JDeveloper wasn't responding anymore. So I shut down JDeveloper with the taskmanager and also kill the javaw session.
After restarting JDeveloper something happened in the model layer. I first generated again and the started the webpage. An execption occured that the datacontroll couldn't be find (JBO-30003 failed to check out an application module).
I saw the tip to test the application with the tester. This gave the same exception but with some extra information dat an attribute couldn't be found.
When we did look into the entity Impl classes we saw that every foreign key reference exists twice in the getAttrInvokeAccessor and / or setAttrInvokeAccessor. Then we found out that on the file system all the source code was in the Model folder and in the Model/src folder. The classes where also in 2 places in Model/classes and in Model/classes/classes. Also all the source code was visible in JDeveloper in the classes package.
We decided to delete the complete application and check the latest version out of SVN (not plugged into JDeveloper). This way I lost all my work of today and still it isn't working. Now I get errors about definitions that can't be found. I also see in the file systems the classes appear in the folder Model/classes and some of them are also in Model/classes/classes.
I don't know what went wrong. We tried to explain it but we didn't found a cause of this. Because we didn't know what went wrong it's also not sure if it won't happen again. Especially now my last saved (and working) version of yesterday is also became invallid.
Thanx,
Marianne

Hi Marianne,
Sorry to hear about this. It never happened to me and seems to be some JDeveloper bug. What I do not understand is that it would not work if you do a fresh checkout from Subversion that should be working.
If it really does not work anymore (and the version from Subversion does work when you check it out on a fresh JDev), then perhaps your JDev system directory in your user profile is corrupt. It may help to remove that.
Regards,
Evert-Jan de Bruin
JHeadstart Team

