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Speed up your Unit Tests with Parallel Execution
Jun 8th, 2010 by Mike

I recently had occasion to use a trick with test execution that is simple and very helpful, but that I forget about frequently, so I thought I’d pass it along here.

We use Maven to execute our unit (and sometimes functional, but that’s another story) tests for a suite of applications my team works on. Some of our apps have quite a few tests, and even though each unit test is very fast (as good unit tests ought to be), running that many of them still takes a bit of time. We’re also burdened with a very slow CI server, unfortunately, which aggravates that situation.

Unit tests, by definition, do not rely on the operation of any other test – they are self-contained, stateless and repeatable. This means they’re ideally suited to running in parallel, and fortunately, that’s very easy to do with Maven.

Maven uses the Surefire Plugin to do it’s test-running, and it’s configurable to run tests in parallel. Our project uses a parent pom (different from an aggregator pom) to specify common configuration, so our pom files stay lean. In our parent pom, we just add the following:


  org.apache.maven.plugins
  maven-surefire-plugin
  2.5
  
methods
20
  

And we’ve told Maven to run our tests in a maximum of 20 threads, and to make each method run in parallel. (There are other options here for only running classes in parallel, etc, which might be helpful for functional tests).

Just doing that took a minute off the time of a couple of our builds, and a bit off the time of even some of the smaller ones. Of course, it’s even more effective if you’re running on a multicore machine, but even the feeble VM running our CI was faster with it there.

Enjoy!

Coding Standards with Sonar, Maven and Intellij IDEA
May 18th, 2010 by Mike

One of the ways to ensure quality in a software project is to find a set of coding standards that your team can agree on then put automated checks in place to ensure they are adhered to.

In this post I’d like to take a very small example of such a stanard, and show how you can use several different tools to help ensure and measure compliance.

The Example
The simple rule we wil use is the use of curl braces on if statements and similar blocks. Our team reached a concensus that we would always prefer this form

if (condition) {
   block
}

over this

if (condition)
    block

even when there is only one line in the block, where the braces are optional. I’m in the habit of not doing this, so I kept doing it the wrong way, making code just that little bit harder for the rest of the team to read and maintain.

We have an existing codebase of hundreds of thousands of lines, some of which adhere to this rule, some of which doesn’t.

First, I wanted to measure adherence to the rule, so I chose the Sonar quality assurance tool.

Sonar
Sonar installation is straightforward: download the distribution, unzip it and run one script. Sonar runs as a web application, so you can immediate go to your browser and see the initial page, like so:

I’m using Sonar (for now) in it’s default mode with a bundled Derby database. If I were going to use it more heavily, I could install a separate MySQL database, and run Sonar itself inside a container of my choice (it comes bundled with a basic web container so you can get going right away).

For my machine, I ran

bin/macosx-universal-64/sonar.sh console

“Console” runs Sonar without backgrounding the task. Normally you’d use “start”, which works just like a Unix service, and is suitable for running from an init.d-type script immediately. The first time around, Sonar takes a few moments to fire up, as it creates all it’s required database tables and populates them with an initial set of data to get your started.

Sonar can measure many hundreds of different metrics, but for the purposes of this simple experiment I only want the one, so I create a custom profile, called “team”.

I set this profile to be the default, then click to edit it.

Now I can search for the braces rule in checkstyle by setting filter criteria:

You can click the rule name to see a description, and to set any optional parameters on the rule.

I activate the rule, and leave it at the default “Minor” priority.

If I now return to my profile, I have a link to access the generated checkstyle.xml file, the configuration file that is used by checkstyle to configure its rules. This will be important later on.

Now I can go to my project and analyze it by running “mvn clean install sonar:sonar”. With the default configuration, this works only when the build is taking place on the same box that Sonar is running, but it’s simple to set up a settings.xml file to tell the Sonar plugin where to find the Sonar instance, so you can have a single shared Sonar instance for the whole team. This is covered nicely in the Sonar documentation.

One minor hiccup: The released version of the Sonar plugin for Maven doesn’t work with Maven version 3 (still in Beta), which I was using. You can build the source version if you need this support, or I’m guessing it’ll be released about the time Maven 3 might be.

Now that I’ve analyzed my project, I can go back into Sonar and see how well I adhered to my rule:

As I see I have a violation, I can drill down and see the violation in context right in the code:

This is handy for checking the state of a rule against an existing codebase, but I’d like to have more immediate feedback. No problem, I can integrate Sonar into both my IDE and my build process very easily.

IntelliJ IDEA: Immediate Feedback

There’s also a new plugin for IntelliJ IDEA for Sonar. To install, just go to the “Available” tab in your plugin configuration within IntelliJ, right-click and select Download and Install. You’ll have to restart IntelliJ to activate the plugin.

Now you can find the Sonar entry in configuration, and set up a URL to point to your Sonar installation, along with a username and password to log in to Sonar. The default is “admin/admin”.

Having done that, I can now see violations directly in my code, as I open each file, like so:

In the above, I’m hovering over the little “price tag” annotation in the left gutter to see the message. You can also see the usual IntelliJ “yellow bar” on the right side of the screen, which shows the same message.

This lets me know of a rule violation before I even attempt to build, so when I forget my braces, I don’t have to wait to be chastized, IntelliJ can do it for me immediately :)

Maven: Ensuring Conformance

There is a Maven Checkstyle Plugin that allows us to make a run of checkstyle part of the build process of our project. I configured this plugin in my POM like so:


    4.0.0
    com.jglobal
    experiment
jar
    Experiment
    1.0.0-SNAPSHOT

UTF-8
    

    

        
            junit
            junit
            4.5
            test
        

    

    


                maven-compiler-plugin
                
                    1.6
                    1.6
                
            

                org.apache.maven.plugins
                maven-checkstyle-plugin
                2.5
                
                    
                        org.codehaus.plexus
                        plexus-resources
                        1.0-alpha-7
                    
                
                
                    http://localhost:9000/rules_configuration/export/java/team/checkstyle.xml
                    
                    true
                    true
                
            

                org.codehaus.sonar
                sonar-maven-plugin
                1.8M1
            
        
    


            codehaus
            Maven Plugin Repository
            http://repository.codehaus.org/
            default
            
                false
            
            
                never
            
        
    

As you can see, instead of providing a file system based location for the configuration file for Checkstyle, I just pointed the Checkstyle plugin at my Sonar-generated checkstyle.xml, this way my IDE, Sonar and my build stay in perfect sync, and I have a nice GUI for adjusting my checkstyle rules, instead of having to hand-edit XML.

Now when I run my build, Maven will analyze my project against the checkstyle rules, and report any violations. With code as we’ve seen above, it of course reports a violation, but the build still succeeds.

This is fine, but now that I’ve verified we are adhering to this rule, I’d like to actually fail the build if we slip back. Also easily done – in Sonar, I just change the level of violation for my one and only rule to “Critical” in my profile. Now when I run my Maven build, sure enough, the build fails, noting the fact that I’m not adhering to a Critical rule.

As my codebase gets cleaner and cleaner, I can up the priority of the rules I really care about until there are no more violations – then Maven and Sonar can guarantee it stays that way. Of course, in a multimodule build (e.g. with an aggregator POM), I might want to create a parent POM, and specify all this configuration there. (It’s generally not a good idea to have the aggregator and the parent in one pom, use two).

This is of course a trivial example of Sonar, IntelliJ and Maven working together. Sonar can apply over 700 rules right out of the box, and more can be added via plugins easily.

What I find good is that I can synchronize all my tools off one common and agreed-upon rulebase, without having to tweak XML files all over the place to gradually increase my quality standards over time.

