I'm in a team that is converting a suite of Java applications to use OSGi. Previously, we used our own home-brew class loader system that has some similarities to OSGi, but it was nothing but trouble; we expect that by moving to using a system like Apache Felix we can have a system that works better while requiring less overall effort on our part to support.
We have been converting the modules that make up the applications into OSGi bundles, a largely painless affair with the use of Spring DM. However, we — well, I as it's my responsibility in the team — need some way to reliably produce applications from this via a tool like Maven (or Jenkins); having a redistributable application installer that will install everything for the user is an absolute requirement. (We know our userbase fairly well; they want a simple install that won't download extra things after installation, well, not unless they decide to install extra plugins, but that's another story.) We do not wish to have to build the application manually at a console, or by using a GUI, as manual processes are too likely to run into silly human errors; we want to get it right and debugged once.
Moreover, some of the applications in our suite have to take command line arguments “like a conventional application”. (The application in question does significant processing internally, and sometimes needs to be invoked from other processes, such as web portals.) I know this causes some issues with the default Felix main, which only allows command line arguments for its own purposes instead of providing a way by default to export those to the bundles. (I know we could wrap things with a shell script so as to pass them in as properties, but… ewwww… there's got to be a better way. I suspect that making a custom main that exports a service providing access to the command line arguments is the best method.)
So, my question is what is a recommended way of building whole OSGi applications automatically, and am I using a reasonable approach to provide the command line arguments?