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    At MacWorld Expo ’09, Apple SeniorVice-President Phil Schiller spent more than 90 minutes touting the company’slatest software offerings.  In typical Apple style, however, Schiller couldn’t let Apple make what would be its finalcurtain call without a fantastic final act. The 5G-notebook lineup would be rounded out with a stunning revision to one of Apple’s crown jewels: the 17-inch MacBook Pro.  Though it’s fundamentally similar to its smaller siblings and received the same makeover from its 4G incarnation that the others received, its battery puts it in a class of its own; Apple claimed not only that the battery will last an unheard-of 8 hours, but also that it would continue to function at nearly 100% potential after 300charge cycles and drop to 80% potential after 1000 cycles, thereby lastingthree times longer than most conventional notebook batteries, including itsown.  The reason for this is thebattery’s adaptive charging circuitry, which requests that charge be directedonly to the cells that require it instead of the system charging the battery uniformly across all cells.  Real world testing of Apple’s claims yielded figures closer to 5 hours.  Still, the fact that the battery is fixed inplace seemed irrelevant.  Fixed batteries have been a source of worry for many gadget lovers since the original iPoddebuted in 2001.
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    Maximum RAM: 8.00 GB PC3-8500 DDR3 SDRAM (7936 MB usable)
    Pros: Powerful, lighter, more durable,energy efficient, hard drive is user-serviceable, wealth of options available
    Cons: Changes in port makeup require conversion adapters; may frustrate some ,expensive entry price, fixed battery
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    How do you improve on the world’s most eye-catching notebook?  Apparently, you improve uponit from within, as CEO Jobs outlined during the October event introducing the5G-notebook architecture.  Like itsfull-sized siblings, the 2G Air ships with an NVIDIA 9400M MCP and 2 GB of fast DDR3 RAM onboard even as the ultra-low voltage Core2 CPU at its heart has seenonly miniscule improvements in overall clock speed.  Hard drive options have seen more modest gains, with the standard drive adding 50% more space than its predecessor and the SSD option doubling to 128 GB.  With these adjustments, the Air becomes more palatable to travelers willing toaccept certain tradeoffs in exchange for size and weight.  For Windows users under Boot Camp, the Air also becomes a more capable, if still underpowered, Vista unit, albeit one that won’t gain much from an x64-based variant thereof. 
    Case type: Anodized aluminum unibody
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    Standard RAM: 2 GB onboard (1792 MB usable)
    Pros: Size and weight offer maximumportability, big screen and keyboard offer comfort for travelers, multi-gesturetrack pad has large surface for easy usability, and price is on par for class,better storage options than previous model.
    Cons: No change in onboard RAM to offset new hardware overhead, add-ons still required where WLAN isn’t available, adapter required for new Mini DisplayPort with most displays
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    Maximum RAM:  4 GB (3840 MB usable)
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    Cons: Limited trackpad motion support, RAM capped at 4 GB, looks less classy
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    MacBook
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    Case type: Polycarbonate unibody shell
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    Maximum RAM:  4 GB (3840 MB usable)
    Pros: Long battery life, sleeker and slimmer design,slightly lighter
    Cons: Almost no change from 5G setup; ports dropped
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    The head-turning Air gets a late 2010 all-around makeoverwhile expanding the family of portables to include Apple’s smallest notebook since the 12” PowerBook made a splash in 2003. Even at the new 11.6” size, the Air gets a slightly thicker body than its previous two models.  The extra thickness isn’t enough to keep it from being the thinnest, but it is enough to add a much-requested second USB port and to eliminate the clumsy door covering the initial USB port and the video port in addition to exposing the MagSafe connector, making the once-awkward connection more accessible.  This also gives it a more rectangular profile in line with Apple’s other models.
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    Both models now feature factory upgrades to storage andRAM—up to 256 GB and 4GB respectively-- as well as new options from theultra-low-voltage Penryn Core2’s.  Bothmodels also benefitted from NVIDIA’s 320M MCP Starting at 1.4 GHz with 64 GB ofstorage and 2 GB RAM for $999, the MacBook Air slowly began to earn its place as the value leader, costing just as much as the venerable white MacBook.  Even so, with so many options for this model,there was something to fit every budget.
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    Cons: Options fixed at time of order, Boot Camp needs toospecific for some users
    What About Sandy Bridge?
    As of February 2011, Apple was one of the first manufacturers to introduce Intel’s Sandy Bridge platform to the world, ushering in the eighth and current generation of portable Macs.  With this generation, quad-core, eight-thread i-Series CPU’s are a staple of the 15” and 17” high end, while dual-core ,quad-thread models still populate the lower end.  Nonetheless, all models now benefit from the same new technology with none fully ahead of or behind the others. 
    All models also feature a breakthrough in peripheralconnectivity that combines bandwidths of both PCI Express and DisplayPort intoa bus markedly faster than any bus presently in use.  Christened “Thunderbolt”, the new interface offers enormous potential with its theoretical 10 gigabit-per-second bandwidth.  However, devices using Thunderbolt are only beginning to emerge on the market,thus it is still too early to offer any concrete opinion regarding thistechnology.
    As these models are currently on sale (and have recentlybeen updated) at the Apple Store and Apple Authorized Resellers worldwide, to proffer any opinion of current models defeats the purpose of this, anhistorical document of Mac portable evolution.
    Conclusion and Final Thoughts
    To have witnessed and tracked the evolution of Apple’snotebook lines from 2006 to the present is no small feat.  One could say that doing so is in fact opening a window on the history of Apple itself, for it is in Apple’s notebooks that we have seen the greatest innovations both from the company and in computing itself.  From their inceptionin 2006, Apple’s Intel notebooks have evolved into some of the best and mostreliable notebooks on the market today. To be able to run Windows as well asthe Mac OS only solidifies that position.
    Yet, with each stage of their evolution, the MacBook, MacBookPro and MacBook Air, while they have made significant forward progress, havehad to sacrifice features that some users find essential.  Still, while the complaints roll in with each generation of notebooks, time must march on. Apple is a computer company after all, and must continually update its wares if it is to remain in its current position near the top of the industryat large.
    The stark realities of Apple’s business, however, should never be used as an excuse to buy the latest and greatest hardware even if yours seems less capable than someone else’s. Holding onto older Apple hardware may actually put you at an advantage, since you may still be able to work with hardware that newer models don’tsupport.  This is one of many reasons Macs tend to stick around longer than most Windows PCs.
    I certainly hope you have enjoyed this look back at Apple’s Intel notebook lines.  As a proudmember of the Mac community for almost eight years and a volunteer whose role connects him to computing past, I find this knowledge of the past fascinating; and yet it is vital to maintain such a background, as it can give us as users an idea of where the industry will be in the months and years to come. 

    Due to a copy/paste glitch, some necessary spaces have inadvertently been removed.  If I could fix this, I would.

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