avaje-inject
Graal
avaje-inject | Graal | |
---|---|---|
19 | 156 | |
195 | 19,807 | |
2.1% | 0.5% | |
9.3 | 10.0 | |
8 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Java | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
avaje-inject
- Apt-based dependency injection for server-side developers
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Avaje Inject - Microservice Focused DI via Annotation Processing
Avaje Inject has quickly become one of my favorite libraries. Inject is basically like Dagger if Dagger was focused on server side instead of Android. It's a tiny lib (~76kb) that uses the power of annotation processing to generate DI classes. Recently I've been using it for AWS lambdas and it works pretty great.
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I wrote a simple, compile-time dependency injection framework
https://avaje.io/inject/ - Implements JSR-330 and JSR-250
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Dependency injection frameworks
Have you tried out Avaje inject? It's currently my favorite DI lib.
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Java OSS with best code quality you’ve ever seen?
Been building a web service with avaje inject and avaje http lately. It has a very spring-like feel for a DI lib, (Lifecycles, Test annotations) but the libs are tiny and totally reflection free through codegen.
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Favorite hidden gem library?
Avaje is pretty cool, it's a compact DI library based on APT. https://github.com/avaje/avaje-inject
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Why is Spring so slow in TechEmpower benchmark?
Like avaje inject ? DI as source code generation done at build time?
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Dirk: a new light-weight system for dependency injection
Just to say, I also created a DI library called avaje-inject - https://avaje.io/inject/ ... which uses Java annotation processing to do DI as mostly source code generation. So the runtime dependency is ~ 67Kb. It also supports AOP aspects via source code gen which I think is kind of cool - you can have your own aspects like `@Retry` etc and it's actually done using source code generation.
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Java SQL code generator. SQL and OOP united finally.
I am a bit fan of using annotation processing (source code generation) to simplify things - DI https://avaje.io/inject/ , JSON binding (https://github.com/avaje/avaje-jsonb) and rest servers and clients (https://avaje.io/http).
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What is your experience with GraalVM Native?
Dagger2 and avaje-inject are other options (DI as source code generation via annotation processing). https://avaje.io/inject/
Graal
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Java 23: The New Features Are Officially Announced
Contrary to what vocal Kotlin advocates might believe, Kotlin only matters on Android, and that is thanks to Google pushing it no matter what.
https://spectrum.ieee.org/the-top-programming-languages-2023
https://snyk.io/reports/jvm-ecosystem-report-2021/
And even so, they had to conceed Android and Kotlin on their own, without the Java ecosystem aren't really much useful, thus ART is now updatable via Play Store, and currently supports OpenJDK 17 LTS on Android 12 and later devices.
As for your question regarding numbers, mostly Java 74.6%, C++ 13.7%, on the OpenJDK, other JVM implementations differ, e.g. GraalVM is mostly Java 91.8%, C 3.6%.
https://github.com/openjdk/jdk
https://github.com/oracle/graal
Two examples from many others, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Java_virtual_machines
- FLaNK Stack 05 Feb 2024
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Apple releases Pkl – onfiguration as code language
Pkl was built using the GraalVM Truffle framework. So it supports runtime compilation using Futurama Projections. We have been working with Apple on this for a while, and I am quite happy that we can finally read the sources!
https://github.com/oracle/graal/tree/master/truffle
Disclaimer: graalvm dev here.
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Live Objects All the Way Down: Removing the Barriers Between Apps and VMs
That's pretty interesting. It's not as aggressive as Bee sounds, but the Espresso JVM is somewhat similar in concept. It's a full blown JVM written in Java with all the mod cons, which can either be compiled ahead of time down to memory-efficient native code giving something similar to a JVM written in C++, or run itself as a Java application on top of another JVM. In the latter mode it obviously doesn't achieve top-tier performance, but the advantage is you can easily hack on it using all the regular Java tools, including hotswapping using the debugger.
When run like this, the bytecode interpreter, runtime system and JIT compiler are all regular Java that can be debugged, edited, explored in the IDE, recompiled quickly and so on. Only the GC is provided by the host system. If you compile it to native code, the GC is also written in Java (with some special conventions to allow for convenient direct memory access).
What's most interesting is that Espresso isn't a direct translation of what a classical C++ VM would look like. It's built on the Truffle framework, so the code is extremely high level compared to traditional VM code. Details like how exactly transitions between the interpreter/compiled code happen, how you communicate pointer maps to the GC and so on are all abstracted away. You don't even have to invoke the JIT compiler manually, that's done for you too. The only code Espresso really needs is that which defines the semantics of the Java bytecode language and associated tools like the JDWP debugger protocol.
https://github.com/oracle/graal/tree/master/espresso
This design makes it easy to experiment with new VM features that would be too difficult or expensive to implement otherwise. For example it implements full hotswap capability that lets you arbitrarily redefine code and data on the fly. Espresso can also fully self-host recursively without limit, meaning you can achieve something like what's described in the paper by running Espresso on top of Espresso.
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Crash report and loading time
I'm also using GraalVM if that's of any help.
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Quarkus 3.4 - Container-first Java Stack: Install with OpenJDK 21 and Create REST API
Quarkus is one of Java frameworks for microservices development and cloud-native deployment. It is developed as container-first stack and working with GraalVM and HotSpot virtual machines (VM).
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Level-up your Java Debugging Skills with on-demand Debugging
Apologies, I didn't mean to imply DCEVM went poof, just that I was sad it didn't make it into OpenJDK so one need not do JDK silliness between the production one and the "debugging one" since my experience is that's an absolutely stellar way to produce Heisenbugs
And I'll be straight: Graal scares me 'cause Oracle but I just checked and it looks to the casual observer that it's straight-up GPLv2 now so maybe my fears need revisiting: https://github.com/oracle/graal/blob/vm-23.1.0/LICENSE
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Rust vs Go: A Hands-On Comparison
> to be compiled to a single executable is a strength that Java does not have
I think this is very outdated claim: https://www.graalvm.org/
- Leveraging Rust in our high-performance Java database
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Java 21 makes me like Java again
https://github.com/oracle/graal/issues/7182
What are some alternatives?
auto-value
Liberica JDK - Free and 100% open source Progressive Java Runtime for modern Javaâ„¢ deployments supported by a leading OpenJDK contributor
spring-examples - Starter projects with Spring using Java and Kotlin. Contains modules that covers Security with JWT, Spring with Kotlin, Dependency injection simplified etc.
Adopt Open JDK - Eclipse Temurinâ„¢ build scripts - common across all releases/versions
Dagger2 - A fast dependency injector for Android and Java.
awesome-wasm-runtimes - A list of webassemby runtimes
Feather - Lightweight dependency injection for Java and Android (JSR-330)
SAP Machine - An OpenJDK release maintained and supported by SAP
dapper - modular dagger
maven-jpackage-template - Sample project illustrating building nice, small cross-platform JavaFX or Swing desktop apps with native installers while still using the standard Maven dependency system.
quarkus-htmx-todos - Todo App in Quarkus with htmx
wasmer - 🚀 The leading Wasm Runtime supporting WASIX, WASI and Emscripten