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Spring Roo

Spring Roo is an open-source software tool that uses convention-over-configuration principles to provide rapid application development of Java-based enterprise software.[1] The resulting applications use common Java technologies such as Spring Framework, Java Persistence API, Thymeleaf, Apache Maven and AspectJ.[2] Spring Roo is a member of the Spring portfolio of projects.

Spring Roo
Spring Roo 2.0.x
Developer(s)DISID, Pivotal Software
Stable release
1.3.2 / September 1, 2015 (2015-09-01)
Preview release
2.0.0.RELEASE / September 30, 2019 (2019-09-30)
Written inJava
PlatformJava SE
TypeRapid application development
LicenseApache License 2.0
Websiteprojects.spring.io/spring-roo/

Motivation and history edit

Spring Roo's mission statement is to "fundamentally improve Java developer productivity without compromising engineering integrity or flexibility".[3]

The technology was first demonstrated during the opening keynote at the SpringOne Europe developer conference on 27 April 2009, with an initial alpha release concurrently being published. During the keynote an application was built live on-stage that would be used by conference attendees to vote on the preferred name for the project (which at that time was codenamed "Roo" within SpringSource).[4] Ultimately the name "Spring Roo" was preferred over alternatives including Spring Boost, Spring Spark, Spring HyperDrive and Spring Dart.[5]

Several releases followed,[6][7] with the Roo 1.0.0.RELEASE (general availability) released in December 2009. In October 2010, Spring Roo 1.1.0.RELEASE was released. The 1.1.0 release moved to an OSGi foundation with associated add-on discovery model, plus added support for incremental database reverse engineering, Spring MVC page complexity reduction, Google Web Toolkit, Google App Engine, Apache Solr, JSON and smaller features like serializable automation.[8] The current Roo project engineers are employed by SpringSource and as such Roo releases typically support the latest available releases of other Spring portfolio projects.

In 2014 DISID takes over the leadership of the open source framework Spring Roo after the partnership agreement with Pivotal. They collaborate on further development of the Spring Roo project. Roo will continue in its goal of providing a code-gen style of RAD framework.

The Spring Roo project will remain as an open source project under Spring, maintaining the same current licensing policy. Both Pivotal and DISID are calling on the Spring and Java communities for anyone who would like to collaborate in the project.

Standards and technology compatibility edit

Roo's default installation facilitates the creation of applications that comply with the following standards and major technologies:[9]

The above list can be augmented through additional Roo add-ons, which provide Roo's method of extensibility.

User interface edit

Spring Roo's main user interface is a command-line shell. The shell provides both a command-line interface and also a mechanism to host plug-ins (which are called "add-ons" in Roo). One key design goal of Roo is to ensure a user can continue to work in a "natural way", which typically means using their preferred integrated development environment (IDE) or text editor for most tasks. As such Roo is often loaded in a separate window to the IDE or text editor, and will monitor the file system for changes made by the user outside of Roo. A startup-time scan of a user's project is also performed to determine any changes that may have been made while Roo was not running.

The user interface shell supports extensive usability features including command-line completion (i.e. press TAB), online help, hinting (a form of context-sensitive help) and contextual awareness (which provides automatic inference of likely intentions based on recent activity). This allows a user to create a new software project via the Roo shell, or use Roo on an existing project. The following is an example of the commands used by Roo to create a new application plus the Spring Boot Maven plugin run goal to compile and run the application using an embedded HTTP server:

$ mkdir hello $ cd hello $ roo.sh roo> project setup --topLevelPackage com.foo roo> jpa setup --provider HIBERNATE --database HYPERSONIC_IN_MEMORY roo> entity jpa --class ~.domain.Timer roo> field string --fieldName message --notNull roo> repository jpa --all roo> service --all roo> web mvc setup roo> web mvc view setup --type THYMELEAF roo> web mvc controller --all --responseType THYMELEAF roo> web mvc controller --all --pathPrefix /api roo> quit $ mvn spring-boot:run 

The above commands did not need to be typed in full, but rather were completed using TAB. Additionally, the "hint" command could have been used to acquire help at any time.

