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  1. DZone
  2. Coding
  3. Frameworks
  4. Introducing Kilo

Introducing Kilo

Meet Kilo (formerly HTTP-RPC), a lightweight Java framework for producing and consuming RESTful and REST-like web services.

By 
Greg Brown user avatar
Greg Brown
·
May. 15, 24 · Tutorial
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Kilo is an open-source framework for creating and consuming RESTful and REST-like web services in Java. It is extremely lightweight and requires only a Java runtime environment and a servlet container. The project’s name comes from the nautical K or Kilo flag, which means “I wish to communicate with you”.

Kilo was formerly known as “HTTP-RPC”, and was created as an alternative to other frameworks that have a larger footprint and steeper learning curve. The name was changed recently to better reflect the project’s current focus and intent.

This article provides an overview of two core Kilo classes, WebService and WebServiceProxy.

WebService

WebService is an abstract base class for web services. It extends the similarly abstract HttpServlet class and provides a thin, REST-oriented layer on top of the standard servlet API.

For example, the following service implements some simple mathematical operations:

Java
 
@WebServlet(urlPatterns = {"/math/*"}, loadOnStartup = 1)
@Description("Math example service.")
public class MathService extends WebService {
    @RequestMethod("GET")
    @ResourcePath("sum")
    @Description("Calculates the sum of two numbers.")
    public double getSum(
        @Description("The first number.") double a,
        @Description("The second number.") double b
    ) {
        return a + b;
    }

    @RequestMethod("GET")
    @ResourcePath("sum")
    @Description("Calculates the sum of a list of numbers.")
    public double getSum(
        @Description("The numbers to add.") List<Double> values
    ) {
        double total = 0;

        for (double value : values) {
            total += value;
        }

        return total;
    }
}


The RequestMethod annotation associates an HTTP verb such as GET or POST with a service method, or “handler”. The optional ResourcePath annotation associates a handler with a specific path, or “endpoint”, relative to the servlet. If unspecified, the handler is associated with the servlet itself. The optional Description annotation is used in the automatically generated documentation for the service.

Arguments may be provided via the query string, resource path, or request body. They may also be submitted as form data. WebService converts the values to the expected types, invokes the method, and writes the return value (if any) to the output stream as JSON.

Multiple methods may be associated with the same verb and path. WebService selects the best method to execute based on the provided argument values. For example, this request would invoke the first method:

GET /math/sum?a=2&b=4


While this would invoke the second:

GET /math/sum?values=1&values=2&values=3


In either case, the service would return the value 6 in response.

Path Variables

Path variables (or “keys”) are specified by a “?” character in a handler’s resource path. For example, the itemID argument in the method below is provided by a path variable:

Java
 
@RequestMethod("GET")
@ResourcePath("items/?")
@Description("Returns detailed information about a specific item.")
public ItemDetail getItem(
    @Description("The item ID.") Integer itemID
) throws SQLException { ... }


Path parameters must precede query parameters in the method signature. Values are mapped to method arguments in declaration order.

Body Content

Body content may be declared as the final parameter in a POST or PUT handler. For example, this method accepts an item ID as a path variable and an instance of ItemDetailas a body argument:

Java
 
@RequestMethod("PUT")
@ResourcePath("items/?")
@Description("Updates an item.")
public void updateItem(
    @Description("The item ID.") Integer itemID,
    @Description("The updated item.") ItemDetail item
) throws SQLException { ... }


Return Values

Return values are converted to JSON as follows:

  • String: string
  • Number/numeric primitive: number
  • Boolean/boolean: boolean
  • java.util.Date: number representing epoch time in milliseconds
  • Iterable: array
  • java.util.Map: object

Additionally, instances of the following types are automatically converted to their string representations:

  • Character/char
  • Enum
  • java.time.TemporalAccessor
  • java.time.TemporalAmount
  • java.util.UUID
  • java.net.URL

All other values are assumed to be beans and are serialized as objects.

WebServiceProxy

The WebServiceProxy class is used to submit API requests to a server. It provides the following two constructors:

Java
 
public WebServiceProxy(String method, URL url) { ... }
public WebServiceProxy(String method, URL baseURL, String path, Object... arguments) throws MalformedURLException { ... }


The first version accepts a string representing the HTTP method to execute and the URL of the requested resource. The second accepts the HTTP method, a base URL, and a relative path (as a format string, to which the optional trailing arguments are applied).

Request arguments are specified via a map passed to the setArguments() method. Any value may be used as an argument and will generally be encoded using its string representation. However, Date instances are automatically converted to a long value representing epoch time in milliseconds. Additionally, Collection or array instances represent multi-value parameters and behave similarly to <select multiple> tags in HTML. Body content can be provided via the setBody() method.

Service operations are invoked via one of the following methods:

Java
 
public Object invoke() throws IOException { ... }
public <T> T invoke(Function<Object, ? extends T> transform) throws IOException { ... }
public <T> T invoke(ResponseHandler<T> responseHandler) throws IOException { ... }


The first version deserializes a successful JSON response (if any). The second applies a transform to the deserialized response. The third version allows a caller to provide a custom response handler:

Java
 
public interface ResponseHandler<T> {
    T decodeResponse(InputStream inputStream, String contentType) throws IOException;
}


The following code demonstrates how WebServiceProxy might be used to access the operations of the simple math service discussed earlier:

Java
 
// GET /math/sum?a=2&b=4
var webServiceProxy = new WebServiceProxy("GET", new URL("http://localhost:8080/kilo-test/math/sum"));

webServiceProxy.setArguments(mapOf(
    entry("a", 4),
    entry("b", 2)
));

System.out.println(webServiceProxy.invoke()); // 6.0
Java
 
// GET /math/sum?values=1&values=2&values=3
var webServiceProxy = new WebServiceProxy("GET", new URL("http://localhost:8080/kilo-test/math/sum"));

webServiceProxy.setArguments(mapOf(
    entry("values", listOf(1, 2, 3))
));

System.out.println(webServiceProxy.invoke()); // 6.0


POST, PUT, and DELETE operations are also supported.

Typed Invocation

WebServiceProxy additionally provides the following methods to facilitate convenient, type-safe access to web APIs:

Java
 
public static <T> T of(Class<T> type, URL baseURL) { ... }
public static <T> T of(Class<T> type, URL baseURL, Consumer<WebServiceProxy> initializer) { ... }


Both versions return an implementation of a given interface that submits requests to the provided URL. An optional initializer accepted by the second version will be called prior to each service invocation; for example, to apply common request headers.

The RequestMethod and ResourcePath annotations are used as described earlier. Proxy methods must include a throws clause that declares IOException, so that callers can handle unexpected failures. For example:

Java
 
public interface MathServiceProxy {
    @RequestMethod("GET")
    @ResourcePath("sum")
    double getSum(double a, double b) throws IOException;

    @RequestMethod("GET")
    @ResourcePath("sum")
    double getSum(List<Double> values) throws IOException;
}


Example usage is shown below:

Java
 
var mathServiceProxy = WebServiceProxy.of(MathServiceProxy.class, new URL("http://localhost:8080/kilo-test/math/"));

System.out.println(mathServiceProxy.getSum(4, 2)); // 6.0
System.out.println(mathServiceProxy.getSum(listOf(1.0, 2.0, 3.0))); // 6.0


Additional Information

This article introduced the Kilo framework and provided a brief overview of two Kilo classes, WebService and WebServiceProxy. For more information, see the project README.

REST Java (programming language) Open source Framework

Published at DZone with permission of Greg Brown, DZone MVB. See the original article here.

Opinions expressed by DZone contributors are their own.

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