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User guide
- Part 1 - Introduction
- Part 2 - Core Restlet
- Part 3 - Restlet Editions
- Part 4 - Restlet Extensions
- Appendices
- Tutorials
- Javadocs
- Change Log
Overview
Introduction
This document will cover the Restlet edition for Android, which is a port of the Restlet Framework to the Android mobile OS.
A Web server on a mobile phone
There are several reasons for having a Web server on a mobile phone:
- Test locally client Web applications without having to consume the network access which might be limited by cost or availability in some areas
- Allow third-party applications, on other phones or other platforms to access to your phone remotely. This requires strong security mechanisms that are provided in part by the Restlet Framework as well as network level authorizations by the carrier.
- Run local Android applications that are leveraging the internal Web browser and behaving like regular hypermedia applications instead of using GUIs specific to Android.
A Web client on a mobile phone
The port of Restlet on Android also includes a full Web client to access to either local or remote Web servers. Android already has an HTTP client library, but with a much lower-level API while Restlet let you leverage higher-level features naturally (such as conditional methods, content negotiation, etc.). The support of other protocols than HTTP (like file system access via file:/// URIs) is also useful.
Specificities
Contrary to other editions, the Android edition can’t leverage Restlet’s autodiscovery mechanism for connectors and converters provided as Restlet extensions. This is due to a limitation in the way Android repackages JAR files, leaving out the descriptor files in the “META-INF/services/” packages used by the Restlet Framework for autodiscovery.
The workaround consist of manually registering those additional connectors and converter in the Restlet engine. Here is an example for the Jackson converter:
import org.restlet.engine.Engine;
import org.restlet.ext.jackson.JacksonConverter;
// ...
Engine.getInstance().getRegisteredConverters().add(new JacksonConverter());
Here is another example for the Apache HTTP Client:
import org.restlet.engine.Engine;
import org.restlet.ext.httpclient.HttpClientHelper;
// ...
Engine.getInstance().getRegisteredClients().clear();
Engine.getInstance().getRegisteredClients().add(new HttpClientHelper(null));