Sample Restful Web Service Example in Java Using Eclipse

Jakarta RESTful Web Services (JAX-RS)
Original author(s) Sun Microsystems
Developer(s) Eclipse Foundation
Stable release

3.0 / June 30, 2020; 16 months ago  (2020-06-30)

Repository
  • github.com/eclipse-ee4j/jaxrs-api Edit this at Wikidata
Written in Java
Operating system Cross-platform
Platform Java
Type Application framework
License EPL 2.0 or GPL v2 w/Classpath exception
Website projects.eclipse.org/projects/ee4j.jaxrs Edit this at Wikidata

Jakarta RESTful Web Services, (JAX-RS; formerly Java API for RESTful Web Services) is a Jakarta EE API specification that provides support in creating web services according to the Representational State Transfer (REST) architectural pattern.[1] JAX-RS uses annotations, introduced in Java SE 5, to simplify the development and deployment of web service clients and endpoints.

From version 1.1 on, JAX-RS is an official part of Java EE 6. A notable feature of being an official part of Java EE is that no configuration is necessary to start using JAX-RS. For non-Java EE 6 environments a small entry in the web.xml deployment descriptor is required.

Specification [edit]

JAX-RS provides some annotations to aid in mapping a resource class (a POJO) as a web resource. The annotations use the Java package jakarta.ws.rs (previously was javax.ws.rs but was renamed on May 19, 2019[2]). They include:

  • @Path specifies the relative path for a resource class or method.
  • @GET, @PUT, @POST, @DELETE and @HEAD specify the HTTP request type of a resource.
  • @Produces specifies the response Internet media types (used for content negotiation).
  • @Consumes specifies the accepted request Internet media types.

In addition, it provides further annotations to method parameters to pull information out of the request. All the @*Param annotations take a key of some form which is used to look up the value required.

  • @PathParam binds the method parameter to a path segment.
  • @QueryParam binds the method parameter to the value of an HTTP query parameter.
  • @MatrixParam binds the method parameter to the value of an HTTP matrix parameter.
  • @HeaderParam binds the method parameter to an HTTP header value.
  • @CookieParam binds the method parameter to a cookie value.
  • @FormParam binds the method parameter to a form value.
  • @DefaultValue specifies a default value for the above bindings when the key is not found.
  • @Context returns the entire context of the object (for example @Context HttpServletRequest request).

JAX-RS 2.0 [edit]

In January 2011 the JCP formed the JSR 339 expert group to work on JAX-RS 2.0. The main targets are (among others) a common client API and support for Hypermedia following the HATEOAS-principle of REST. In May 2013, it reached the Final Release stage.[3]

On 2017-08-22 JAX-RS 2.1[4] specification final release was published. Main new supported features include server-sent events, reactive clients, and JSON-B.[5]

Implementations [edit]

Implementations of JAX-RS include:[6]

  • Apache CXF, an open source Web service framework
  • Jersey, the reference implementation from Sun (now Oracle)
  • RESTeasy, JBoss's implementation
  • Restlet
  • WebSphere Application Server from IBM:
    • Version 7.0: via the "Feature Pack for Communications Enabled Applications"
    • Version 8.0 onwards: natively
  • WebLogic Application Server from Oracle, see notes
  • Apache Tuscany (http://tuscany.apache.org/documentation-2x/sca-java-bindingrest.html), discontinued
  • Cuubez framework (https://web.archive.org/web/20190707005602/http://cuubez.com/)
  • Everrest, Codenvy's Implementation
  • Jello-Framework, Java Application Framework optimized for Google App Engine, including a powerful RESTful engine and comprehensive Data Authorization model.
  • Apache TomEE, an addition to Apache Tomcat

References [edit]

  1. ^ Hadley, p. 1.
  2. ^ "Rename package commit on Github". GitHub.
  3. ^ "JSR 339: JAX-RS 2.0: The Java API for RESTful Web Services". Java Community Process.
  4. ^ "JSR 370: Java API for RESTful Web Services (JAX-RS 2.1) Specification". Java Community Process.
  5. ^ "JSR 367: Java API for JSON Binding (JSON-B)". Java Community Process.
  6. ^ Little, Mark (October 1, 2008). "A Comparison of JAX-RS Implementations".
  • Hadley, Marc and Paul Sandoz, eds. (September 17, 2009). JAX-RS: Java API for RESTful WebServices (version 1.1), Java Community Process

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

Tutorials [edit]

  • https://javabrains.io/courses/javaee_jaxrs/
  • http://docs.oracle.com/javaee/6/tutorial/doc/giepu.html
  • http://www.vogella.com/tutorials/REST/article.html
  • http://www.mkyong.com/tutorials/jax-rs-tutorials/
  • http://www.coderpanda.com/jax-rs-tutorial/
  • http://howtodoinjava.com/restful-web-service/

Sample Restful Web Service Example in Java Using Eclipse

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_RESTful_Web_Services

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