Hessian Java API Overview
From Resin 3.0
Contents |
Introduction to Hessian
Creating a Hessian service using Java has four steps:
- Create an Java interface as the public API
- Create a client using HessianProxyFactory
- Create the Service implementation class
- Configure the service in your servlet engine.
The Service API
A Hessian service's API is just a plain old Java interface.
Hello, World API
public interface BasicAPI { public String hello(); }
The Hessian protocol eliminates external API descriptions like CORBA IDL files or WSDL. Documenting a Hessian service API is as simple as providing the JavaDoc. Because Hessian is language-independent, the Java interface classes are not required for non-Java languages. For external languages, the Java interfaces serve only to document the service methods.
Service Implementation
The service implementation can be a plain-old Java object (POJO) or can extend HessianServlet to make the servlet-engine configuration trivial.
Hello, World Service
public class BasicService extends HessianServlet implements BasicAPI { private String _greeting = "Hello, world"; public void setGreeting(String greeting) { _greeting = greeting; } public String hello() { return _greeting; } }
The service implementation can also be a plain-old Java object (POJO),
avoiding any dependency on HessianServlet. More details are at
Hessian introduction
and in the [http://www.caucho.com/resin-3.0/protocols/tutorial/hessian-ioc/index.xtp Hessian
Service using Dependency Injection] tutorial.
Client Implementation
Creating a client is as simple as creating an API interface:
Hello, World Client
String url = "http://www.caucho.com/hessian/test/basic"; HessianProxyFactory factory = new HessianProxyFactory(); BasicAPI basic = (BasicAPI) factory.create(BasicAPI.class, url); System.out.println("hello(): " + basic.hello());