Architecture edit

While there are many ways that software can automatically generate code,[11] Roo operates by generating AspectJ inter-type declarations (otherwise known as mixins or introductions). This achieves separation of concerns, as the code maintained by Roo is in a different compilation unit from the code a user writes. This means Roo can incrementally modify the AspectJ inter-type declarations that it needs to and leave all other files intact.[12][13][14]

Spring Roo uses add-ons to provide all the functionality within and on top of an OSGi runtime system based on Apache Felix.

Base add-ons edit

There are numerous commands available in Roo, depending on which "base add-ons" (those which ship with Roo) and "third-party add-ons" (those that do not ship with Roo) have been installed. The base add-ons shipping with Roo 2.0.x include:

  • Add-On Creator: enables easy creation of third-party Roo add-ons
  • Backup: enables backups to be made to a ZIP file by typing backup
  • Bean Info: exposes JavaBean property, accessor and mutator metadata (primarily used by other add-ons)
  • Configurable: introduces Spring Framework's @Configurable annotation (primarily used by other add-ons)
  • Database reverse engineering: allows incremental reverse engineering of relational databases
  • Data on Demand: provides seed data that is compliant with JSR 303 (JavaBean Validation) annotations present in entities
  • DTO: extensive support for automatically maintaining Data Transfer Objects
  • Email: simplifies setup of SMTP-based emails and mail sender support via Javamail
  • Entity: extensive support for automatically maintaining Java Persistence API @Entity classes
  • Java Bean: automatically maintains JavaBean getters/setters for classes with an @RooJavaBean annotation
  • JDBC: encapsulates OSGi-compliant access to JDBC drivers shipped in different bundles (primarily used by other add-ons)
  • JMS: simplifies connecting to a JMS provider (or embedding ActiveMQ) and sending/receiving JMS messages
  • JPA: installs a specified JPA provider and sets up JDBC accordingly
  • JSON: adds JSON related serialization and deserialization methods to POJOs
  • Logging: sets up Log4j, including command-based log level configuration
  • Pluralization: provides pluralization of nouns (primarily used by other add-ons)
  • Property Editor: manages property editors, as required by Spring MVC
  • Property File: manages Java properties files and provides shell commands to read, set and remove property values
  • Security: sets up Spring Security, including login pages, filters and dependencies
  • Test: produces JUnit integration tests for project classes
  • ToString: produces a valid toString() method for any class with the @RooToString annotation
  • Web Flow: installs the Spring Web Flow and creates a default flow
  • Web MVC: maintains the view layer based on Spring MVC plus Thymeleaf templates and the RESTful API
  • WS: produces SOAP services and SOAP clients

Roo core modules edit

Roo also includes a core set of modules that provide a hosted execution environment for different add-ons. These major modules include:

  • Support: used by core modules and add-ons for common utility class support services
  • Metadata: provides a metadata service provider interface and implementation that includes dependency registration and caching
  • File monitor: publishes events following detected file system changes (the default implementation uses auto-scaled disk polling)
  • File undo: provides a file undo facility for use by the process manager
  • Project: abstracts typical end user project build systems like Apache Maven and Apache Ant
  • Process manager: offers an ACID-like file system abstraction that includes disk rollback and process synchronization
  • Classpath: performs abstract syntax tree parsing and type binding of Java and AspectJ compilation units
  • Felix: integrates with Apache Felix, such as providing "osgi" commands in the Roo shell
  • OBR: adds Apache Felix OSGi Bundle Repository capabilities
  • URL Stream: encapsulates access to downloads in different host environments (Roo shell, IDE embedding) and enforces the Pretty Good Privacy-based httppgp:// protocol handler

Differentiation edit

Spring Roo differentiates from other convention-over-configuration rapid application development tools in the following major ways:[15]

