Like the XFire (still crying on its death :( ) I really like the process of: Write a simple annotated POJO, compile and run, that's it.
Anyway, since I encountered a couple of issues, and implemented some nice extra (XStream adapter and Spring beans injection) here are my findings.
First thanks to getting started entry and getting started with jersey that convinced me Jersey is the way to go.
Getting started
I'm using Maven and Jetty and so running the HelloWorld example got this bug 70. Setting up the Annotation scanner per Java packages solves the problem, and anyway sounds a lot more manageable to me. So here is my web.xml (for 0.8):
<servlet>
<servlet-name>Jersey Web Application</servlet-name>
<servlet-class>org.artifactory.rest.servlet.ArtifactoryRestServlet</servlet-class>
<init-param>
<param-name>com.sun.jersey.config.property.resourceConfigClass</param-name>
<param-value>com.sun.jersey.api.core.PackagesResourceConfig</param-value>
</init-param>
<init-param>
<param-name>com.sun.jersey.config.property.packages</param-name>
<param-value>org.artifactory.rest</param-value>
</init-param>
<!-- Usable only in 0.9 version of Jersey
<init-param>
<param-name>com.sun.jersey.spi.container.ContainerRequestFilters</param-name>
<param-value>org.artifactory.rest.common.AuthorizationContainerRequestFilter</param-value>
</init-param>
-->
<load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup>
</servlet>
<servlet-mapping>
<servlet-name>Jersey Web Application</servlet-name>
<url-pattern>/api/*</url-pattern>
</servlet-mapping>
So now the annotations scanner reads correctly my classes, and I needed only 2 dependencies in my pom.xml:
<dependency>
<groupId>javax.servlet</groupId>
<artifactId>servlet-api</artifactId>
<version>2.5</version>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.sun.jersey</groupId>
<artifactId>jersey</artifactId>
<version>${jersey.version}</version>
</dependency>
XStream Message Reader and Writer
Most of my object model classes are using XStream, so I wanted Jersey to marshall/unmarshall automatically any XStream class. It was amazingly easy, here is my XStream message reader provider class:
@ProduceMime({"application/xml", "text/xml", "*/*"})
@ConsumeMime({"application/xml", "text/xml", "*/*"})
@Provider
public class XStreamAliasProvider extends AbstractMessageReaderWriterProvider<Object> {
private static final Set<Class> processed = new HashSet<Class>();
private static final XStream xstream = new XStream();
private static final String DEFAULT_ENCODING = "utf-8";
public boolean isReadable(Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation annotations[]) {
return type.getAnnotation(XStreamAlias.class) != null;
}
public boolean isWriteable(Class<?> type, Type genericType, Annotation annotations[]) {
return type.getAnnotation(XStreamAlias.class) != null;
}
protected static String getCharsetAsString(MediaType m) {
if (m == null) {
return DEFAULT_ENCODING;
}
String result = m.getParameters().get("charset");
return (result == null) ? DEFAULT_ENCODING : result;
}
protected XStream getXStream(Class type) {
synchronized (processed) {
if (!processed.contains(type)) {
xstream.processAnnotations(type);
processed.add(type);
}
}
return xstream;
}
public Object readFrom(Class<Object> aClass, Type genericType, Annotation[] annotations,
MediaType mediaType, MultivaluedMap<String, String> map, InputStream stream)
throws IOException, WebApplicationException {
String encoding = getCharsetAsString(mediaType);
XStream xStream = getXStream(aClass);
return xStream.fromXML(new InputStreamReader(stream, encoding));
}
public void writeTo(Object o, Class<?> aClass, Type type, Annotation[] annotations,
MediaType mediaType, MultivaluedMap<String, Object> map, OutputStream stream)
throws IOException, WebApplicationException {
String encoding = getCharsetAsString(mediaType);
XStream xStream = getXStream(o.getClass());
xStream.toXML(o, new OutputStreamWriter(stream, encoding));
}
}
Spring integration
All my backend objects are Spring service bean, so I wanted autowired injection of Spring beans. Here again it was really nice. I defined my own annotation @SpringAutowired, and created a SpringBeanInjector for it that was fetching my context for a bean of the type of the injected field. Here I'm adding manually the list of "injectable" interfaces, because: I don't have an annotation to identify them :) With EJB3 it should be a lot cleaner to use @Stateless.
Here is my annotation:
@Target({ElementType.PARAMETER, ElementType.METHOD, ElementType.FIELD})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Documented
public @interface SpringAutowired {
}
And here the bean injector class as inner class of my Servlet:
public class ArtifactoryRestServlet extends ServletContainer {
@Override
protected void configure(ServletConfig config, ResourceConfig rc,
WebApplication application) {
super.configure(config, rc, application);
Set<Object> pi = rc.getProviderInstances();
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(AuthorizationService.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(CentralConfigService.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(UserGroupService.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(AclService.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(RepositoryService.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(ArtifactoryContext.class));
pi.add(getSpringBeanInjector(SecurityService.class));
}
public static <T> SpringBeanInjector<T> getSpringBeanInjector(Class<T> beanInterface) {
return new SpringBeanInjector<T>(beanInterface);
}
public static class SpringBeanInjector<T>
implements InjectableProvider<SpringAutowired, Type>, Injectable<T> {
private Class<T> type;
public SpringBeanInjector(Class<T> t) {
this.type = t;
}
public ComponentProvider.Scope getScope() {
return ComponentProvider.Scope.PerRequest;
}
public Injectable getInjectable(ComponentContext ic,
SpringAutowired autowired, Type type) {
if (type.equals(this.type)) {
return this;
} else {
return null;
}
}
public T getValue(HttpContext context) {
/*
(ArtifactoryContext) context
.getAttribute("org.springframework.web.context.ROOT");
*/
ArtifactoryContext springContext = ContextHelper.get();
if (springContext == null) {
return null;
}
return springContext.beanForType(type);
}
}
}
Conclusion
I really liked the WebBeans consept and the Guice injection, but actually working with these nice modern Framework architecture on a real case proved that's the way to go.
Morale: "Chapeau bas for Paul Sandoz at Sun"