RAD with Scala and Vaadin
May 5th, 2010 by Mike

I’ve had an opportunity recently to work on a product that needed an RIA web interface, and I chose my recent favorite tool for this, Vaadin. The services for this project needed to be highly scalable, and lent themselves well to functional techniques, so I selected Scala as my language of choice. I build my projects with Maven, for reasons I won’t go into right now, and I do much of my JVM-language work in Intellij’s excellent IDEA IDE.

Given these tools, I found a way to facilitate very rapid development of web UI’s, and I thought I’d pass it along.

Another technique I use, which I’ll expound on later, is creating “dummy” implementations of all of my backing services for my application. The “real” implementations are written as OSGi services, in separate modules from my UI. The UI is packaged as a war, but is also OSGi aware, with a bundle activator. This activator only gets called if the war is deployed into an OSGi container, and not otherwise. This allows the app to select which implementation of the services it uses – the “dummy” ones when it’s deployed outside of OSGi, and the “real” ones when they’re available.

This means I can use the handy Maven jetty plugin to quickly spin up my application and test it on my local workstation, without needing all of the dependencies (like a data store and such) of my real services. That’s good, in that I can get my “cycle time” down to a few seconds, where “cycle time” is the time between making a change and actually being able to test it in my browser.

We can do better, though.

I’m using Scala as my language of choice for building the UI as well, as it works just fine with Vaadin (and with everything else in the JVM ecosystem, for that matter, which is why I didn’t choose a non-JVM language – but that’s yet another rant).

I compile my Scala with the Maven scala plugin – here’s where the next handy bit comes into play. Turns out the Scala plugin has a goal called “cc”, for continuous compilation. Using this, I can fire up Maven with a “mvn scala:cc” command, and leave it running. Then I also use the “mvn jetty:run” command in another window to fire up the web application, and leave it running as well.

Here’s my configuration for the Scala plugin:


                org.scala-tools
                maven-scala-plugin
                2.9.1
                
                    
                        
                            compile
                            testCompile
                        
                    
                
                
                    ${scala.version}
                    
                        -target:jvm-1.5
                    
                
            

And for Jetty:


                org.mortbay.jetty
                maven-jetty-plugin
                6.1.9
                
                    10
                    src/main/webapp
                    jetty.xml
                    
                        
                            file
                            realm.properties
                        
                    
                    stop
                    8889
                
            

Now I go back to my IntelliJ and start coding. Every time IntelliJ saves (which it does automatically unless you tell it not to), the Scala plugin compiles the files. This generates a new .class file, which the Jetty plugin (well, technically, Jetty itself) detects, and in response, reloads the running classes for the web application.

Net effect is that I can make my change and by the time I switch back to the browser, my new code is running. I test my change, emit the appropriate profanity, and go back to editing, all within a second or two.

This has profound effects on how you develop a UI, which every dynamic language aficionado knows (e.g. like Ruby/Rails or Python/Django). You don’t hesitate to experiment, and you get to see the visual effect of your changes right away. The good news is that I get to do this with my language of choice, and with all the power of the JVM ecosystem to support it.

The technique is not perfect – I’ve found that if you edit some resources or webapp files (images and such), it’s possible the Jetty plugin doesn’t “see” the change. Of course, two things help with that considerably: first, it’s lightning-fast to just Control-C the jetty plugin task and re-launch it, and second a Vaadin app generally doesn’t use many resources, unlike JSP or many other frameworks that make extensive use of templates.

Once in a while I’ve found the scala:cc task will report that it’s lost it’s connection to the “fsc” (fast scala compiler) background process – again, quickly control-c-ing the task and starting it again solves the problem every time.

Overall, I can crank UI out pretty darn quick with this method, and given that I can TDD even my UI code using Vaadin, I find the overall combination very effective and efficient.

OSGi Adventures, Part 2 – Dispatch Service and Dealer Service
Nov 20th, 2009 by Mike

In Part 1 of our OSGi adventures, we described how to build a nice Ajax-aware Vaadin UI app, and couple it to a generic back-end OSGi service we called the service dispatcher.

Now we’ll take the adventure to the next step, show how to deploy that webapp into our OSGi container and get it up and running, then go through the functionality of the Dispatch Service, and show how it routes requires through to the first of our domain-specific application services.

In our UI, we built a form that allowed the user to enter and save a “Dealer”, with some fields like name, phone number, etc., so the first service we’ll build for the service dispatcher to talk to will be our “dealer” service.

First, though, let’s see how to get our webapp into our OSGi container.

As we’re building our Vaadin app with Maven, we can easily add the small bits of additional configuration to turn our project into an OSGi-friendly WAR file.

OSGi deploys “bundles”, but a bundle is just a jar file (or a war, which is after all just a special kind of jar) with a bit of extra meta-data. The META-INF/MANIFEST.MF file is where the magic happens. We add the following to our POM:

              <plugin>
                <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                <artifactId>maven-war-plugin</artifactId>
                <version>2.0</version>
                <configuration>
                  <archive>

                      org.springframework.osgi.web.context.support,\
                       org.springframework.web.servlet,\
                       org.springframework.web.servlet.handler,\
                       org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc,\
                       org.springframework.web.servlet.view,\
                       dwmj.domain,\
                       org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.annotation,\
                       org.springframework.web.context

                    <manifestEntries>
                      <Bundle-ManifestVersion>2</Bundle-ManifestVersion>
                        <Bundle-SymbolicName>com.point2.Admin</Bundle-SymbolicName>
                        <Bundle-Name>Admin</Bundle-Name>
                        <Bundle-Version>1.0.0</Bundle-Version>
                        <Bundle-Activator>com.point2.ServiceClient</Bundle-Activator>
                        <Import-Package>org.osgi.framework,com.point2.services.dispatch,javax.servlet;version="2.4.0",
javax.servlet.http;version="2.4.0",org.osgi.service.http;version="1.2.0",
org.osgi.util.tracker;version="1.3.2"</Import-Package>
                        <Webapp-Context>admin</Webapp-Context>
                        <Bundle-ClassPath>WEB-INF/classes, WEB-INF/lib/service-dispatch-api-1.0.0.jar, WEB-INF/lib/vaadin-6.1.3.jar</Bundle-ClassPath>
                    </manifestEntries>
                  </archive>
                </configuration>
              </plugin>
     

This bit of magic allows Maven to build us a MANIFEST.MF like this:

Manifest-Version: 1.0
Archiver-Version: Plexus Archiver
Created-By: Apache Maven
Built-By: mnash
Build-Jdk: 1.6.0_15
Extension-Name: admin
Implementation-Title: admin
Implementation-Version: 1.0-SNAPSHOT
Bundle-Activator: com.point2.ServiceClient
Bundle-ClassPath: WEB-INF/classes, WEB-INF/lib/service-dispatch-api-1.
 0.0.jar, WEB-INF/lib/vaadin-6.1.3.jar
Bundle-ManifestVersion: 2
Bundle-Name: Admin
Bundle-SymbolicName: com.point2.Admin
Bundle-Version: 1.0.0
Import-Package: org.osgi.framework,com.point2.services.dispatch,javax.
 servlet;version="2.4.0",javax.servlet.http;version="2.4.0",org.osgi.s
 ervice.http;version="1.2.0",org.osgi.util.tracker;version="1.3.2"
Webapp-Context: cadmin

Now we have our OSGi-friendly .war file, sitting in our target directory. We can then connect to the console of our OSGi container (in this case, ServiceMix), and say:

install war:file:/Users/mnash/experiments/admin/target/admin-1.0.0-SNAPSHOT.war

Our container honors the “Webapp-Context” tag in our manifest, so we can then surf to http://localhost:8181/admin/ to see our application. 8181 is the default port for the Jetty HTTP service in ServiceMix – it can easily be changed to another number as required, of course.

