Sorry, this questions sounds silly, but after developing some of my RESTful services using Jersey, I asked myself the question - If REST is just an architecture, and not a protocol like SOAP, why do we need a specification like JAX-RS ? I actually googled for questions like "What is the difference between servlets and RESTful services over HTTP" and to sum up the community answers, I got :
- RESTful service development (on Jersey) is an architecture, which inherently uses servlets.
- JAX-RS compliant tools like Jersey provide easy marhalling-unmarshalling of XML/JSON data, helping the developers.
- REST helps us use GET/PUT/POST/DELETE in a fashion that is far efficient than normal servlets.
According to these answers, I guess if I write a servlet which uses JAXB (for dealing with automatic serialization), and I efficiently use GET/POST/PUT/DELETE in my servlet code, I dont use a tool like Jersey, and hence JAX-RS.
I know I am terribly wrong passing this statement, please correct me.
PS : This doubt actually came in when I had to develop some RESTful services in PHP. After going on through some of the RESTful PHP codes, I realized they are just the same old PHP scripts, with some helper methods for handling XML/JSON.
