20 projects tagged "Apache 2.0"
Geomajas profiling project is a simple application profiling system that can be used to continuously gather profiling information in a running application. It allows you to get the number of invocations and total/average time. Profiling data can also be grouped to allow total time to be split up over different groups. There is utility code to use this for JDBC access profiling, and JMX integration for accessing the data which is gathered and reset the counters.
HTMLSplicer is a toolkit that provides methods to compose complex HTML documents from simpler HTML documents, called templates. It can be used to generate servlet responses in Java Web applications, without adopting a full-fledged presentation layer framework like JSP, JSF, Apache Wicket, or GWT.
Commentari is a Disqus like commenting written in Java/Spring. It uses JavaScript/Ajax to fetch, add, and page through comments. Progressive enhancement is used. The demo interface uses Zurb Foundation, and adapts to tablets, mobile devices, etc. using HTML media calls. Comments are stored in a disk backed treap store, a fast binary tree.
FitNesse Launcher Maven Plugin can launch FitNesse as a wiki server or automatically run FitNesse tests as part of a standard integration-test/verify build. It allows configuration of FitNesse's classpath through plugin dependencies and injects all Maven project properties as FitNesse variables (which can be overridden from the commandline using "-D").
CmdOption is a simple annotation-driven command line parser toolkit for Java 5 applications. Everything you need is (at least one) simple configuration object. Each field and method annotated with an CmdOption annotation will be processed. Based on this config, CmdOption is able to parse any command line, guaranteeing the declared specification. The result is directly stored in the given config object. When errors occur, CmdOption gives a meaningful error message. Generated output and validation/error message can be localized.
RMI WebSocket provides a library for remote method invocations between a browser and a Jetty Web Server using the HTML5 WebSocket. The idea is to enable tight method-level integration between the user interface and the server so that patterns such as MVP (Model-View-Presenter) can be applied in a Web environment. The method-level communications between the browser code and the server code allows the developer to think about the Web page and server-side components as objects in a UML world. Details such as the over-the-wire protocols in WebSockets are abstracted away in the process.