Dispatch Service
Now that we can see how to get the wepapp into ServiceMix, let’s look at the Dispatch Service in detail.

Our Dispatch Service is going to be a regular OSGi bundle, so we have a separate Maven project that produces a .jar file in this case, not a WAR file.

Our MANIFEST.MF needs the following magic for this project:

Bundle-ManifestVersion: 2
Bundle-SymbolicName: com.point2.services.dispatch.DispatchService
Bundle-Name: DispatchService
Bundle-Version: 1.0.0
Bundle-Classpath: .,lib/commons-beanutils-1.8.0.jar,lib/commons-collections-3.2.1.jar
Bundle-Activator: com.point2.services.dispatch.impl.DispatchServicePublisher
Import-Package: org.osgi.framework
Export-Package: com.point2.services.dispatch

You can see we’re again specifying a “Bundle-Activator” class, which, much like the ServiceClient class in our webapp, is called by the OSGi framework when the bundle containing this service is started.

One slight oddity: The dispatch service needs the two jars listed under “Bundle-Classpath:” to do it’s business – because we are building an OSGi bundle, we “embed” these jars in our bundle (which is, yes, another jar) by putting them in the src/main/resources/lib directory. We refer to them in that location in the POM, and Maven automatically includes them in the finished jar, where they’re available when our bundle needs them. The other alternative is to install the dependencies as their own bundles, but that’s a whole ‘nother post :)

In the case of DispatchService, we’ve got an activator like this:

public class DispatchServicePublisher implements BundleActivator {
    private ServiceRegistration registration;

    public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
        registration = context.registerService(DispatchService.class.getName(),
                new DispatchServiceImpl(), null);
        DispatchServiceImpl.setBundleContext(context);
        System.out.println("Dispatch Service registered");
    }

    public void stop(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
        registration.unregister();
        System.out.println("Dispatch Service unregistered");
    }
}

Which simply takes a reference to the BundleContext on startup and passes it to the DispatchServiceImpl, which implements the DispatchService interface, like so:

public interface DispatchService {
   List<Map<String, Object>> call(String serviceName, String serviceOperation, Map<String, Object> parameters,
                                  String versionPattern, String securityToken) throws Exception;
}

The big JuJu with OSGi is that only this interface is “exposed” from the bundle. No other service can see the innards of our service, unlike Jars on a classpath.

The implementation of the DispatchService is equally straightforward:

public class DispatchServiceImpl implements DispatchService {

    private static BundleContext context;

    public List<Map<String, Object>> call(String serviceName, String serviceOperation, Map<String, Object> parameters, String versionPattern, String securityToken) throws Exception {

        ServiceReference reference = getServiceNamed(serviceName);
        if (reference == null)
            throw new RuntimeException("There is no service with service-name " + serviceName);
        Object service = context.getService(reference);
        Adapter adapter = new Adapter(service);
        List<Map<String, Object>> response = adapter.callList(serviceName, serviceOperation, parameters);
        context.ungetService(reference);
        return response;
    }

    private ServiceReference getServiceNamed(String serviceName) throws Exception {
        ServiceReference[] references = context.getAllServiceReferences(null, null);
        System.out.println("There are " + references.length + " services available");
        for (int i = 0; i < references.length; i++) {
            ServiceReference reference = references[i];
            Object serviceNameValue = reference.getProperty("service-name");
            if (serviceNameValue != null) {
                System.out.println("I see service with name " + serviceNameValue);
                if (serviceNameValue.toString().equalsIgnoreCase(serviceName))
                    return reference;
            }
        }
        throw new RuntimeException("There is no service available with service-name " + serviceName);
    }

    public static void setBundleContext(BundleContext newContext) {
        context = newContext;
    }
}

The dispatch service implementation simply looks through the “published” services in the OSGi context, and looks at the “service-name” property of each service to find the one specified in the call. Assuming it finds an appropriate service, it then uses another class, Adapter, to do the type conversion of the generic Map of parameters to the specific types needed for the service being called, then uses Java reflection to actually make the call and return the response as a List of Maps, again converting the service-specific types to a generic Map in order to pass the response back to the user interface.

Why do we go through those gyrations, instead of just having access to the domain-specific beans in our UI? If we want a full decoupling, and the advantages that come with it, the type-independence of this approach gives us that. It also allows parallel development of the UI and the back-end services without an ever-increasing number of binary dependencies as well – for that matter, with the static data adapter in the Vaadin app allows us to develop on our UI entirely without the back-end services. That’s pretty decoupled.

The Dispatch Service by itself, though, doesn’t give us any functionality. It acts much like a router on a network, simply moving the request from the client to the proper service on the back-end, so let’s build such a service – in this case, a service for handling Dealers.

Dealer Service
The bulk of our application-specific code will be prepared as independent OSGi services, just like this one. In later postings, I’ll describe how to set up dependencies between services (and how to use Spring DM to make doing that kind of thing far simpler).

First, let’s look at our MANIFEST.MF for our new service (again, we can use Maven to produce this for us, but the result is the same):

Bundle-ManifestVersion: 2
Bundle-SymbolicName: com.point2.services.dealer.DealerService
Bundle-Name: DealerService
Bundle-Version: 1.0.0
Bundle-Activator: com.point2.services.dealer.impl.DealerServicePublisher
Import-Package: org.osgi.framework
Export-Package: com.point2.services.dealer

The two key elements above are the Bundle-Activator, a class called DealerServicePublisher, and the Export-Package.

OSGi best practices dictate that the package that is exported should only contain the interface for the class (or classes) you wish to make available from your service. In our case, that comprises a bean class, called “Dealer”, and the interface to our actual service, DealerService.

The Dealer bean is very simple, just your basic property-holding JavaBean:

public class Dealer {
    private String name;
    private String phone;
    private String contactLast;
    private String contactFirst;
    private String address1;
    private String address2;

    public String getContactLast() {
        return contactLast;
    }

    public void setContactLast(String contactLast) {
        this.contactLast = contactLast;
    }

    public String getContactFirst() {
        return contactFirst;
    }
   .....

I’ve ommitted the rest of the getters and setters here for brevity (in case you’re wondering, yes, this is much easier to express in Scala, and yes, OSGi works just fine with Scala…)

The interface for our service is even simpler:

public interface DealerService {
    public void save(Dealer dealer);
    public Dealer findById(int id);
}

Of course, a fully fleshed-out service might in fact have more methods, but again, you get the idea.

I won’t bore you with the actual implementation of the DealerServiceImpl class, but it’s important to note that it’s not in the same package as the Dealer bean and the DealerService implementation. They are the only two classes (well, one class, one interface) in that package, as the entire package is “exported” by OSGi, and therefore visible to other services and clients.

The DealerServicePublisher is the last piece to examine, and it’s pretty straightforward as well:

package com.point2.services.dealer.impl;

import com.point2.services.dealer.DealerService;
import org.osgi.framework.BundleActivator;
import org.osgi.framework.BundleContext;
import org.osgi.framework.ServiceRegistration;

import java.util.Dictionary;
import java.util.Hashtable;

public class DealerServicePublisher implements BundleActivator {
    private ServiceRegistration registration;

    public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
        System.out.println("Registering dealer service");
        Dictionary dictionary = new Hashtable();
        dictionary.put("service-name", "dealer");
        registration = context.registerService(DealerService.class.getName(),
                new DealerServiceImpl(), dictionary);
    }

    public void stop(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
        System.out.println("Unregistering dealer service");
        registration.unregister();
    }
}

Essentially all we do in this activator is “register” our service, making it visible to the OSGi container and other services or clients that need it. We add an extra property via the “Dictionary” object, which allows us to specify arbitrary properties to be associated with our service. Because we want to look up our services from the dispatcher by name, rather than by class or interface name, we use the string “dealer” and associate it with the key “service-name”. If you examine the code for our DispatchService, you’ll see that it uses this property to find services.

