Here's the shortest way I could think of to a fully functional REST API requiring only Java, Gradle, and a text editor. Create two files in a clean project directory as follows:
build.gradle
buildscript {
repositories { mavenCentral() }
dependencies {
classpath 'org.gradle.api.plugins:gradle-tomcat-plugin:0.9.8'
}
}
apply plugin: 'tomcat'
repositories { mavenCentral() }
dependencies {
compile(
'com.sun.jersey:jersey-core:1.17',
'com.sun.jersey:jersey-server:1.17',
'com.sun.jersey:jersey-servlet:1.17',
'com.sun.jersey:jersey-json:1.17',
)
tomcat(
'org.apache.tomcat:tomcat-catalina:7.0.40',
'org.apache.tomcat:tomcat-coyote:7.0.40',
'org.apache.tomcat:tomcat-jasper:7.0.40',
)
}
src/main/java/org/example/TheApplication.java
package org.example;
import com.sun.jersey.api.core.ClassNamesResourceConfig;
import javax.ws.rs.*;
import javax.ws.rs.core.Response;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.XmlRootElement;
@Path("/")
@ApplicationPath("/")
public class TheApplication extends ClassNamesResourceConfig {
public TheApplication() { super(TheApplication.class); }
static Foo foo = new Foo();
@GET @Produces("application/json")
public Foo getFoo() {
return foo;
}
@POST @Consumes("application/json")
public Response setFoo(Foo foo) {
TheApplication.foo = foo;
return Response.ok().entity("Stored it!").build();
}
@XmlRootElement
static class Foo {
private String message = "Hello World";
public String getMessage() { return message; }
public void setMessage(String message) { this.message = message; }
}
}
Once those two files are in place, gradle tomcatRunWar
will start your REST API, and navigating to http://localhost:8080/fastest-web-service/
in a browser will get you the "Hello World" JSON message. If you then POST similar JSON, like {"message": "something else"}
to that same URL with something like curl or Poster specifying a Content-Type of "application/json", that new object will be stored and returned on successive GET requests. It's just a very bare-bones example but covers a lot of the basics of a JSON API.
IDEs: You could further develop this easily with any common Java IDE. The Community Edition of IntelliJ IDEA and Eclipse are both popular and free IDEs. <opinion>
IDEA is far superior and the Ultimate Edition is 110% worth the cost of a personal license for a regular Java developer.</opinion>
Technology Stack: JAX-RS is a leading way of writing REST APIs in Java. Pick any implementation. This example uses Jersey, the reference implementation. Spring may be overkill if you just need a simple API to expose already-written logic. It brings along more complexity than it sounds like you need. On the other hand, if you need a more flexible and capable framework that has more built-in support for virtually everything in the world, Spring may be just the ticket.
Server: Jetty or Tomcat supporting Servlet 3.0. There's not likely a reason for anything more or less.