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Top 11 Servlet Open-Source Projects
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Jetty
Eclipse Jetty® - Web Container & Clients - supports HTTP/2, HTTP/1.1, HTTP/1.0, websocket, servlets, and more
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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android-http-server
A complete zero-dependency implementation of a web server and a servlet container in Java with a sample Android application.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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tommybox
TommyBox is a single-file executable that makes it possible to launch web apps on a desktop.
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ywti-j2ee-webapp-project
Full-stack J2EE, HTML, CSS, and JS responsive web app facilitating last-minute event bookings.
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amaya-tomcat
About Amaya is a fairly lightweight web framework for Java, which guarantees speed, ease of creating plugins/addons, flexibility and ease of use. Tomcat implementation.
Project mention: Example Java Application with Embedded Jetty and a htmx Website | dev.to | 2024-03-28As described on eclipse.dev/jetty: "Jetty provides a web server and servlet container, additionally providing support for HTTP/2, WebSocket, OSGi, JMX, JNDI, JAAS and many other integrations. These components are open source and are freely available for commercial use and distribution."
Project mention: Methods and processes for reduce bugs in production | news.ycombinator.com | 2023-08-24>As now we've introduced some peers code review, automatic testing on most critical stuff (but since the codebase sucks these aren't really reliable tests)
They may not be "reliable", but these are your safety net, or harness, so you don't fall. I wrote about similar issues, for instance here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26591067 and, given your promotion, here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37211796. It contains a few steps starting from "So...".
You can add monitoring, something like Sentry (https://sentry.io) will capture exceptions that were not handled that you have not seen because the stack trace is buried in hundreds of pages of logs or something. It groups them by exception and counts them. It's pretty awesome. (https://docs.sentry.io). It supports around 108 platforms (Java, Python, JavaScript, etc.). This lets you see the exceptions and makes prioritizing easier (which ones are the most frequent, which ones impact the most, etc.).
If you don't have them already, issue templates are really useful and the comment I linked to explains why, but here's an example of an issue template (again, you can configure them for different types of issues so team members select from a dropdown for a bug or a feature):
You can still mix and match APIs at will with EE. This is what you do on Tomcat mostly, but also with Piranha Cloud (https://piranha.cloud), and to a degree even with Open Liberty.
Servlet related posts
- Show HN: Kilo – Lightweight REST for Java
- Quarkus 3.0 final released!
- Piranha Cloud 22.11 released!
- GlassFish 7 M8 released! (passing Jakarta EE 10 TCK)
- Jetty adds Loom support
- Helidon 3.0 Released!
- Jetty WONTFIX on PEM support (2021)
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A note from our sponsor - SaaSHub
www.saashub.com | 23 Apr 2024
Index
What are some of the best open-source Servlet projects? This list will help you:
Project | Stars | |
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1 | Jetty | 3,742 |
2 | javaee7-samples | 2,508 |
3 | sentry-java | 1,096 |
4 | xsbt-web-plugin | 384 |
5 | Kilo | 321 |
6 | android-http-server | 319 |
7 | piranha | 187 |
8 | tommybox | 20 |
9 | AI-Enabled-B2B-FINTECH-Management | 12 |
10 | ywti-j2ee-webapp-project | 1 |
11 | amaya-tomcat | 0 |
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