Now we can build our new service with a simple “mvn package” command, and install the resulting jar into our OSGi runtime with “install file:/Users/mnash/experiments/dealer/target/dealer-1.0.0.jar” (again, you can do an install directly from the Maven repository, or from a URL, as opposed to a file).

That’s it – our “dealer” service is now available, and our “dispatch” service is fired up and ready to locate it.

If we deploy our Vaadin application in our OSGi container (as described in the previous post), you’ll find that calls to the “call” method of the ServiceClient now return the “real” data from our service.

In the next few posts we’ll examine an even easier way to define new services, and explore the power of OSGi for updating and working with our decoupled services. Then we’ll look at how to hook services together, allowing services to call other services to do their jobs as required.

OSGi Adventures, Part 1 – A Vaadin front-end to OSGi Services
Nov 16th, 2009 by Mike

In my experience, the future of modularity on the JVM is OSGi.

Many developers don’t seem to recognize the need for it, but other bloggers have covered this in great detail (see my Resources page for some links), so I’m not going to try to “sell” OSGi here at all – I assume you’re already sold, and looking at how to put OSGi to good use in your development and deployment process.

Extending my recent experiments with the Vaadin framework, I decided I wanted to have a Vaadin front-end talking to a set of OSGi services on the back end. Initially, these will be running within the same OSGi container, which in this case is FUSE 4, the commercially supported variant of Apache ServiceMix.

One of my goals was to acheive a loose coupling between the Vaadin webapp and the backing services, so that new services can readily be added, started, stopped, and updated, all without any impact on the running Vaadin app. I also wanted to maintain the convenience of being able to run and tinker with the UI portion of my app by just doing a “mvn jetty:run”, so the app needed to be able to start even if it wasn’t inside the OSGi container.

Fortunately, doing all this is pretty easy, and in the next series of articles I’ll describe how I went about it, and where the good parts and bad parts of such an approach became obvious.

In this part, we’ll start by describing the Vaadin app, and how it calls the back-end services. In later parts, I’ll describe the evolution of the back-end services themselves, as I experimented with more sophisticated techniques.

Vaadin Dependency
I’m building all my apps with Apache Maven, so the first step was to create a POM file suitable for Vaadin. Fortunately, Vaadin is a single jar file, and trivial to add to the classpath. My POM needed this dependency:

       <dependency>
            <groupId>vaadin</groupId>
            <artifactId>vaadin</artifactId>
            <version>6.1.3</version>
            <scope>system</scope>
            <systemPath>${basedir}/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/lib/vaadin-6.1.3.jar</systemPath>
        </dependency>
     

Here I’m using the trick of specifying a systemPath for my jar, instead of retrieving it on demand from a local Nexus repository or from the internet, but that’s just one way of doing it – the main thing is to get this one Vaadin jar on your path.

web.xml
Next I proceeded to tweak my web.xml to have my top-level Vaadin application object available on a URL. The main Vaadin object is an extension of a Servlet, so this is also very easy – here’s my web.xml in it’s entirety:

     <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<web-app xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:web="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_2_5.xsd" id="WebApp_ID" version="2.5">
  <display-name>Admin</display-name>
  <servlet>
    <servlet-name>Admin</servlet-name>
    <servlet-class>com.vaadin.terminal.gwt.server.ApplicationServlet</servlet-class>
    <init-param>
      <param-name>application</param-name>
      <param-value>Admin</param-value>
    </init-param>
  </servlet>
  <servlet-mapping>
    <servlet-name>Admin</servlet-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
  </servlet-mapping>
</web-app>

In this situation my “Admin” class is in the default package, which is not generally a good practice, but you get the idea.

Menu and MenuDispatcher
I then used the “Tree” class in Vaadin to build myself a nice tree-style menu, and added that to the layout on my main page. My main page has some chrome regions for a top banner and other assorted visual aids, then a left-side area where the menu lives, and a “main” area, where all the real action in the application will happen.

A class I called MenuDispatcher “listens” for events on the menu (e.g. the user clicking something), and does the appropriate action when a certain menu item is clicked.

Here’s the interesting bits from the MenuDispatcher – as you can see, it’s constructed with a reference to the “mainArea” layout when it’s first initialized.

     public class MenuDispatcher implements ItemClickEvent.ItemClickListener {

    private VerticalLayout mainArea;

    public MenuDispatcher(VerticalLayout mainArea) {
        this.mainArea = mainArea;
    }

    public void itemClick(ItemClickEvent event) {
        if (event.getButton() == ItemClickEvent.BUTTON_LEFT) {
            String selected = event.getItemId().toString();

            System.out.println("Selected " + selected + " from menu");
            if (selected.equals("create dealer")) {
                createDealer();
            } else if (selected.equals("edit dealers")) {
                editDealer();
            }
...
            }
            System.err.println("Selected " + event.getItemId());
        }
    }

    private void createDealer() {
        mainArea.removeAllComponents();
        Component form = new CreateDealerForm();
        mainArea.addComponent(form);
        mainArea.setComponentAlignment(form, Alignment.MIDDLE_CENTER);
        mainArea.requestRepaint();
    }

    private void editDealer() {
...
    }

...
}

Again, this code can be made more sophisticated – I’m thinking a little Spring magic could make adding new forms and such very convenient, but this gets us started.

Submitting the Form
The “CreateDealerForm” object referred to in the Dispatcher then builds a Vaadin “Form” class, much like the example form built in the “Book of Vaadin”. The only interesting part of my form was that I chose not to back it with a Bean class, which is an option with Vaadin forms. If you back with a bean, then you essentially bind the form to the bean, and the form fields are generated for you from the bean.

If I wanted to then send the corresponding bean to the back-end service, then binding the bean to the form would be a good way to go. Instead, however, I don’t want my back-end services to be sharing beans with my UI application at all. I’ll explain why and how later on in more detail.

The interesting part of my form, then, is how I handle the submission of the form:

Assuming I have a button on my form, defined like so:

      Button okbutton = new Button("Submit", dealerForm, "commit");

I can add a listener to this button (again, using Vaadin’s magic ability to route the Ajax events to my Java code) like thus:

      okbutton.addListener(new Button.ClickListener() {
            public void buttonClick(Button.ClickEvent event) {

                Map<String, Object> parameters = new HashMap<String, Object>();
                for (Object id: dealerForm.getItemPropertyIds()) {
                    Field field = dealerForm.getField(id);
                    parameters.put(id.toString(), field.getValue());
                }

                System.out.println("*** Calling dealer service via dispatcher");
                ServiceClient.call("dealer", "save", parameters, null, null);
                getWindow().showNotification("Dealer Saved");
            }
        });

I’m using an anonymous inner class to listen to the event, and the “buttonClick” method gets called when the user says “Submit”.

The next steps are where the form meets the back-end service: First, I iterate over the form and build a map containing all the field values. The map is keyed with a string, for the name of the field or property, and the value in the map is the value the user entered. Note that these values are already typed – e.g. a checkbox can have a boolean, a TextField can have a string, a calendar field can have a java.util.Date. We retain these types, and wrap everything up in a map.

Now (after a quick println so I can see what’s going on), I call a static method on class called ServiceClient, sending along the name of the service I want to call, the operation on that service, and the parameter map I just built from my form.

The last line just shows a nice “fade away” non-modal notification to the user that the dealer he entered has been saved (assuming the call to ServiceClient didn’t throw an exception, which we’re assuming for the moment for simplicity).

