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Resteasy has a few different plugins for different embedabble HTTP and/or Servlet containers if use Resteasy in a test environment, or within an environment where you do not want a Servlet engine dependency.
Undertow is a new Servlet Container that is used by WildFly (JBoss Community Server). You can embed Undertow as you wish. Here's a a test that shows it in action.
import io.undertow.servlet.api.DeploymentInfo; import org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.undertow.UndertowJaxrsServer; import org.jboss.resteasy.test.TestPortProvider; import org.junit.AfterClass; import org.junit.Assert; import org.junit.BeforeClass; import org.junit.Test; import javax.ws.rs.ApplicationPath; import javax.ws.rs.GET; import javax.ws.rs.Path; import javax.ws.rs.Produces; import javax.ws.rs.client.Client; import javax.ws.rs.client.ClientBuilder; import javax.ws.rs.core.Application; import java.util.HashSet; import java.util.Set; /** * @author <a href="mailto:bill@burkecentral.com">Bill Burke</a> * @version $Revision: 1 $ */ public class UndertowTest { private static UndertowJaxrsServer server; @Path("/test") public static class Resource { @GET @Produces("text/plain") public String get() { return "hello world"; } } @ApplicationPath("/base") public static class MyApp extends Application { @Override public Set<Class<?>> getClasses() { HashSet<Class<?>> classes = new HashSet<Class<?>>(); classes.add(Resource.class); return classes; } } @BeforeClass public static void init() throws Exception { server = new UndertowJaxrsServer().start(); } @AfterClass public static void stop() throws Exception { server.stop(); } @Test public void testApplicationPath() throws Exception { server.deploy(MyApp.class); Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); String val = client.target(TestPortProvider.generateURL("/base/test")) .request().get(String.class); Assert.assertEquals("hello world", val); client.close(); } @Test public void testApplicationContext() throws Exception { server.deploy(MyApp.class, "/root"); Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); String val = client.target(TestPortProvider.generateURL("/root/test")) .request().get(String.class); Assert.assertEquals("hello world", val); client.close(); } @Test public void testDeploymentInfo() throws Exception { DeploymentInfo di = server.undertowDeployment(MyApp.class); di.setContextPath("/di"); di.setDeploymentName("DI"); server.deploy(di); Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); String val = client.target(TestPortProvider.generateURL("/di/base/test")) .request().get(String.class); Assert.assertEquals("hello world", val); client.close(); } }
The Sun JDK comes with a simple HTTP server implementation (com.sun.net.httpserver.HttpServer) which you can run Resteasy on top of.
HttpServer httpServer = HttpServer.create(new InetSocketAddress(port), 10); contextBuilder = new HttpContextBuilder(); contextBuilder.getDeployment().getActualResourceClasses().add(SimpleResource.class); HttpContext context = contextBuilder.bind(httpServer); context.getAttributes().put("some.config.info", "42"); httpServer.start(); contextBuilder.cleanup(); httpServer.stop(0);
Create your HttpServer the way you want then use the org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.sun.http.HttpContextBuilder to initialize Resteasy and bind it to an HttpContext. The HttpContext attributes are available by injecting in a org.jboss.resteasy.spi.ResteasyConfiguration interface using @Context within your provider and resource classes.
Maven project you must include is:
<dependency> <groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId> <artifactId>resteasy-jdk-http</artifactId> <version>3.1.0.Final</version> </dependency>
RESTEasy integrates with the TJWS Embeddable Servlet container. It comes with this distribution, or you can reference the Maven artifact. You must also provide a servlet API dependency as well.
<dependency> <groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId> <artifactId>tjws</artifactId> <version>3.1.0.Final</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>javax.servlet</groupId> <artifactId>servlet-api</artifactId> <version>2.5</version> </dependency>
From the distribution, move the jars in resteasy-jaxrs.war/WEB-INF/lib into your classpath. You must both programmatically register your JAX-RS beans using the embedded server's Registry. Here's an example:
@Path("/") public class MyResource { @GET public String get() { return "hello world"; } public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception { TJWSEmbeddedJaxrsServer tjws = new TJWSEmbeddedJaxrsServer(); tjws.setPort(8080); tjws.start(); tjws.getRegistry().addPerRequestResource(RestEasy485Resource.class); } }
The server can either host non-encrypted or SSL based resources, but not both. See the Javadoc for TJWSEmbeddedJaxrsServer as well as its superclass TJWSServletServer. The TJWS website is also a good place for information.
If you want to use Spring, see the SpringBeanProcessor. Here's a pseudo-code example
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception { final TJWSEmbeddedJaxrsServer tjws = new TJWSEmbeddedJaxrsServer(); tjws.setPort(8081); tjws.start(); org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.server.servlet.SpringBeanProcessor processor = new SpringBeanProcessor(tjws.getDeployment().getRegistry(), tjws.getDeployment().getFactory(); ConfigurableBeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(...); factory.addBeanPostProcessor(processor); }
NOTE: TJWS is now deprecated. Consider using the more modern Undertow.
Resteasy has integration with the popular Netty project as well..
public static void start(ResteasyDeployment deployment) throws Exception { netty = new NettyJaxrsServer(); netty.setDeployment(deployment); netty.setPort(TestPortProvider.getPort()); netty.setRootResourcePath(""); netty.setSecurityDomain(null); netty.start(); }
Maven project you must include is:
<dependency> <groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId> <artifactId>resteasy-netty</artifactId> <version>3.1.0.Final</version> </dependency>
Resteasy has integration with the popular Vert.x project as well..
public static void start(VertxResteasyDeployment deployment) throws Exception { VertxJaxrsServer server = new VertxJaxrsServer(); server.setDeployment(deployment); server.setPort(TestPortProvider.getPort()); server.setRootResourcePath(""); server.setSecurityDomain(null); server.start(); }
Maven project you must include is:
<dependency> <groupId>org.jboss.resteasy</groupId> <artifactId>resteasy-vertx</artifactId> <version>3.1.0.Final</version> </dependency>
The server will bootstrap its own Vert.x instance and Http server.
When a resource is called, it is done with the Vert.x Event Loop thread, keep in mind to not block this thread and respect the Vert.x programming model, see the related Vert.x manual page.
Vert.x extends the Resteasy registry to provide a new binding scope that creates resources per Event Loop:
VertxResteasyDeployment deployment = new VertxResteasyDeployment(); // Create an instance of resource per Event Loop deployment.getRegistry().addPerInstanceResource(Resource.class);
The per instance binding scope caches the same resource instance for each event loop providing the same concurrency model than a verticle deployed multiple times.
Vert.x can also embed a Resteasy deployment, making easy to use Jax-RS annotated controller in Vert.x applications:
Vertx vertx = Vertx.vertx(); HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(); // Set an handler calling Resteasy server.requestHandler(new VertxRequestHandler(vertx, deployment)); // Start the server server.listen(8080, "localhost");
Vert.x objects can be injected in annotated resources:
@GET @Path("/somepath") @Produces("text/plain") public String context( @Context io.vertx.core.Context context, @Context io.vertx.core.Vertx vertx, @Context io.vertx.core.http.HttpServerRequest req, @Context io.vertx.core.http.HttpServerResponse resp) { return "the-response"; }