1

I've been doing my research about exposing Eclipse plugins as web services, but I'm getting confused.

My requirement is basically to build an Equinox back end for a set of web services. I'll be using EMF and related projects heavily, so with this goal in mind I've been reading about Equinox/OSGI and options to build what I need.

However, there are some mysterious points and in general an abundance of projects around. Given the findings below, I'd like hear your suggestions. Maybe there is an option I'm missing, or maybe you've done this before. Here are the nominees (drumroll)

Hosting Equinox in a web container. Using bridge.war, the plugins can expose a servlet. The problem is, to use nice REST frameworks such as RestEasy (my favourite), the REST framework needs to be a osgi bundle that'd live in the Equionox runtime. I've spend 3 days, and due to classloader issues, this is not working. I am now convinced that I won't be able to have RestEasy in Equinox. I can have RestEasy in web container, and use XML serialization/deserialization to make code in web container talk to code in Equionox, but this feels like such a waste of resources. Still, this may work.

The other option seems to be ECF, which is an implementation of distributed OSGI, which seems to support SOAP/Rest. However, I could not find a clear tutorial that just exposes Equinox hosted functionality as a web service. So this still forces me no not to use RestEasy, but at least it seems to give me a proper framework to talk to Equinox. I'd probably still have to keep this in a web contaner for scalability.

Then there is Eclipse Virgo, which seems to support hosting web applications alongside OSGI runtime, and apparently web container hosted code can talk to OSGI runtime code. Still, I am not sure if I can pass around classes since a Jaxb annotated type A created under web container is likely to use a differnet classloader than the OSGI runtime plugin. Also, this setup locks me into Virgo, and I would rather go with JBoss etc for production use.

So given these options, and possibly more I do not know about at the moment, how would you expose EMF and other Eclipse framework based projects as web services?

Edit: based on the great response I'd like to add more. Partially details of the question, partially comments which did not fit into comment section.

My research after the question let me to the exact same point with the accepted answer: Apache CXF is now an implementation of Distributed OSGI, which is good. I have given up on RestEasy. My current concern is, I already have a XSD that has created my classes. RestEasy made it very easy to expose these, and I'd have to do the same here. My plugins would have to use these JAXB based classes. In the worst case, I may attempt to use Eclipse Link project which offers JAXB support, in order to create XML content, and pass it through either basic servlet use or as string values based on CXF. So solutions discussed here don't feel perfect, but I guess this is the best one can do at the moment.

2 Answers 2

1

I work on a product that has done this. We have Equinox inside the web container. We expose SOAP and REST web services using Apache CXF. It took some black magic to get everything wired up correctly. I found the CXF documentation to be not so great, especailly for OSGI.

As I am sure you know, hosting Equinox in the web container is not a recommended practice, although it is a hard one to avoid if you want to use OSGI. We too experienced a number of classloading issues. In fact we never really enjoyed the advertised benefits from OSGI (modularity, etc). It's too late for us to turn back now. OSGI should not be entered into lightly.

So here is a quick overview of how we have enabled SOAP/REST using CXF. Hopefully this will at least point you in the right direction.

1) Install CXF OSGI bundles, both core and DOSGI - We are using the following: cxf-bundle-minimal-2.2.12.jar cxf-dosgi-ri-discovery-local-1.1.jar cxf-dosgi-ri-dsw-cxf-1.1.jar Links: http://cxf.apache.org/download.html

2) Install JAX-RS (REST) and JAX-WS (SOAP) APIs -The API definition are in org.apache.servicemix.specs.jsr311-api-1.0-1.3.0.jar and org.apache.servicemix.specs.jaxws-api-2.1-1.1.1.jar (these are the versions we have) -These may or may not be bundled with CXF. IN our case, only the JAX-WS jar was included. We had to hunt down the JAX-RS bundle. -In addition to installing the bundles in the webapp (WEB-INF/eclipse/plugins), we also had to add them to the ECLIPSE/plugins directory for compilation.