So, now we have our “call” method to consider, where the map of values we built in our Vaadin front-end gets handed off to the appropriate back-end service.

Calling the Service

The only job of the ServiceClient object is to route a call from somewhere in our Vaadin app (in this case, the submission of a form) to the proper back-end service, and potentially return a response.

We identify our back-end services by a simple string, the “service name” (our first argument). The second argument to call tells us the “operation” we want from this service, as a single service can normally perform several different operations. For instance, our dealer service might have the ability to save a dealer, get a list of dealers, find a specific dealer, and so forth.

In Java parlance, a service operation might correspond to a method on the service interface, but we’re not coupling that tightly at this point – our service, after all, might not be written in Java for all we know at this point, and I prefer to keep it that way.

This is the “loose joint” in the mechanism between the UI and the back-end. To keep the joint loose, we don’t send a predefined Bean class to the back-end service to define the parameters to the service operation, we send a map, where that map contains a set of key/value pairs. The keys are always Strings, but the values can be any type – possibly even another map, for instance, which would allow us to express quite complex structures if required, in a type-independent fashion.

Let’s have a look at ServiceClient:

     public class ServiceClient implements BundleActivator {

    private static DispatchService dispatchService = null;

    public void start(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
            ServiceReference reference = context.getServiceReference(DispatchService.class.getName());
            if (reference == null)
                throw new RuntimeException("Cannot find the dispatch service");
            dispatchService = (DispatchService) context.getService(reference);
            if (dispatchService == null)
                throw new RuntimeException("Didn't find dispatch service");
    }

    public void stop(BundleContext context) throws Exception {
        System.out.println("Stopping bundle");
    }

    public static List<Map<String, Object>> call(String serviceName, String operation, Map<String, Object> params, String versionPattern, String securityToken) throws Exception {
            if (dispatchService == null) {
                System.out.println("No OSGi dispatch service available - using dummy static data");
                return StaticDataService.call(serviceName, operation, params, versionPattern, securityToken);
            }
            return dispatchService.call(serviceName, operation, params, versionPattern, securityToken);
    }
}

Let’s go through that class piece by piece. First, you’ll notice that the class implements the BundleActivator interface – this tells the OSGi container that it is possible to call this class when the OSGi bundle containing it is started and stopped. During the start process, you can have the class receive a reference to the BundleContext. This is somewhat analagous to the Spring ApplicationContext, in that it gives our class access to the other services also deployed in OSGi. The Spring DM framework lets you do this kind of thing more declaratively, but it’s good to know how the low-level works before engaging the autopilot, I always find.

In order to allow BundleActivator to be found, we need another couple of things on our classpath, so we add this to our POM:

       <dependency>
            <groupId>org.osgi</groupId>
            <artifactId>osgi_R4_core</artifactId>
            <version>1.0</version>
        </dependency>

        <dependency>
            <groupId>org.osgi</groupId>
            <artifactId>osgi_R4_compendium</artifactId>
            <version>1.0</version>
        </dependency>

This defines the BundleActivator interface and other OSGi requirements which we use.

As you can see, we use our reference to the OSGi context to get a ServiceReference to an interface called “DispatchService”. We’ll examine dispatch service in detail in my next posting, but for now you can see we hold on to our reference as an instance variable.

When the call to the “call” method happens, our DispatchService reference is already available if we’re running inside an OSGi container, all wired up and ready to go. To give us flexibility, though, we also allow for the case where dispatch service is null, meaning we’re not running inside and OSGi container.

Instead of crashing and burning, however, we simply redirect our call to a “StaticDataService” class, which does just what you might expect. For every call it understands, it returns a static “canned” response. This allows us to build and test our UI without actually having written any of the back-end services, and to continue to run our Vaadin app with a simple “mvn jetty:run”, when all we’re working on is look and feel, or logic that only affects the UI.

This means my “cycle time” to test a change in the UI code is a matter of seconds – when I do a “mvn jetty:run” my code is compiled and up and running in my browser in about 5 seconds, and that’s on my 5 year-old macbook laptop, so there’s no penalty for not having a dynamic language in the mix here, from my point of view.

If DispatchService is not null, however, then we’re running “for real” inside an OSGi container, so we use our stored reference to the dispatch service to “forward on” our call. The dispatch service works it’s magic, which we’ll examine in a later post, and returns a List of Map objects with our response. This list might only contain one Map, of course, if the service was a simple one.

The response is then returned to the caller elsewhere in the Vaadin application, to do whatever is necessary from a UI point of view – perhaps populate a form or table with the response data.

As we’ll see in detail in my next post, the dispatch service in this case acts as a “barrier” between the UI-oriented code in our Vaadin app and our domain-specific application logic contained in our services. It is responsible for mapping our generic map of parameters into whatever domain beans are used by our back-end services, and for figuring out which of those services should be called, and which operation on that service is required. Those services then return whatever domain-specific objects they return, and the dispatcher grinds them into non-type-bound maps, or lists of maps, if there is a whole series of returns.

This means our Vaadin app only ever has to talk to one thing: the dispatcher. We only change our Vaadin code for one reason: to change the UI, never in response to a change of service code, even if the beans and classes of that service change significantly.

Next time we’ll look at the dispatch service and the first of our application-specific domain-aware services, and see how they come together.

First Look at Vaadin
Nov 12th, 2009 by Mike

I’ve had the chance over a recent weekend to have a first crack at a web framework called Vaadin.

I was originally browsing for news about the latest release of Google’s GWT framework when I stumbled on a reference to Vaadin, and decided to go take a look. What I found intrigued me, and I decided to take it for a test drive, as I was down sick for a couple of days with a laptop nearby…. My back became annoyed with me, but it was worth it, I think.

First Look
First off, the practicalities: Vaadin is open source, and with a reasonable license, the Apache License. The essential bits of Vaadin are contained in a single JAR, and it’s both Ant and Maven friendly right out of the box.

The next thing that struck me about Vaadin was the documentation. The first unusual thing about it’s documentation was the fact of it’s existance, as open source projects are downright notorious for poor documentation. Vaadin is a pleasant exception, with tons of examples, a well-organized API doc, in the usual JavaDoc format, and even the “Book of Vaadin”, an entire PDF book (also available in hardcopy) that takes you through Vaadin in enough detail to be immediately productive.

Given that surprisingly pleasant start, I dug deeper, creating a little app of my own.

Just the Java, Ma’am
The main thing that kept me interested in Vaadin once I started digging further was that it’s pure Java. Many frameworks talk about writing your UI work in Java, such as Wicket, but there’s still a corresponding template and some wiring that happens to put the code and the template together. Not so with Vaadin.

When they say “just Java”, they mean it – your entire UI layer is coded in Java, plain and simple. No templates, no tag libraries, no Javascript, no ‘nuthin. It’s reminiscent of the Echo framework, except in Vaadin’s case the Javascript library that your code automatically produces is Google’s GWT, instead of Echo’s own Core.JS library.

Unlike GWT, though, the Vaadin approach doesn’t bind you to any specific source code though, it’s just a binary jar you put on your classpath.

The only thing in my sample app, other than 2 Java files, was a web.xml and a css stylesheet, both of which were only a few lines long. And this was no “Hello, World”, either, but a rich AJAX webapp with a tree menu, fancy non-modal “fading” notifications, images, complex layouts, and a form with build-in validation. And it took maybe 4 hours of total work to produce – and that was from a standing start, as I’d never heard of Vaadin before last Thursday. Not bad, not bad at all.

I found I was able to get a very capable little webapp up and running with no need to invent my own components, even though I had trees and sliders and menus and other assorted goodies on the page. It worked in every browser I was able to try it in, which is certainly not the case for my own hand-rolled JavaScript most of the time :)

I haven’t yet tried creating my own custom components, but it certainly looks straightforward enough.

