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I just realized a JSF (web JavaScript application) that connect to a MongoDB database and generate a report (PDF) thanks to JasperReports Library (so with a .java file).

Is it possible to do the same thing with a web application in CoffeeScript and Node.js? I am really new to this, so I don't know where to start.

For example: Is it possible to run a .java thanks to Node.js or CoffeeScript?

3 Answers 3

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JSF is actually a JavaServer Faces application, not a JavaScript application. JavaScript (which Node.js, CoffeeScript are based on) is not equivalent to Java despite the similarity in names.

If you already have a JSF-based application then you already should have everything you need to create a web-based application. There is no need for Node.js, CoffeeScript, etc.

Go take a look at JSP, Tomcat, etc. to figure out how to render web pages rather than output to PDF and you should be set.

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  • Yes but as I said I don't want to keep this JSF. I want to use coffescript, nodejs and mongoDB because i have to import this to an another web application based on these languages.
    – Louis
    Feb 29, 2012 at 13:21
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    Well, first, you should be more specific about what you want to keep and what you don't. There is a connector for MongoDB that can be used with Jasper Reports, there is a driver for node.js that can also connect to MongoDB. As for node.js and integration with Jasper Reports, I have no idea (this is assuming that most of the work you reference has been done in Jasper Reports and you intend to keep it). If you want to get rid of Jasper Reports too then you are either going to have to write the entire thing from scratch or find a javascript substitute. Feb 29, 2012 at 13:30
  • Thanks you for this answer, i searched a lot for node.js and his integration with Jasper Reports . I didn't find anything. And if I have to get rid of Jasper Reports it will be a lot of work I guess. I know that Pentaho is also a report tool but I guess that's the same issue.
    – Louis
    Feb 29, 2012 at 13:37
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If you want to rewrite your application in javascript and run it on node.js, you should be able to use PDFKit to build the PDFs.

If you only wish to use your existing application and integrate it with a node.js server, I think you would be wise to run them in parallel (or proxy requests to your JSF application through node, in case that makes sense). It's hard to give a better answer unless you can state more clearly what it is you want to accomplish.

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  • Thanks for the PDFKit info, No i want to start over because I guess I can't use the java file anymore. And as there is no info for nodejs and jasperreport integration, your solution (run them in parrallel) may be an alternative
    – Louis
    Feb 29, 2012 at 14:02
  • I just found this nodejs module do you think it would be possible to use jasper report library with it ?
    – Louis
    Feb 29, 2012 at 14:27
  • I haven't seen that module before, very interesting. That said, no, I don't think it would be a great idea. You could always try, though! Feb 29, 2012 at 14:33
  • I going to try... I guess the other solution would be yours (parallel run) But anyway I would'nt know where to start. So I may need your help later :)
    – Louis
    Feb 29, 2012 at 14:36
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    Now I've looked at what Jasper Reports is and it seems pretty complex. If I were you and I already had a JSF application working, I would just proxy that behind a node.js app (you haven't told us why you need to "import" it into a node.js app, but I take your word for it). Feb 29, 2012 at 14:43
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Yes, it's possible. You can start / stop / control another process with Node.js - so You can start .java in another process and use it to generate PDF. But ... it may be not very efficient in terms of resource usage, so it's an open question.

Or, you can write a simple worker that will generate PDF from JSON data and use 0MQ or other inter-process communications between Node.js and this Java worker.

He-he, JSF was one of the worst technologies I ever saw (I believe it's still in the same state now as it was in 2007 when I left Java), even dumb JSP and servlets was better...

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