日期:2014-05-17  浏览次数:21072 次

Build an Apache Wink REST service(一)
Apache Wink service configuration
Apache Wink applications are typically deployed in a servlet container like Apache Tomcat and packaged as a WAR file. Like any other Web application, Apache Wink services also need a web.xml file
web.xml Web configuration file    as following:
<web-app>
	<display-name>Wink demo</display-name>
	<description>Demonstration of SDK features</description>
	<!-- Wink SDK servlet configuration. 
		This servlet handles HTTP requests
		of SDK web service on application server.-->
	<servlet>
		<servlet-name>restSdkService</servlet-name>
		<servlet-class>
			org.apache.wink.server.internal.servlet.RestServlet
		</servlet-class>
		<init-param>
			<param-name>applicationConfigLocation</param-name>
			<param-value>/WEB-INF/application</param-value>
		</init-param>
	</servlet>
	<servlet-mapping>
		<servlet-name>restSdkService</servlet-name>
		<url-pattern>/rest/*</url-pattern>
	</servlet-mapping>
</web-app>

@Workspace Annotation
The following example demonstrates the use of @Workspace annotation on the resources in order to
have the auto-generated APP service document contain the information about it.
Given the following collection Resources definitions, ResourceA the result is displayed in
the "Auto Generated APP Service Document" table that follows.
@Workspace(workspaceTitle = "Services", collectionTitle = "Service1")
@Path("services/service1")
public class ResourceA {
    @POST
    @Produces("text/plain")
    @Consumes({"application/atom+xml", "application/xml"})
    public String getText() {return "hey there1";}
}

Auto Generated APP Service Document
<service xmlns:atom=http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom
         xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2007/app">
    <workspace>
        <atom:title>Services</atom:title>
        <collection href="services/service1">
            <atom:title>Service1</atom:title>
            <accept>application/xml</accept>
            <accept>application/atom+xml</accept>
        </collection>
    </workspace>
</service>

@Scope Annotation Specification
The following example illustrates how to define a resource with a singleton lifecycle
@Scope(ScopeType.SINGLETON)
@Path("service1")
public class ResourceA {
    ...
}

some kinds of lifescopes is below ,you can choose one which you need during your
coding
PROTOTYPE, SINGLETON
@Parent Annotation
The @Parent annotation provides the ability to define a base template URI for the URI specified in a
resources @Path annotation.If a resource is annotated with the @Parent annotation, the Apache Wink runtime calculates the final
resource template by first retrieving the value of the @Parent annotation, which holds the parent resource class, and then concatenates the resource path template definition to the path template definition of the parent resource.example is following:
@Path("services")
public class ParentResource {
    ...
}
@Parent(ParentResource .class)
@Path("service1")
public class ResourceA {
    ...
}

In the example, the user defined two resources: A ParentResource and ResourceA. ParentResource
defines the @Path annotation to associate it with "services" URI. ResourceA defines the @Path
annotation to associate it with "service1" URI and defines ParentResource to be its parent by specifying
it in the @Parent annotation. In this case, the final URI path for Resour