Entity Proxies
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Home - Codehaus - 0 views
docs.codehaus.org/...Home
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shared by Hendy Irawan on 25 Dec 10
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Janino is a super-small, super-fast Java™ compiler. Not only can it compile a set of source files to a set of class files like the JAVAC tool, but also can it compile a Java™ expression, block, class body or source file in memory, load the bytecode and execute it directly in the same JVM. Janino is not intended to be a development tool, but an embedded compiler for run-time compilation purposes, e.g. expression evaluators or "server pages" engines like JSP. JANINO is integrated with Apache Commons JCI ("Java Compiler Interface") and JBoss Rules / Drools. JANINO can also be used for static code analysis or code manipulation. JANINO can be configured to use the javax.tools.JavaCompiler API (available since JDK 1.6), which removes the Java 5-related limitations.
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Arquillian - JBoss Community - 0 views
www.jboss.org/arquillian
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shared by Hendy Irawan on 16 Apr 11
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Arquillian enables you to test your business logic in a remote or embedded container. Alternatively, it can deploy an archive to the container so the test can interact as a remote client. The mission of the Arquillian project is to provide a simple test harness that abstracts away all container lifecycle and deployment from the test logic so developers can easily produce a broad range of integration tests for their enterprise Java applications. Arquillian is part of the JBoss Testing initiative, an umbrella project focused on providing a comprehensive testing tool set for application developers. Arquillian can either execute a test case inside the container, in which case the test class is deployed by Arquillian along with the code under test, or hold back the test class so it can act as a remote client to the deployed code. All the developer has to do is write the test logic. In short... Arquillian makes integration testing a breeze!
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Formatter (Java 2 Platform SE 5.0) - java platform format string syntax - 0 views
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Space: Arquillian - JBoss Community - 0 views
community.jboss.org/arquillian
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shared by Hendy Irawan on 19 Jul 10
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"Test in-container! Arquillian logo This space contains the user discussions and articles for the Arquillian project. The development discussions and articles are found in the Arquillian Development Space and the FAQs are located in the Arquillian FAQ Space. Information about the project can be found on the Project Site. We invite you to join us in the #jbosstesting channel on freenode IRC to chat about Arquillian, ShrinkWrap, Embedded AS and testing. This channel is logged by echelog and JBossBot is there to expand JIRA issues."
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Getting Started with RequestFactory - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views
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- ...147 more annotations...
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BigDecimal, BigInteger, Boolean, Byte, Enum, Character, Date, Double, Float, Integer, Long, Short, String, Void
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Methods that return a Request object in the client interface are implemented as static methods on the entity
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backing store (JDO, JPA, etc.) is responsible for updating the version each time the object is persisted,
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On the client side, RequestFactory keeps track of objects that have been modified and sends only changes
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automatically populates bean-style properties between entities on the server and the corresponding EntityProxy on the client,
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It is not necessary to represent every property and method from the server-side entity in the EntityProxy
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Shrinkwrap - JBoss Community - 0 views
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Shrinkwrap provides a simple mechanism to assemble archives like JARs, WARs, and EARs with a friendly, fluent API.
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Shrinkwrap provides a simple mechanism to assemble archives like JARs, WARs, and EARs with a friendly, fluent API. JavaArchive archive = ShrinkWrap.create(JavaArchive.class,"archive.jar") .addClasses(MyClass.class,MyOtherClass.class) .addResource("mystuff.properties"); From there you may deploy directly into any supported integration container like JBoss EmbeddedAS, GlassFish v3 Embedded, Jetty, or OpenEJB. Or perhaps you'd like to export the archive to a file or exploded directory structure. Maybe you'd prefer to serialize it over the network to a remote host. The possibilities are limitless. To boot, ShrinkWrap is the supported deployment mechanism of the Arquillian project, and together we render the testing of true enterprise components amiable as a puppy. Where Java EE brought a POJO programming model to application development, we've brought it to testing. You handle your business logic; we'll do the rest. To foster community participation, the majority of documentation and examples are available through our Wiki. Releases are available either via our Downloads section, or through the JBoss Maven Repository, which we recommend is configured in ${userHomeDir}/.m2/settings.xml:
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AtomServer 2.3.4 - - 0 views
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"AtomServer is a generic data store implemented as a RESTful web service. It is designed as a GData-style Atom Store. It is based on the following concepts and protocols; REST. REST is a design pattern. It's not a technology like SOAP or HTTP. REST is a proven design pattern for building loosely-coupled, highly-scalable applications. There are important benefits to sticking to the REST design pattern; Simple. REST is incredibly simple to define. There are just a handful of principles and well defined semantics associated with it. Scalable. REST leads to a very scalable solution by promoting a stateless protocol and allowing state to be distributed across the web. Layered. REST allows any number of intermediaries, such as proxies, gateways, and firewalls. Ultimately REST is just a web site, albeit one that adheres to a design pattern, so one can easily layer aspects such as Security, Compression, etc. on an as needed basis. Atom. Fundamentally, Atom is an XML vocabulary for describing lists of timestamped entries. These entries can be anything, although because Atom was originally conceived to replace RSS, Atom lists are Feeds, and the items in the lists are Entries. Atom is a RESTful protocol. AtomServer stands on the shoulders of giants. It is built on top of several open source projects - most notably, Apache Abdera (a Java-based Atom Publishing framework) and Spring. AtomServer is an Atom Store. Thus, it requires a relational database to run. AtomServer currently supports; PostgresSQL, SQLServer, and HSQLDB. Using HSQLDB, AtomServer requires zero configuration and can run out-of-the-box. While this configuration is suitable for many applications, those that see significant load will likely require a database with better transactional semantics, such as PostgreSQL. AtomServer is easy to use. It deploys as a simple WAR file into any Servlet container. Or alternately, can be used out-of-the-box as a standalone server, running with