Skip to content

heig-lherman/dai-practical-content

Repository files navigation

HEIG-VD DAI 2023/24 - Practical Works by @lutonite

This is the repository for the practical works done as part of the DAI (Développement d'Applications Internet) course at HEIG-VD.

Modules

Module directory Description
dai-dependencies Common module that regroups dependencies for the monorepo in a central place
dai-parent Parent module for all practical work modules that sets up the basic utilities and packaging options
pw-hello-world The first practical module implementend as part of Chapter 4 of the course
pw-io-benchmark Practical content from Chapter 5 of the course, where we had to benchmark different IO classes

How to run the practical works

Note Build artifacts are provided for every commit. In the case you do not want to compile the project, you can fetch the latest build artifact for every module from the Actions tab

Prerequisites

You need Java 17 to run this project. Maven is also required, but available through the wrapper.

Build

Note For IntelliJ users, you can import the project as a Maven project and use the IDE to build the project, a run configuration is already set up for each module.

To build only one module, run the following command from the root of the project:

./mvnw clean package -am -pl <module-name>

For example, to build the pw-hello-world module, run:

./mvnw clean package -am -pl pw-hello-world

Run

To run a module, run the following command from the root of the project:

java -jar <module-name>/target/<module-name>-<version>.jar

For example, to run the pw-hello-world module, run:

java -jar pw-hello-world/target/pw-hello-world-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar

Writing modules

Each practical work done through the course should be implemented as a module in this repository. The pom.xml should inherit from dai-parent, which includes all the ground work for getting a runnable module easily.

As a basic rule, each module should be tested through some unit tests, using JUnit.

The code is checked using Checkstyle when opening a pull request, you can install the Checkstyle IntelliJ plugin to get inlined feedback on your code inside the editor. The configuration file is located at the root of the repository.

About

My repo for the practical contents of DAI (23/24) at HEIG-VD

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Languages