Springy lets you use a simple Domain Specific Language (DSL) based on JRuby to wire up your Spring context. See Wiring up Spring with JRuby for an introduction.
Springy requires JRuby (1.0), Spring 2.0 and the Bean Scripting Framework.
You need to add springy.jar, bsf.jar and jruby-1.0.jar to your classpath. Create your context definition and put it somewhere in your classpath. To actually create the context do:
import org.springframework.core.io.Resource; import springy.context.BSFSpringyContext; // ... Resource r = new ClassPathResource("/path/to/context_definition.rb"); ApplicationContext ctxt = new SpringyContext(r); Object myBean = ctxt.getBean("myBean");
String serialized = new SpringyContext(r).getContextAsXml();
import org.springframework.core.io.Resource; import springy.context.RuntimeSpringyContext; import org.jruby.Ruby; // ... Resource r = new ClassPathResource("/path/to/context_definition.rb"); Ruby runtime = Ruby.getDefaultInstance(); ApplicationContext ctxt = new RuntimeSpringyContext(runtime, r);
See the test cases, especially the Ruby context context.rb and its XML equivalent context.xml.
To build Springy from the source, you need need Maven. Alternatively you can use Rake plus the Jerbil extensions. Once everything is installed, do
% m2 package (maven) % rake dist (jerbil)
in the toplevel directory.
FAQ.
Contact: jan@trampolinesystems.com
Homepage: code.trampolinesystems.com/springy
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the “License”); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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