I did try linking to external resources, and included non-Vaadin pages in my app, with no difficulties, so it appears that Vaadin plays well with others, and can be introduced into an existing project that uses, for instance, a whack of JSP’s that one might want to obsolete.

Webapps
I think Vaadin warrants more exploration, and I intend to put it further through its paces in the next few weeks. It appears extremely well-suited to web applications, as opposed to websites with a tiny bit of dynamic stuff in them.

It offers an interesting alternative to some of the patterns I’ve seen for advanced dynamic webapp development so far.

One approach I’ve seen a lot is to divide the duties of creating an app into the “back end” services and the “UI”. Generally the UI is written in either JavaScript, or uses Flex or some other semi-proprietary approach. The “back end” stuff is frequently written to expose it’s services as REST, then the two are bolted together. The pain point here happens when the two meet, as it’s common and easy to have minor (or major!) misunderstandings between the two teams. This usually results in a lot of to-and-fro to work out the differences before the app comes all the way to life.

The other approach, more common on smaller or resource-strapped teams, is to have the same group responsible for both UI and back-end services. This reduces the thrash in the joints a bit, but doesn’t eliminate it, because the two technologies on the two sides of the app aren’t the same. You can’t test JavaScript the same way you write Java, for instance, and they’re two different languages – one of which (Java) has far better tooling support than the other. IDE support, for instance, is superb for Java, and spotty at best for JavaScript.

With Vaadin, both of these approaches become unnecessary, as its the same technology all the way through (at least, what you write is – technically it’s still using JavaScript, but because that’s generated, I don’t count it).

You get to use all of the tools you know and love for the back-end services to write the code for the UI, which you can then unit and functional test to your heart’s content.

The temptation to mix concerns between UI code and back-end service code must still be resisted, of course, but at least that code isn’t buried somewhere in the middle of a JSP page, ready to leap out and bite you later.

Because you’re using dynamic layouts, the app always fits properly on the screen without any extra work, addressing a pet peeve of mine, the “skinny” webapp, restraining itself to the least common denominator of screen size, thus rendering impotent my nice wide monitors.

Scala
Just because Vaadin is a Java library doesn’t restrict you to using Java to drive it, however. I made another little webapp where the whole UI was defined in Scala, calling the Vaadin APIs, and it worked like a charm. In some ways, Scala is an even better fit for Vaadin than straight Java, I suspect. I haven’t tried any other JVM compatible language, but I see no reason they wouldn’t work equally well.

Deployment and Development Cycle
As I was building the app with Maven, I added a couple of lines to my POM and was able to say “mvn jetty:run” to get my Vaadin app up and running on my local box in a few seconds. My development cycle was only a few seconds between compile and interactive tests, as I was experimenting with the trial-and-error method.

TDD would be not only possible, but easy in this situation.

I successfully deployed my little Vaadin app to ServiceMix, my OSGi container of choice, without a hitch.

Performance appeared excellent overall, although I haven’t formally tested it with a load-testing tool (yet).

Summary
So far, I’m impressed with Vaadin. I’m more impressed with any web framework I’ve worked with in a number of years, in fact. I’m sure there are some warts in there somewhere, but for the benefits it brings to the table, I suspect they’re easily worth it. I think the advantages to teams that already speak fluent Java is hard to overstate, and the productivity to produce good-looking and functioning webapps is quite remarkable.

Lift in ServiceMix 4
Sep 5th, 2009 by Mike

Apache’s ServiceMix 4 is a unique combination of OSGi container and JBI-compliant ESB, but in addition to this it’s also a capable web application container. More specifically, it can contain a webapp container, but the effect is the same…

My current favorite tool for cranking out MVC-style webapps is the Lift framework, so I thought I’d document here the process for deploying a Lift webapp into ServiceMix 4.

The good news is that it’s very straightforward.

First, build the .war for your Lift app using mvn package. This will result in a .war file in the target directory of your project, and is well-covered by the Lift documentation if you need more details. In my case, I started with a slightly modified version of the PocketChange example app for Lift.

Now start servicemix with

bin/servicemix

Done from the root directory of your ServiceMix install. You should see the ServiceMix banner after a few moments, followed by a prompt.

In the console, type the “osgi” command to enter OSGi mode.
then

install war:file:///tmp/admin-0.1.war?Webapp-Context=admin

You’ll see some startup messages as your webapp is digested by ServiceMix, turned automagically into a bundle, and processed by various intestinal organs such as the HTTP service.

Now surf to

http://localhost:8080/admin/

And up comes your application!!

Maven with included Dependencies
Sep 4th, 2009 by Mike

One of the most common, and, in my opinion, valid criticism’s of Apache Maven is the way it handles dependencies.

The default way of doing dependencies in Maven is for a build to look for dependency jars in one of a specified number of places. If you don’t specify a location, it will start with your local Maven repository, then a stock set of online repositories (such as ibiblio).

What this means is that you can quickly and easily add a dependency to your project by just listing it in the POM, and Maven will frequently just go get it for you as required. For dependencies that don’t change rapidly (which is generally a bad idea for entirely separate reasons), the local copy is always used, so after the first download you don’t go get the jar again unless it changes.

The downside of this (and hence the basis for the criticism) is that your local repository is considered a cache, and is not checked in to your source control system. Maven aficionados believe that source control should be for what the name implies: source, not jars (which are an artifact, not source code). This is good, except in situations where the local repository is removed (as it’s a cache, and not “backed up” by being in source control) and you want to rebuild your project. Normally, no problem: Maven will simply go back out into the wilds of the internet and get your jars for you again. Except when it can’t, which is where the problem starts.

Let’s say your project depends on foo-1.0.jar, for the sake of discussion. Foo-1.0.jar is found in a repository at http://baz.com. No problem. Two months from now, you come back and make a change to your project, and your local repo doesn’t have foo-1.0.jar in it. Maven goes to get it for you, but baz.com has gone offline. Oops. Now you can’t build your project at all. Worse, let’s say you *do* find foo-1.0.jar, but it’s been updated. Granted, this is a gross violation of the version scheme, but as baz.com is not under your control, it *can* happen – and Murphy was an optimist.

The first level of defense against this is to have a local jar proxy that *is* backed up, like Nexus. Nexus not only provides a safe haven for the exact versions of Jars you need to build your project, but also proxies new jars automatically, when set up correctly. That way, once you use that external dependency, it’s available on the local proxy immediately forever more, in precisely the correct version.

This solution is so good, that I always consider Nexus and Maven to be two parts of one solution – as you don’t really have reliable and repeatable builds without Nexus in the mix.

Another way to go, however, is perhaps even more straightforward, and might be appropriate if you have a limited number of “internal” binary dependencies – that is, binary dependencies that you generate within your organization between projects.

This is the option I want to describe in this blog, and it takes a form very similar to the old Ant style of having a “lib” directory in your project, and checking jars into source control.

You simply create a directory (called lib or whatever you wish, but “lib” might be more standard), and put your jar dependencies in it. Then you refer to each dependency in your pom.xml file with a special syntax, like so:

    <dependency>
      <groupId>mygroup</groupId>
      <artifactId>myjar</artifactId>
      <version>1.0.0</version>
      <scope>system</scope>
      <systemPath>${basedir}/src/main/resources/lib/myjar-1.0.0.jar</systemPath>
    </dependency>

Now the myjar-1.0.0.jar will be on my classpath during compilation, easy as that. I can then check in that nicely versioned jar file, and have a fully self-contained project, while at the same time being able to leverage the power of Maven and it’s rich ecosystem of plugins. If you’re using the shade plugin, this is an excellent way to create a self-contained executable jar file containing all of your necessary dependencies in one shot, rather than having to worry about classpaths at runtime.