  1. Java platform productivity: Roo provides a productivity solution for Java developers. It does not require the user to program in any language other than Java. It also uses mainstream Java enterprise application standards and technologies (as listed above) to maximize reuse of existing developer knowledge, skills and experience.
  2. Usability: Roo's shell is designed to provide a discoverable, easy-to-use environment that minimizes training requirements. Roo annotations all start with @Roo to facilitate code assist (command line completion in IDEs). Users can use their IDE for all operations and do not need to be aware of Roo running. Roo also supports users editing their files when Roo is not running.
  3. No runtime: Roo does not provide a runtime API or require specific runtime components. This ensures there is no Roo-related CPU, memory and disk storage resource consumption at runtime. Roo code is optimized for small-footprint cloud deployment and high scalability use cases.
  4. Avoids lock-in: Roo can be rapidly removed from a user project, which is useful to protect against vendor lock-in. This is possible because there is no runtime component to remove, @Roo annotations are "source retention" only (ensuring they are not preserved in compiled *.class files)[16] and Roo's AspectJ inter-type declarations can be "pushed in" to standard *.java compilation units.[17][18]
  5. Extensibility: Roo's separation of core infrastructure and base add-ons intends to allow third parties to easily extend Roo.[19][20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "InfoWorld: SpringSource CEO to tout Roo, a new Java enhancement" by Paul Krill; Dated 2009-06-01.
  2. ^ "SD Times: Roo released to handle repetitive Spring tasks" 2012-02-25 at the Wayback Machine by Alex Handy; Dated 2009-10-19.
  3. ^ "Spring Roo reference documentation", Mission Statement section; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  4. ^ "Tech Videos: The Future of Java Innovation" 2009-10-09 at the Wayback Machine by Rod Johnson (CEO of SpringSource); Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  5. ^ "Spring Roo reference documentation", History section; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  6. ^ "InfoQ: Spring Roo 1.0 M1 Released" by Srini Penchikala; Dated 2009-5-31.
  7. ^ "Jira issue tracking for Spring Roo Project releases"; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  8. ^ "A Big Hop Forward: Spring Roo 1.1.0 Is Released!" 2010-10-28 at the Wayback Machine, by Ben Alex (lead of Spring Roo at SpringSource); Retrieved 2010-10-27.
  9. ^ "TechCast: Spring Roo podcast" by Ken Rimple; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  10. ^ "Spring Roo 1.2.4.RELEASE available now " Dated 2013-10-17.
  11. ^ "InfoQ: Role of Code Generation in Java Development" by Srini Penchikala; Dated 2009-9-3.
  12. ^ "InfoQ: Introduction to Spring Roo 1.0.0 Video Presentation", by Ben Alex (lead of Spring Roo at SpringSource); Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  13. ^ "JAX Italia 2009 Conference: Spring Roo" by Massimiliano Dessì; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  14. ^ "Philadelphia Java User Group: Spring Roo" by Ken Rimple; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  15. ^ "Spring Roo Home Page"; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  16. ^ "Sun Java 5 JavaDocs for RetentionPolicy.SOURCE" by Sun Microsystems; Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  17. ^ "Push-In Refactoring for AJDT" by Andrew Eisenberg (AJDT project lead at SpringSource); Retrieved 2009-10-17.
  18. ^ "Eclipse AJDT intertypes and Push-In refactoring" 2010-01-17 at the Wayback Machine by Dhruba Bandopadhyay; Dated 2009-12-31.
  19. ^ "Italian Java User Group JavaDay IV Conference: Spring Roo Internals" by Massimiliano Dessì; Retrieved 2010-2-21.
  20. ^ "Spring, Roo, and Alfresco Too: What Alfresco Gave to Spring and Why" by Jeff Potts; Dated 2009-12-16.