3) Tell Equinox to load CXF plugins. There are probably other ways to do this. We accomplished this with entries in WEB-INF/eclipse/configuration/config.ini. -If this file exists, add your new jars to the osgi.bundles property: osgi.bundles=... org.apache.servicemix.specs.jaxb-api-2.1-1.1.1.jar@start, org.apache.servicemix.specs.jaxws-api-2.1-1.1.1.jar@start, org.apache.servicemix.specs.jsr311-api-1.0-1.3.0.jar@start, \ cxf-dosgi-ri-discovery-local-1.1.jar@5:start, \ cxf-bundle-minimal-2.2.12.jar@5:start, \ cxf-dosgi-ri-dsw-cxf-1.1.jar@5:start

4) That's it. You should now be able to start writing SOAP and REST services. This is a Java-first approach (as opposed to XML-schema first). What this means is that you: -Define a Java interface -Configure CXF to publish you interface as either REST or SOAP endpoint.

Here's a very simple example for REST. It comes with the standard disclaimer that it is specific to our environment. YMMV.

a) We use declarative services, so first we define the DS file in our bundle's manifest Service-Component: META-INF/ds/helloworld.xml b) Here is the DS file: META-INF/ds/helloworld.xml. The DS file defines the services in your OSGI bundle and their dependencies. Those entries have been omitted for brevity.

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<components xmlns="http://www.osgi.org/xmlns/scr/v1.0.0">

<component name="hello_world_service" xmlns="http://www.osgi.org/xmlns/scr/v1.0.0">

   <!-- Defines this as a REST service --->
   <property name="service.exported.configs" value="org.apache.cxf.rs"/>
   <!-- This is the URI of your REST resource.  
    It is realtive to the Equinox bridge servlet in your webapp -->
   <property name="org.apache.cxf.rs.httpservice.context" value="/helloworld" /> 
   <!-- This is the java interace that will be exposed .  You
   will use JAX-RS annotations to map these java methods to HTTP verbs. -->  
   <property name="service.exported.interfaces" value="com.foo.IHelloWorldService"/>        
... 

</components>

c) Here is the interface class:

package com.foo;

@Path("/greeting")
public Interface IHelloWorldService {

   @GET
   @Produces("application/xml")
   public Greeting getGreeting();

}

public class HelloWorldService implements IHelloWorldService {
   @override
   public Greeting getGreeting() {
      Greeting g = new Greeting();
      g.message = "Hello World";
      return g;
   }
}

d) So, once this is all in place, you should be able to GET the following URL:

   /<web-app-name>/bridge/helloworld/greeting

and receive the following response:

   <Greeting>
      <message>Hello World</message>
   </Greeting>

Good luck. Hope this helps.

7
  • Very good answer, and many thanks for the detailed response. Please see my addition to original question, that begins after "Edit:"
    – mahonya
    Dec 4, 2011 at 15:07
  • Another critical question is: then what is the recommended way of exposing OSGI ? If not running Equionox in a web servlet?
    – mahonya
    Dec 4, 2011 at 15:10
  • The recommended approach is to embed the web/servlet container in the OSGI container. That is not always possible however as not all web container have OSGI implementations.
    – EJK
    Dec 5, 2011 at 6:26
  • As for your comment about existing XSDs... I have only used CXF for Java-first development, but CXF docs claim that contract-first (i.e. WSDL, XSD) is supported as well. For more details on CXF, I would strongly suggest subscribing to the CXF-Users list: cxf.apache.org/mailing-lists.html. Several CXF contributors are quite active in answering questions on this list.
    – EJK
    Dec 5, 2011 at 6:30
  • Thanks, it sounds promising. I think I have some reading to do now.
    – mahonya
    Dec 5, 2011 at 9:38
1

Unfortunately I think that RESTeasy is the problem here. As per your comment in another question, RESTeasy uses the Java ServiceLoader API to lookup classes dynamically, which unfortunately makes assumptions about classloading that are untrue in any non-flat (i.e. modular) classloading architecture.

I would encourage you to ask on the RESTeasy forums about alternatives to the ServiceLoader approach to looking up these classes. It may be possible to explicitly register those classes, for example.

However failing a solution that allows you to continue using RESTeasy, there are alternative REST APIs that do work very well in OSGi. Restlet for example has explicit OSGi support. I have successfully used Jersey as well.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.