javalin
DISCONTINUED
Jooby
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javalin | Jooby | |
---|---|---|
23 | 13 | |
5,583 | 1,651 | |
- | 1.0% | |
9.1 | 9.7 | |
almost 2 years ago | 4 days ago | |
Kotlin | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
javalin
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Looking for maintainer for jvm-brotli
If you've read this far, you might be interested to know that Javalin has been offering Brotli compression through jvm-brotli for three years already, and that there have been no (reported) issues. In other words, the effort required to release and maintain this is probably not huge.
- Using "equivalents" in other languages to help learn
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Question about Kotlin from an ex-Java developer
I'm a big fan of Ktor (ktor.io) but another reasonable lightweight alternative is Javelin (https://javalin.io/). Heck even Spring Boot isn't that bad. HikariCP + JooQ (has both java and kotlin codegen) for DB access if you need and you're good to go.
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Turbo: The speed of a SPA without writing JavaScript
A similar alternative that does not rely on web sockets is https://htmx.org. I have greatly enjoyed using it with some simpler web frameworks like https://javalin.io to do some prototyping and smaller projects. I'm sure if someone made a plug and play UI library like material UI for Angular on top of htmx you could absolutely fly through MVPs.
- Does Java has an equivalent to Django/Laravel/Node
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Java Equivalent of Express.js for REST
If you want something really small that simply let's you expose REST APIs using plain Java, without the IoC containers, you might want to check out Javalin, Ratpack or Armeria
Javalin
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Why people don't love Java?
I've been looking at https://javalin.io/ Seems close enough to express and some big names are using it, so I wouldn't say it's fizzling out
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Is there Expressjs like framework for java
Javalin (https://javalin.io) is strongly inspired by Express and Koa, so you should feel right at home:
Jooby
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Javalin – a simple web framework for Java and Kotlin
One of the good things about it is that using asynchrony is optional. If you don't have to call out anywhere to build the response, processing can all stay in the handler's calling thread. If you do, you can return a future and have the library handle the async for you.
One downside is that it is based on Jetty which isn't considered the most performant backend. A lib with a similar API but based on Netty is Jooby [1] which scores well in the Techempower benchmarks.
[1] - https://jooby.io/
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Is the Spring framework too heavy and over-designed?
Jooby and Helidon SE are among the best.
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RIFE2 web framework under development
The code snippet gave me a vibe like it was jooby Looks cool, I suggest maybe start incorporating Project Loom virtual threads in the future.
- Java modern frameworks choice
- Latest version of Microhttp, an event-driven, zero-dependency, pure-Java web server with 500 LOC, capable of 1,000,000+ requests per second on commodity EC2 hardware.
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The Flask Mega-Tutorial
Speaking of backend development, recently I gave Jooby[1] a try after discovering it was one of the world's top performer in Tech Empower's web framework benchmark[2].
Surprisingly enough, it's terribly easy to put together a REST API with Jooby. I wonder why it's adoption rate is so low.
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What is the current state of the art for efficiently handling blocking requests in Java/Spring?
Do you need to use Spring btw? If you want to broaden the tool selection I've had great success with i.e Jooby (https://jooby.io/) together with Kotlin coroutines. Another alternative is the KTOR framework.
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Java Equivalent of Express.js for REST
Jooby I think is the best bet. https://jooby.io/ watch out for jooby dot org I think someone sniped the domain.
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There is no magic in Spring, I wrote my own (very simplified) framework from scratch to show it
Personally I find it extremely difficult to read and use code that uses ASM directly vs ByteBuddy or some wrapper library. For example take a peak at this: https://github.com/jooby-project/jooby/blob/2.x/modules/jooby-apt/src/main/java/io/jooby/internal/apt/HandlerCompiler.java
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What would you use to start a new HTTP + SSR project with Java today?
[4] https://jooby.io/
What are some alternatives?
ktor - Framework for quickly creating connected applications in Kotlin with minimal effort
Spring Boot - Spring Boot
Vert.x - Vert.x is a tool-kit for building reactive applications on the JVM
Quarkus - Quarkus: Supersonic Subatomic Java.
http4k - The Functional toolkit for Kotlin HTTP applications. http4k provides a simple and uniform way to serve, consume, and test HTTP services.
vertx-lang-kotlin - Vert.x for Kotlin
spark-kotlin - A Spark DSL in idiomatic kotlin // dependency: com.sparkjava:spark-kotlin:1.0.0-alpha
springdoc-openapi - Library for OpenAPI 3 with spring-boot
Spring - Spring Framework