External links edit

  • Official website  

spring, open, source, software, tool, that, uses, convention, over, configuration, principles, provide, rapid, application, development, java, based, enterprise, software, resulting, applications, common, java, technologies, such, spring, framework, java, pers. Spring Roo is an open source software tool that uses convention over configuration principles to provide rapid application development of Java based enterprise software 1 The resulting applications use common Java technologies such as Spring Framework Java Persistence API Thymeleaf Apache Maven and AspectJ 2 Spring Roo is a member of the Spring portfolio of projects Spring RooSpring Roo 2 0 xDeveloper s DISID Pivotal SoftwareStable release1 3 2 September 1 2015 2015 09 01 Preview release2 0 0 RELEASE September 30 2019 2019 09 30 Written inJavaPlatformJava SETypeRapid application developmentLicenseApache License 2 0Websiteprojects wbr spring wbr io wbr spring roo wbr Contents 1 Motivation and history 2 Standards and technology compatibility 3 User interface 4 Architecture 4 1 Base add ons 4 2 Roo core modules 5 Differentiation 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksMotivation and history editSpring Roo s mission statement is to fundamentally improve Java developer productivity without compromising engineering integrity or flexibility 3 The technology was first demonstrated during the opening keynote at the SpringOne Europe developer conference on 27 April 2009 with an initial alpha release concurrently being published During the keynote an application was built live on stage that would be used by conference attendees to vote on the preferred name for the project which at that time was codenamed Roo within SpringSource 4 Ultimately the name Spring Roo was preferred over alternatives including Spring Boost Spring Spark Spring HyperDrive and Spring Dart 5 Several releases followed 6 7 with the Roo 1 0 0 RELEASE general availability released in December 2009 In October 2010 Spring Roo 1 1 0 RELEASE was released The 1 1 0 release moved to an OSGi foundation with associated add on discovery model plus added support for incremental database reverse engineering Spring MVC page complexity reduction Google Web Toolkit Google App Engine Apache Solr JSON and smaller features like serializable automation 8 The current Roo project engineers are employed by SpringSource and as such Roo releases typically support the latest available releases of other Spring portfolio projects In 2014 DISID takes over the leadership of the open source framework Spring Roo after the partnership agreement with Pivotal They collaborate on further development of the Spring Roo project Roo will continue in its goal of providing a code gen style of RAD framework The Spring Roo project will remain as an open source project under Spring maintaining the same current licensing policy Both Pivotal and DISID are calling on the Spring and Java communities for anyone who would like to collaborate in the project Standards and technology compatibility editRoo s default installation facilitates the creation of applications that comply with the following standards and major technologies 9 Apache ActiveMQ as an embedded JMS implementation Apache Maven version 3 2 or above Apache Tomcat embedded execution support AspectJ used for AOP plus mixins to achieve separation of concerns AspectJ Development Tools Eclipse plugin Bootstrap version 3 3 6 or above Cloud computing via SpringSource Cloud Foundry Google App Engine and VMforce Eclipse IDE concurrent execution and project metadata creation EclipseLink as a JPA implementation Hibernate as a JPA implementation Java Bean Validation JSR 303 including Hibernate Validator Java API for XML Web Services both services and clients Java Message Service both message producers and consumers Java Persistence API multiple implementations Java Transaction API via Spring transaction abstraction Java version 5 6 or 7 Java 7 is supported since Roo 1 2 4 10 JQuery version 1 11 or above JSON REST support JUnit automated tests for user projects Log4J installation and configuration OSGi the Roo tool is built on OSGi Representational State Transfer REST Spring Boot version 1 4 or above Spring Data JPA version 1 10 or above Spring Framework version 4 or above Spring Security version 4 or above Spring Web Flow installation and flow definition SpringSource Tool Suite STS has an embedded Roo shell and Roo command helpers Thymeleaf version 3 or above The above list can be augmented through additional Roo add ons which provide Roo s method of extensibility User interface editSpring Roo s main user interface is a command line shell The shell provides both a command line interface and also a mechanism to host plug ins which