In web applications, you can do even better. By placing the dependency in the correct spot in your source tree, you can have it automatically included in the finished .war file, while at the same time finding it in your classpath during compile time, like so:

    <dependency>
      <groupId>xstream</groupId>
      <artifactId>xstream</artifactId>
      <version>1.3.1</version>
      <scope>system</scope>
      <systemPath>${basedir}/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/lib/xstream-1.3.1.jar</systemPath>
    </dependency>

This includes the xstream jar in my webapp. Every IDE that can digest a POM file (which include my 3 main ones, IntelliJ IDEA, Eclipse IDE and Netbeans) also automagically find the dependencies.

One minor constraint here is that you must use a *versioned* jar file – e.g. it must be named according to the artifact-version.jar pattern. I consider this a feature, not a limitation, as I’m a firm believer that all artifacts should be properly versioned, so I can tell what source code originally created them. Yes, I know that can be done internally, in a manifest or such, but I like to see the label on the outside of the box, so to speak.

As one colleague put it, now you can be assured of coming back to your project months or years later, even if you don’t have internet connectivity, and be able to build the darn thing again, without going off on a wild jar chase all over the internet.

This pattern can overcome a serious and legitimate objection to Maven, and might be appropriate in many situations. Give it a try, let me know what you think!

Maven’s Release Mechanism
Jun 10th, 2009 by Mike

I’ve blogged a few times about how Maven and it’s associated tools and plugins is much more than a build tool, it’s a project information and management framework, so it’s no secret that I’m a fan.

One of the lesser-known things about Maven’s project management abilities is in it’s release plugin – the ability for Maven to co-ordinate and manage your release process in a reliable, simple, and fully-automated way. That’s what I’d like to explore here.

If we’re developing in an environment that supports a fully deterministic build process, including dependencies (binary and source), then we need to be able to version all our build artifacts, whether they are jar files, war files, or any other kind of file. During the development process, we need to be able to assemble applications quickly without compiling any more than we need to, and without being forced to release modules that are still moving targets. This is accomplished in Maven by use of the “SNAPSHOT” versions of modules. A module, let’s say “app”, that produces a jar file, is at any point at some specific version, let’s say “1.1″. Once we create the artifact for 1.1, our next creation of that jar must not re-use 1.1, it must be something else, as changes are incorporated.

If we’re not ready to release 1.2 (and we probably aren’t if we just released 1.1, we need an “intermediary” between 1.1 and 1.2. This is 1.2-SNAPSHOT. By seeing the “SNAPSHOT” we know we’re dealing with a version that may and probably will change. Internally, Maven translates the “-SNAPSHOT” to a date/timestamp and serial-number combination that allows you to track quite precisely each SNAPSHOT version as it changes, if you want, but generally you just want “the latest” (like HEAD from Subversion), and this is just called “SNAPSHOT”.

When we want to release a new stable version, however, we want to reverse this process – we need to produce a new non-SNAPSHOT of our artifact, then immediately switch to the next SNAPSHOT version so that development can continue without interruption. In the case of our example, we’re going to produce app-1.2.jar, then immediately begin working on 1.3-SNAPSHOT.

During development, we may also want to specify our dependencies as SNAPSHOT versions as well, so if we have a dependency that is also in development, we can work on “the latest” version as well. Once we’re ready to release, though, this changes – we want only stable and reproducible code in our release, so we need to “resolve” all SNAPSHOT dependencies to a specific version, then we can switch our own module to a release version, probably tag the code at that point in SVN, and create the releaseable artifact. We probably also want to deploy that artifact to a staging area, ready to be deployed into our production environment.

Maven’s release plugin does all of this for us, and more, in a reliable and fail-safe way.

Run in two phases, the plugin’s goal “prepare” does all of the verification work for us. It:

  1. Verifies that there are no changes not yet committed to version control (so you’re sure you can reproduce this release from the checked-in code)
  2. Runs all tests, builds the project to ensure it passes it’s tests
  3. Verifies that there are no dependencies (direct or transitive) on SNAPSHOT intermediate versions (again, so the release is fully reproducable and stable)
  4. Increments the version number in the project POM (or POMS, if you’re doing a multi-module release) to the new version (prompting for the next version number to use)
  5. Modifies the source code management information in the POM to point to the tagged version of the code
  6. Commits the changes made above to subversion (or your system of choice)
  7. Tags the code in the source control system (so you know exactly what code produced this release)
  8. Increment the version number again, now to the next SNAPSHOT version (again, prompting for the new value with sensible defaults)
  9. Commit the change to the new SNAPSHOT version

The goal “perform” actually performs the release, doing all the steps required to produce and publish a versioned artifact to our staging area (often a system such as Nexus), where it can be accessed as required to deploy to other environments.

The perform process:

  1. Checks out the code from source control from the proper tag
  2. Produces the versioned artifact and deploys it to the staging area (usually Nexus or similar)
  3. Produces the project website (with mvn site) and deploys that to it’s destination, recording information about the release, notes, and so forth

There are other goals for recovering a failed release, doing “dry runs” of a deploy without actually changing anything, and even moving the deployed artifact into the target environment.

So why might you choose Maven’s deployment process over a custom-built scripted process?

There’s a few things you might consider when making such a choice:

  1. Nothing to build: Maven’s release process is already written and finished, nothing to construct. This means less time to get an automated deployment process in operation, no matter how fast you can construct one, with Maven’s auto-discovery of plugins, it won’t be as fast as typing “mvn release:prepare”. You can apply Maven to a new project in seconds, as there’s nothing to configure or install, no scripts to write or edit.
  2. Complete: Maven covers all the essential steps in a release automatically, so there’s no chance of leaving something out – like forgetting to tag SVN at the right moment or a SNAPSHOT dependency slipping into a production release
  3. Standardized and Proven: A new user that knows Maven who is starting with your project has almost nothing to learn – the Maven release process is standardized and well-tested in thousands of high-volume sites.
  4. Integrated: The Maven release process works with all of the other project management tools that Maven brings to your project, such as reporting, staging, site generation, automated testing, and hundreds of others. Maven’s integration with tools like Nexus for staging and storing build artifacts allows you to manage component modules easily , permitting roll-out and roll-back of versions in a reliable and repeatable way.
  5. Vendor-independent: The release plugin, like Maven itself, is vendor-agnostic, and works with any IDE, any CI server, and deployment scenario.
  6. OSGi-Ready: A wealth of tools to handle OSGi bundle generation are supported by Maven and fully compatible with the release process, setting your project up to take advantage of the power of OSGi when you’re ready for it.
  7. Dependency-Aware: Maven’s project management handles the complexity of multi-module/multi-component software “assembly”, a critical aspect of highly productive short-cycle development with on-demand release and deployment schedules, and the release plugin makes sure that the proper inter-module dependencies are observed and transient versions resolved before every deployment, automatically. Without such a tool, your teams will be tempted to build larger more monolithic applications, just because they’re easier to provision, release and deploy – always a poor reason to avoid componentization.
  8. Multilingual: Maven and the release plugin can work with many different languages, not just Java, giving you a standardized deployment process across
    a modern multi-language development environment easily.
  9. Highly extensible and customizable: Because it’s open source, you have full control over the operation of Maven and it’s deploy process in a way that’s not possible with non-open products. Even without using the available source, configuration can bind custom operations to every lifecycle phase of a release’s process easily.

In short, rolling your own process for deployment is a much more expensive and risky proposition than using a reliable and well-established tool such as Maven to do it for you.

