<dependency>
<groupId>cc.protea.spreedly</groupId>
<artifactId>spreedly</artifactId>
<version>0.9.9</version>
</dependency>
I've attempted to preserve as much as possible of the Spreedly nomenclature, while making this more accessible to folk who spend a lot more time writing Java code than they do working with the Spreedly team.
There are no significant external dependencies. The module does depend on a three-class HTTP utility that I had previously included but is now its own project, but no substantial code will be pulled in. It also depends on JAXB which should be available on any reasonable server-side project.
This is not intended to be used in client-side or mobile applications since it depends heavily on your Spreedly apiSecret which should never leave your own servers and be exposed to the general public. For pure client-side work, I suggest an approach similar to that used in https://github.com/rjstanford/spreedly to tokenize.
In general, the only spelling differences are the use of StudlyCaps rather than under_scores. I have taken the liberty of branching the Spreedly term "gateway" into "gatewayAccount" and "gatewayProvider", which removes a frequent source of confusion for people newly exposed to the API. A gatewayProvider is a business such as Authorize.Net, and a gatewayAccount is the entity represented by a gatewayProvider and a set of credentials, such as a M_ID.
For general usage, create a new Spreedly(environmentKey, apiSecret) - this is threadsafe - and call its top level methods directly such as spreedly.listGatewayProviders() or spreedly.purchase(transactionRequest);
Since I assume that you're going to be using this in a much larger project, all Spreedly classes are prefaced with the word Spreedly to avoid confusion.
To run the (trivial) tests, simply set the environment variables SPREEDLYCORE_ENVIRONMENT_KEY and SPREEDLYCORE_API_SECRET to appropriate values.