Annotations
Apache Wink provides several annotations in addition to those defined by the JAX-RS specification. The following section describes these annotations in detail.
@Workspace Annotation
The purpose of the @Workspace annotation is to associate a "Collection Resource" with a workspace element and collection elements in an APP Service Document.
Reference
Refer to section 5.4 APP Service Document
The workspaceTitle annotation parameter specifies the title of the workspace and the collectionTitle annotation parameter specifies the title of the collection.
@Workspace Annotation Specification
Value |
Description |
|
---|---|---|
Mandatory |
No |
|
Target |
Resource class |
|
Parameters |
Name |
Type |
|
workspaceTitle |
String |
|
collectionTitle |
String |
Example |
@Workspace(workspaceTitle = "Title", |
@Workspace Annotation Example
The following example demonstrates the use of @Workspace annotation on two resources in order to have the auto-generated APP service document contain the information about them.
Given the following collection Resources definitions, ResourceA and ResourceB, the result is displayed in the "Auto Generated APP Service Document" table that follows.
ResourceA Definition
@Workspace(workspaceTitle = "Services", collectionTitle = "Service1") @Path("services/service1") public class ResourceA { @POST @Produces("text/plain") @Consumes({"application/atom+xml", "application/xml"}) public String getText() {return "hey there1";} }
ResourceB Definition
@Workspace(workspaceTitle = "Services", collectionTitle = "Service2") @Path("services/service2") public class ResourceB { @POST @Produces("text/plain") @Consumes({"application/atom+xml", "application/xml"}) public String getText() {return "hey there2";} }
The auto-generated APP Service Document is as follows:
Auto Generated APP Service Document
<service xmlns:atom=http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2007/app"> <workspace> <atom:title>Services</atom:title> <collection href="services/service1"> <atom:title>Service1</atom:title> <accept>application/xml</accept> <accept>application/atom+xml</accept> </collection> <collection href="services/service2"> <atom:title>Service2</atom:title> <accept>application/xml</accept> <accept>application/atom+xml</accept> </collection> </workspace> </service>
@Asset Annotation
The @Asset annotation is a marker annotation used by the Apache Wink runtime in order to identify an entity as an Asset.
Reference
Refer to chapter 5 TBD for more information on Assets.
@Asset Annotation Specification
Value |
Description |
---|---|
Mandatory |
No |
Target |
Resource class |
Parameters |
None |
Example |
@Asset |
@Scope Annotation
The JAX-RS specification defines the default lifecycle behavior for resources and providers, and the option for controlling the lifecycle through the javax.ws.rs.core.Application class.
Apache Wink provides the @Scope annotation to specify the lifecycle of a provider or resource.
@Scope Annotation Specification
Value |
Description |
|
---|---|---|
Mandatory |
No |
|
Target |
Provider class or Resource class |
|
Parameters |
Name |
Type |
|
Value |
ScopeType enum |
Example |
@Scope(ScopeType.PROTOTYPE) |
Resource Example
The following example illustrates how to define a resource with a singleton lifecycle.
@Scope(ScopeType.SINGLETON) @Path("service1") public class ResourceA { ... }
Provider Example
The following example illustrates how to define a provider with a prototype lifecycle.
@Scope(ScopeType.PROTOTYPE) @Provider public class EntityProvider implements MessageBodyReader<String> { ... }
@Parent Annotation
The @Parent annotation provides the ability to define a base template URI for the URI specified in a resources @Path annotation.
If a resource is annotated with the @Parent annotation, the Apache Wink runtime calculates the final resource template by first retrieving the value of the @Parent annotation, which holds the parent resource class, and then concatenates the resource path template definition to the path template definition of the parent resource.
@Parent Annotation Specification
Value |
Description |
|
---|---|---|
Mandatory |
No |
|
Target |
Provider class or Resource class |
|
Parameters |
Name |
Type |
|
Value |
Class<?> |
Example |
@Parent(ParentResource.class) |
Example 1
@Path("services") public class ParentResource { ... }
Example 2
@Parent(BaseResource.class) @Path("service1") public class ResourceA { ... }
Explanation
In the example, the user defined two resources: A ParentResource and ResourceA. ParentResource defines the @Path annotation to associate it with "services" URI. ResourceA defines the @Path annotation to associate it with "service1" URI and defines ParentResource to be its parent by specifying it in the @Parent annotation. In this case, the final URI path for ResourceA is "services/service1".