tipsy/javalin
A simple and modern Java and Kotlin web framework
repo name | tipsy/javalin |
repo link | https://github.com/tipsy/javalin |
homepage | https://javalin.io |
language | Kotlin |
size (curr.) | 2130 kB |
stars (curr.) | 3774 |
created | 2017-04-02 |
license | Apache License 2.0 |
Javalin - A simple web framework for Java and Kotlin
Javalin is a very lightweight web framework for Kotlin and Java which supports WebSockets, HTTP2 and async requests. Javalin’s main goals are simplicity, a great developer experience, and first class interoperability between Kotlin and Java.
Javalin is more of a library than a framework. Some key points:
- You don’t need to extend anything
- There are no @Annotations
- There is no reflection
- There is no other magic; just code.
General information:
- The project webpage is javalin.io.
- Documentation: javalin.io/documentation
- Chat: https://gitter.im/javalin-io/general
- Contributions are very welcome: CONTRIBUTING.md
- License summary: https://tldrlegal.com/license/apache-license-2.0-(apache-2.0)
- Interesting issues: /tipsy/javalin/issues?q=label:INFO
Quickstart
Add dependency
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>io.javalin</groupId>
<artifactId>javalin</artifactId>
<version>3.7.0</version>
</dependency>
Gradle
compile "io.javalin:javalin:3.7.0"
Start programming (Java)
import io.javalin.Javalin;
public class HelloWorld {
public static void main(String[] args) {
Javalin app = Javalin.create().start(7000);
app.get("/", ctx -> ctx.result("Hello World"));
}
}
Start programming (Kotlin)
import io.javalin.Javalin
fun main() {
val app = Javalin.create().start(7000)
app.get("/") { ctx -> ctx.result("Hello World") }
}
Examples
This section contains a few examples, mostly just extracted from the docs. All examples are in Kotlin, but you can find them in Java in the documentation (it’s just syntax changes).
Api structure and server config
val app = Javalin.create { config ->
config.defaultContentType = "application/json"
config.autogenerateEtags = true
config.addStaticFiles("/public")
config.asyncRequestTimeout = 10_000L
config.dynamicGzip = true
config.enforceSsl = true
}.routes {
path("users") {
get(UserController::getAll)
post(UserController::create)
path(":user-id") {
get(UserController::getOne)
patch(UserController::update)
delete(UserController::delete)
}
ws("events", userController::webSocketEvents)
}
}.start(port)
WebSockets
app.ws("/websocket/:path") { ws ->
ws.onConnect { ctx -> println("Connected") }
ws.onMessage { ctx ->
val user = ctx.message<User>(); // convert from json string to object
ctx.send(user); // convert to json string and send back
}
ws.onClose { ctx -> println("Closed") }
ws.onError { ctx -> println("Errored") }
}
Filters and Mappers
app.before("/some-path/*") { ctx -> ... } // runs before requests to /some-path/*
app.before { ctx -> ... } // runs before all requests
app.after { ctx -> ... } // runs after all requests
app.exception(Exception.class) { e, ctx -> ... } // runs if uncaught Exception
app.error(404) { ctx -> ... } // runs if status is 404 (after all other handlers)
app.wsBefore("/some-path/*") { ws -> ... } // runs before ws events on /some-path/*
app.wsBefore { ws -> ... } // runs before all ws events
app.wsAfter { ws -> ... } // runs after all ws events
app.wsException(Exception.class) { e, ctx -> ... } // runs if uncaught Exception in ws handler
JSON-mapping
var todos = arrayOf(...)
app.get("/todos") { ctx -> // map array of Todos to json-string
ctx.json(todos)
}
app.put("/todos") { ctx -> // map request-body (json) to array of Todos
todos = ctx.body<Array<Todo>>()
ctx.status(204)
}
File uploads
app.post("/upload") { ctx ->
ctx.uploadedFiles("files").forEach { (contentType, content, name, extension) ->
FileUtil.streamToFile(content, "upload/$name")
}
}
OpenAPI (Swagger)
Javalin has an OpenAPI (Swagger) plugin. Documentation can be enabled both through a DSL and through annotations, and Javalin can render docs using both SwaggerUI and ReDoc. Read more at https://javalin.io/plugins/openapi.
Special thanks
- Blake Mizerany, for creating Sinatra
- Per Wendel, for creating Spark
- Christian Rasmussen, for being a great guy
- Per Kristian Kummermo, also for being a great guy