You can use spring-data-rest and Spring's RestTemplate. No need to write a webapp as you can bootstrap Spring easily into a standalone java application putting AnnotationConfigApplicationContext
in the Main(). It's quite simple.
For example, suppose you have a Restful URL, http://localhost:8080/croot/books/
that returns a list of books (deserialized into objects of type Book).
Using Spring's RestTemplate you can do the following:
public Resource<List<Resource<Book>>> findAll() {
return restTemplate
.exchange(
"http://localhost:8080/croot/books/",
HttpMethod.GET,
null,
new ParameterizedTypeReference<Resource<List<Resource<Book>>>>() {
}).getBody();
}
You can also process this using spring-data-hateoas allowing you to further decouple the client from the server and helps process what to do next, say in pagination.
This is a very simplified/contrived example but the REST support in Spring 3 combined with the spring-data framework is quite elegant.
Using Spring you also get the advantage of Jackson for JSON processing as the RestTemplate
will have one of the flavors of Jackson's message converters (provided through MappingJackson2HttpMessageConverter
for example) in it's list of default converters used for processing.