are called add ons in Roo One key design goal of Roo is to ensure a user can continue to work in a natural way which typically means using their preferred integrated development environment IDE or text editor for most tasks As such Roo is often loaded in a separate window to the IDE or text editor and will monitor the file system for changes made by the user outside of Roo A startup time scan of a user s project is also performed to determine any changes that may have been made while Roo was not running The user interface shell supports extensive usability features including command line completion i e press TAB online help hinting a form of context sensitive help and contextual awareness which provides automatic inference of likely intentions based on recent activity This allows a user to create a new software project via the Roo shell or use Roo on an existing project The following is an example of the commands used by Roo to create a new application plus the Spring Boot Maven plugin run goal to compile and run the application using an embedded HTTP server mkdir hello cd hello roo sh roo gt project setup topLevelPackage com foo roo gt jpa setup provider HIBERNATE database HYPERSONIC IN MEMORY roo gt entity jpa class domain Timer roo gt field string fieldName message notNull roo gt repository jpa all roo gt service all roo gt web mvc setup roo gt web mvc view setup type THYMELEAF roo gt web mvc controller all responseType THYMELEAF roo gt web mvc controller all pathPrefix api roo gt quit mvn spring boot run The above commands did not need to be typed in full but rather were completed using TAB Additionally the hint command could have been used to acquire help at any time Architecture editWhile there are many ways that software can automatically generate code 11 Roo operates by generating AspectJ inter type declarations otherwise known as mixins or introductions This achieves separation of concerns as the code maintained by Roo is in a different compilation unit from the code a user writes This means Roo can incrementally modify the AspectJ inter type declarations that it needs to and leave all other files intact 12 13 14 Spring Roo uses add ons to provide all the functionality within and on top of an OSGi runtime system based on Apache Felix Base add ons edit There are numerous commands available in Roo depending on which base add ons those which ship with Roo and third party add ons those that do not ship with Roo have been installed The base add ons shipping with Roo 2 0 x include Add On Creator enables easy creation of third party Roo add ons Backup enables backups to be made to a ZIP file by typing backup Bean Info exposes JavaBean property accessor and mutator metadata primarily used by other add ons Configurable introduces Spring Framework s Configurable annotation primarily used by other add ons Database reverse engineering allows incremental reverse engineering of relational databases Data on Demand provides seed data that is compliant with JSR 303 JavaBean Validation annotations present in entities DTO extensive support for automatically maintaining Data Transfer Objects Email simplifies setup of SMTP based emails and mail sender support via Javamail Entity extensive support for automatically maintaining Java Persistence API Entity classes Java Bean automatically maintains JavaBean getters setters for classes with an RooJavaBean annotation JDBC encapsulates OSGi compliant access to JDBC drivers shipped in different bundles primarily used by other add ons JMS simplifies connecting to a JMS provider or embedding ActiveMQ and sending receiving JMS messages JPA installs a specified JPA provider and sets up JDBC accordingly JSON adds JSON related serialization and deserialization methods to POJOs Logging sets up Log4j including command based log level configuration Pluralization provides pluralization of nouns primarily used by other add ons Property Editor manages property editors as required by Spring MVC Property File manages Java properties files and provides shell commands to read set and remove property values Security sets up Spring Security including login pages filters and dependencies Test produces JUnit integration tests for project classes ToString produces a valid toString method for any class with the RooToString annotation Web Flow installs the Spring Web Flow and creates a default flow Web MVC maintains the view layer based on Spring MVC plus Thymeleaf templates and the RESTful API WS produces SOAP services and SOAP clients Roo core modules edit Roo also includes a core set of modules that provide a hosted execution environment for different add ons These major modules include Support used by core modules and add ons for common utility class support services Metadata provides a metadata