The simple packaging technique may be to simply copy or unzip the extension's
files into the SkyVault directory hierarchy.
As well as copying individual files,
perhaps using a scripting language or build tool such as Ant, it is possible to simply package
the files into a Zip with an embedded directory structure, and then unzip this over the SkyVault
installation. This can be an effective technique during the early phases of
development.
Many development environments employ a build process that can execute a script to move unpackaged modified files from source control into the web application's exploded WAR file. Ant, Bash, Maven or a scripting language can achieve this.
Moving unpackaged files has the advantage of being quick and easy to understand, but it may be better to package the files into a Zip artifact that will then be unzipped over the exploded WAR.
CAUTION:
This approach is not recommended for QA or production environments, as
Tomcat (and other application servers) may re-explode WAR files at unpredictable times,
thereby overwriting any extensions that may have been deployed using this technique. This is
one of the reasons that AMP files were created.