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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
Spring extension - Integration modes
Introduction
During the development of the 1.0 version of the Restlet API, several users attempted to integrate Restlet with Spring. They were especially trying to use the XML-based bean wiring feature of Spring.
In order to facilitate this integration, two dedicated Spring extension were added to the Restlet. It allows us to provide several integration modes.
Restlet as main container
In the first mode, the goal is to leverage the concept of Restlet Application and all the associated services, as well as the transparent deployment to either a Servlet container (using the adapter ServerServlet extension class) or using a standalone HTTP server connector. For this, you can leverage the SpringContext class which is a Spring’s GenericApplicationContext subclass. You can associate a list of XML or property configuration URIs (file:/// or war:/// URIs) in order to have Spring auto-instantiate and wire your Restlet beans.
Spring as main container
In the second mode, the goal is to leverage the concept of Spring Web Application as an alternative to the Restlet Application. This is sometimes required when the Restlet code is part of a larger Spring-based Web application, with dependencies on the Servlet API for example.
Initially, it was hard to achieve this integration because the Servlet extension, and especially the ServerServlet adapter class was assuming the usage of a Restlet Application. Later we added a lighter adapter based on the ServletConverter class that lets you directly instantiate Restlet Routers, Finders and ServerResources from your existing Servlet-based Spring code. You can check the Javadocs for details.
Finally, there is also a SpringFinder class available in the Spring extension. It hasn’t any specific dependency to Spring, but the addition of a parameter-less create() method allows the usage of the Spring’s “lookup-method” mechanism.
In Restlet 1.1, the Spring extensions received several contributions, increasing the number of ways to integrate Restlet with Spring. There is now a RestletFrameworkServlet, a SpringServerServlet, SpringBeanFinder and SpringBeanRouter.