service provider interface and implementation that includes dependency registration and caching File monitor publishes events following detected file system changes the default implementation uses auto scaled disk polling File undo provides a file undo facility for use by the process manager Project abstracts typical end user project build systems like Apache Maven and Apache Ant Process manager offers an ACID like file system abstraction that includes disk rollback and process synchronization Classpath performs abstract syntax tree parsing and type binding of Java and AspectJ compilation units Felix integrates with Apache Felix such as providing osgi commands in the Roo shell OBR adds Apache Felix OSGi Bundle Repository capabilities URL Stream encapsulates access to downloads in different host environments Roo shell IDE embedding and enforces the Pretty Good Privacy based httppgp protocol handlerDifferentiation editSpring Roo differentiates from other convention over configuration rapid application development tools in the following major ways 15 Java platform productivity Roo provides a productivity solution for Java developers It does not require the user to program in any language other than Java It also uses mainstream Java enterprise application standards and technologies as listed above to maximize reuse of existing developer knowledge skills and experience Usability Roo s shell is designed to provide a discoverable easy to use environment that minimizes training requirements Roo annotations all start with Roo to facilitate code assist command line completion in IDEs Users can use their IDE for all operations and do not need to be aware of Roo running Roo also supports users editing their files when Roo is not running No runtime Roo does not provide a runtime API or require specific runtime components This ensures there is no Roo related CPU memory and disk storage resource consumption at runtime Roo code is optimized for small footprint cloud deployment and high scalability use cases Avoids lock in Roo can be rapidly removed from a user project which is useful to protect against vendor lock in This is possible because there is no runtime component to remove Roo annotations are source retention only ensuring they are not preserved in compiled class files 16 and Roo s AspectJ inter type declarations can be pushed in to standard java compilation units 17 18 Extensibility Roo s separation of core infrastructure and base add ons intends to allow third parties to easily extend Roo 19 20 See also edit nbsp Free and open source software portal nbsp Computer programming portal Grails framework Griffon framework A Desktop framework inspired by Grails Play FrameworkReferences edit InfoWorld SpringSource CEO to tout Roo a new Java enhancement by Paul Krill Dated 2009 06 01 SD Times Roo released to handle repetitive Spring tasks Archived 2012 02 25 at the Wayback Machine by Alex Handy Dated 2009 10 19 Spring Roo reference documentation Mission Statement section Retrieved 2010 2 21 Tech Videos The Future of Java Innovation Archived 2009 10 09 at the Wayback Machine by Rod Johnson CEO of SpringSource Retrieved 2009 10 17 Spring Roo reference documentation History section Retrieved 2010 2 21 InfoQ Spring Roo 1 0 M1 Released by Srini Penchikala Dated 2009 5 31 Jira issue tracking for Spring Roo Project releases Retrieved 2010 2 21 A Big Hop Forward Spring Roo 1 1 0 Is Released Archived 2010 10 28 at the Wayback Machine by Ben Alex lead of Spring Roo at SpringSource Retrieved 2010 10 27 TechCast Spring Roo podcast by Ken Rimple Retrieved 2010 2 21 Spring Roo 1 2 4 RELEASE available now Dated 2013 10 17 InfoQ Role of Code Generation in Java Development by Srini Penchikala Dated 2009 9 3 InfoQ Introduction to Spring Roo 1 0 0 Video Presentation by Ben Alex lead of Spring Roo at SpringSource Retrieved 2010 2 21 JAX Italia 2009 Conference Spring Roo by Massimiliano Dessi Retrieved 2010 2 21 Philadelphia Java User Group Spring Roo by Ken Rimple Retrieved 2010 2 21 Spring Roo Home Page Retrieved 2010 2 21 Sun Java 5 JavaDocs for RetentionPolicy SOURCE by Sun Microsystems Retrieved 2009 10 17 Push In Refactoring for AJDT by Andrew Eisenberg AJDT project lead at SpringSource Retrieved 2009 10 17 Eclipse AJDT intertypes and Push In refactoring Archived 2010 01 17 at the Wayback Machine by Dhruba Bandopadhyay Dated 2009 12 31 Italian Java User Group JavaDay IV Conference Spring Roo Internals by Massimiliano Dessi Retrieved 2010 2 21 Spring Roo and Alfresco Too What Alfresco Gave to Spring and Why by Jeff Potts Dated 2009 12 16 External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spring Roo amp oldid 1147301473, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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