Automatic Dependency Management with Maven
May 28th, 2009 by Mike

Apache Maven is a lot more than a “build tool”, and one of it’s major strengths is it’s ability to manage dependencies.

Maven’s not just for external dependency management, though – it can help us work faster and more easily with our own modules as well as those written by others. In fact, it’s “internal” dependency management is actually far more powerful for most development shops.

Every dependency Maven manages is identified with 3 pieces of information – it’s group id, it’s artifact id, and it’s version. Group id is often some sub-domain of the company it’s working on, e.g. com.point2.somemodule, and the artifact id helps identify the specific module with that group, like rest-api or such.

Possibly the most interesting part is the version number, though, as this is where the real power of Maven comes to the fore. Versions allow us to maximize the opportunity for parallel development without descending into unversioned chaos. Each version represents a specific point in time in a library’s development – and, most importantly, allows us to “re-assemble” our application to a known state at any time (not re-build it).

Let’s take a for-instance to see how this might work…

Component-Based Application “Assembly”
For example, let’s say I’ve got a few teams working on different modules for my new application, let’s call them “persistence”, “rest-api” and the user-interface, “ui”. Each of these modules depends on a set of common utility classes in “util”.

We can represent this through a set of triples like so:

rest-api depends-on persistence
rest-api depends-on util
ui depends-on rest-api
persistence depends-on util (directly, and not only on the transitive dependency through persistence)

The unseen aspect here is the versioning. If we include versions in our triples, we see the picture is a bit more sophisticated:

rest-api-1.0 depends on persistence-3.1
rest-api-1.0 depends-on util-1.1
ui-1.0 depends-on rest-api-1.0
persistence-3.1 depends-on util-1.0

Now we have a fully defined dependency graph that we can assemble into an application, say app-1.0. At any time, if we want a copy of the app in 1.0 state, we re-construct it from this deployed modules, no need to build any source code, and we’ve got the exact same app, every time.

Get it in motion…
Now let’s look at this in a dynamic development environment, where we’re trying to maximize sustainable velocity:

Although there are dependencies between each module, we don’t want to hold up one team by forcing them to build the other teams modules unnecessarily. We also want each team to choose if they want to work with the very latest version of the other modules, or working against a fixed and stable version for a time instead.

The “ui” team, for example, might be refactoring JavaScript code that’s relying on version 1.0.3 of “rest-api”, while “rest-api” in turn is already working on 1.0.4 – and it uses 1.1.0 of “persistence”… it can get tangled in a hurry without a way to manage it, and we don’t want to be artificially discouraged from writing modular code just because it’s hard to keep version numbers straight.

Enter Maven again. Instead of forcing everyone to just always work with the latest version of every other module (which can bring productivity to a screeching halt in some situations), we allow each time to decide what dependency they will include in their POM (Project Object Model) file.

What if I want the very latest version of “persistence” while I work on “rest-api”, with changes checked in by other developers while I’m still working? This is where the SNAPSHOT version comes into play. Instead of declaring a dependency on 1.1.0, I declare a dependency on 1.1.1-SNAPSHOT. This represents the latest “edge” code for the referenced dependency.

Now we have a graph that looks like this:

app-1.0-SNAPSHOT depends on ui-1.1-SNAPSHOT
rest-api-1.1-SNAPSHOT depends on persistence-3.1-SNAPSHOT
rest-api-1.1-SNAPSHOT depends-on util-1.1
ui-1.1-SNAPSHOT depends-on rest-api-1.1-SNAPSHOT
persistence-3.1-SNAPSHOT depends-on util-1.1

As you can see, we have a mix of stable versioned modules (util in this case), and “on the fly” versions. Yet at the same time we’re assured that major changes that break backwards compatibility will not be seen, as we indicate such changes with a change in our major version number (e.g. 1.X to 2.0).

Then we can set up a CI job (say on TeamCity, Bamboo, or whatever your CI system of choice is) to automatically build and deploy our SNAPSHOT version of “persistence” to our local Maven repository (within our company firewall). The SNAPSHOT version actually turns into a date/timestamped version when it’s deployed to Nexus, and Maven is clever enough to fetch for us the most recent of these SNAPSHOTs every time we build. The “persistence” team checks in some code, CI builds it and deploys the resulting SNAPSHOT jar to our repository, and we get it automagically the next time we build, even though we’re working on rest-api, not persistence.

When we’re ready to “stabilize” our dependencies, we simply switch from the SNAPSHOT to a specific version. Maven has a pre-defined “release” process that guarantees, among other things, that every released version has no remaining SNAPSHOT dependencies, is tagged to version control, and verified via all it’s tests. More than a build tool indeed…

We could of course just put all the modules we’re going to depend on in an aggregator POM, and build everything every time we make a change, but this is hardly efficient, and limits our development velocity unnecessarily (and of course we might not all be in the same source tree, or even the same version-control repository). We want to be building smaller pieces, not bigger ones.

A critical part of this process is our company-local Maven repository – here I mean not just the developer-local repository on each developers own workstation, but a product like Nexus that holds a company-wide copy of all required jars for a build. By doing this, we can guarantee a consistent copy of all our required dependencies without having to depend on the availability of outside repositories, such as ibiblio. It’s not a bad idea to in fact *only* permit access to the local repository for building releases, which ensures this policy is not violated accidentally – while at the same time keeping the “external” maven repo’s available to developers for experimenting and prototyping. Once something gets used in production code, however, it gets stored in the “inside the firewall” Nexus repo (and backed up from there). This avoids the bad practice of checking jar files into source control (it’s called “source” control for a reason).

Testing, Testing…
To add a new aspect to the problem, let’s say that it’s not only production code we depend on, but helper classes for tests as well. If it’s difficult to set up a fixture for a certain kind of test, that might be a code smell in and of itself, but that’s also another story. If we have some test helpers that reside in our dependent modules, we won’t be able to see those helpers in our tests in another module, as we’re only depending on that module’s production code, not test code.

We can easily tell Maven to also bundle up the test code from a certain module, however, and make it available to us in a jar file, like so:

 <build>
        <plugins>
            <plugin>
                <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
                <artifactId>maven-jar-plugin</artifactId>
                <executions>
                    <execution>
                        <goals>
                            <goal>test-jar</goal>
                        </goals>
                    </execution>
                </executions>
            </plugin>
            ...
     </plugins>
</build>

Now when we build, we’ll get a test jar as well as our regular jar, which we can depend on like so:

   <dependency>
            <groupId>com.point2.core</groupId>
            <artifactId>somemodule</artifactId>
            <version>1.0</version>
            <scope>test</scope>
            <classifier>tests</classifier>
        </dependency>

Now our test classes in the module declaring the above dependency can see the test helpers in the somemodule module – but we’re still not including test code in our production jar.

Again, I have to emphasize that this level of coupling might indicate a deeper issue, but if you do need to do this, it’s good to know how :)

Maven also includes facilities to analyze and clean up a complex dependency tree, remove unnecessary dependencies, and keep the whole project manageable.

In summary, Maven can handle extremely complex dependency management for us in a fully declarative and versioned manner, allowing us at any moment to see exactly what our project depends on, both in production and test code. In conjunction with a CI system (like TeamCity) and repository server (like Nexus), we can automate the deployment of intermediary and full-release versions to the point where we save significant time, and never build code that we’re not actually working on, allowing us to concentrate on the task at hand and leaving the heavy lifting to Maven.

This allows us to only ever build the code we’re actually changing – never code that’s already available in another library, reducing our developer cycle time significantly. It also means we’re spending more time “assembling” software from re-usable components than re-compiling (and probably re-testing) code that’s already verified and available in object form.

Maven: not just for breakfast anymore.

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