Changes for page Your First Rest Project

Last modified by Steve Peery on 2013/09/06 11:02

From version 22.1
edited by Filippo Laurìa
on 2013/07/22 12:39
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 24.1
edited by steffan
on 2013/02/10 18:44
Change comment: Fix validation error when POSTing a blog entry by setting lastModified value

Summary

Details

Page properties
Author
... ... @@ -1,1 +1,1 @@
1 -XWiki.filippolauria
1 +XWiki.steffan
Content
... ... @@ -1,7 +1,5 @@
1 +{{toc}}{{/toc}}
1 1  
2 -
3 -{{toc/}}
4 -
5 5  = Introduction =
6 6  
7 7  In the first part of the Blog tutorial, you will learn:
... ... @@ -22,93 +22,21 @@
22 22  
23 23  BlogEntry will have the following columns:
24 24  
25 -|=(((
26 -Column name
27 -)))|=(((
28 -Type
29 -)))|=(((
30 -Constraints
31 -)))
32 -|(((
33 -id
34 -)))|(((
35 -integer
36 -)))|(((
37 -primary key
38 -)))
39 -|(((
40 -title
41 -)))|(((
42 -string(255)
43 -)))|(((
44 -
45 -)))
46 -|(((
47 -content
48 -)))|(((
49 -string(4000)
50 -)))|(((
51 -
52 -)))
53 -|(((
54 -creationDate
55 -)))|(((
56 -timestamp
57 -)))|(((
58 -
59 -)))
60 -|(((
61 -lastModified
62 -)))|(((
63 -timestamp
64 -)))|(((
65 -
66 -)))
67 -|(((
68 -author
69 -)))|(((
70 -integer
71 -)))|(((
72 -relation with Author
73 -)))
23 +|= Column name |= Type |= Constraints
24 +| id | integer | primary key
25 +| title | string(255) |
26 +| content | string(4000) |
27 +| creationDate | timestamp |
28 +| lastModified | timestamp |
29 +| author | integer | relation with Author
74 74  
75 75  Author will have the following columns:
76 76  
77 -|=(((
78 -Column name
79 -)))|=(((
80 -Type
81 -)))|=(((
82 -Constraints
83 -)))
84 -|(((
85 -id
86 -)))|(((
87 -integer
88 -)))|(((
89 -primary key
90 -)))
91 -|(((
92 -firstName
93 -)))|(((
94 -string(50)
95 -)))|(((
96 -
97 -)))
98 -|(((
99 -lastName
100 -)))|(((
101 -string(50)
102 -)))|(((
103 -
104 -)))
105 -|(((
106 -email
107 -)))|(((
108 -string(100)
109 -)))|(((
110 -unique
111 -)))
33 +|= Column name |= Type |= Constraints
34 +| id | integer | primary key
35 +| firstName | string(50) |
36 +| lastName | string(50) |
37 +| email | string(100) | unique
112 112  
113 113  == Creating the EOModel ==
114 114  
... ... @@ -116,24 +116,16 @@
116 116  
117 117  An EOModel consists of entities, attributes and relationships. When using it in a RDBMS context, an entity is a table (or a view), an attribute is a table column and a relationship is a join between two tables.
118 118  
119 -To create the EOModel, in the project right-click on the project name and select **New** -> **EOModel**.
45 +To create the EOModel, in the project right-click on the project name and select **New** > **EOModel**.
120 120  
121 121  Name it **BlogModel** and in the plugin list, select **H2**. Click **Finish**.
122 122  
123 123  The model should show up in a window that looks like this:
124 124  
125 -[[image:attach:EOModeler.png]]
126 -
127 127  If it didn't show up, the window might have opened behind the main Eclipse window. If that's the case, open the **Window** menu and select the windows that have //Entity Modeler// in its name.
128 128  
129 -In the Entity Modeler window, click on **Default**, and for the **URL** field, type
53 +In the Entity Modeler window, click on **Default**, and for the **URL** field, type {{code}}jdbc:h2:~/BlogTutorial{{/code}}. When the database will be created, it will be stored in your home directory (/Users/youruser/ on OS X).
130 130  
131 -{{code}}
132 -jdbc:h2:~/BlogTutorial
133 -{{/code}}
134 -
135 -. When the database will be created, it will be stored in your home directory (/Users/youruser/ on OS X).
136 -
137 137  Now, right-click on **BlogModel** and select **New Entity**.
138 138  
139 139  Type the following details in the **Basic** tab:
... ... @@ -154,87 +154,36 @@
154 154  
155 155  Now, repeat the last two steps to create the other attributes for the **BlogEntry** entity, with the following values:
156 156  
157 -|=(((
158 -Attribute name
159 -)))|=(((
160 -Column
161 -)))|=(((
162 -Prototype
163 -)))
164 -|(((
165 -content
166 -)))|(((
167 -content
168 -)))|(((
169 -longtext
170 -)))
171 -|(((
172 -creationDate
173 -)))|(((
174 -creationDate
175 -)))|(((
176 -dateTime
177 -)))
178 -|(((
179 -lastModified
180 -)))|(((
181 -lastModified
182 -)))|(((
183 -dateTime
184 -)))
75 +|= Attribute name |= Column |= Prototype
76 +| content | content | longtext
77 +| creationDate | creationDate | dateTime
78 +| lastModified | lastModified | dateTime
185 185  
186 186  If you did everything well, the list of attributes should look like this:
187 187  
188 -[[image:attach:list.png]]
189 -
190 190  You will notice that the attributes have a column with a lock in it. When a lock is present, it will use the value of that attribute for //UPDATE ... WHERE attribute = ''// statement. This is to do optimistic locking, aka to prevent data conflict when the data object was modified by two different users. Using timestamps for optimistic locking is not a good idea because for certain RDBMS, the value can be different because of milliseconds, so remove the locks on the **creationDate** attribute. The final list should look like this:
191 191  
192 192  Next step is to create the **Author** entity. Create a new entity with **Author** at its name (and also as the table name), and for the class name, use **your.app.model.Author**. The attributes for this entity are:
193 193  
194 -|=(((
195 -Attribute name
196 -)))|=(((
197 -Column
198 -)))|=(((
199 -Prototype
200 -)))
201 -|(((
202 -firstName
203 -)))|(((
204 -firstName
205 -)))|(((
206 -varchar50
207 -)))
208 -|(((
209 -lastName
210 -)))|(((
211 -lastName
212 -)))|(((
213 -varchar50
214 -)))
215 -|(((
216 -email
217 -)))|(((
218 -email
219 -)))|(((
220 -varchar100
221 -)))
86 +|= Attribute name |= Column |= Prototype
87 +| firstName | firstName | varchar50
88 +| lastName | lastName | varchar50
89 +| email | email | varchar100
222 222  
223 223  Final list of attributes should look like this:
224 224  
225 -[[image:attach:list.png]]
226 -
227 227  Now, it's time to link the two entities together. An Author can have multiple blog entries, and a BlogEntry can only have one author. To create the relationship (the join), right-click on **Author** and select **New Relationship**. On your right, select **BlogEntry** in the list. On your left, select **to many BlogEntries**, and on your right, select **to one Author**. Now, in BlogEntry, we need to store the primary key of the author so that we can make the join. The relationship builder allow us to add that attribute, so make sure **and a new foreign key named** is checked (it is checked by default). The **Create Relationship** pane should look like this:
228 228  
229 229  If you check in the **Outline** tab, you should see that **Author** now have a **blogEntries** relationship, and **BlogEntry** have a **author** relationship.
230 230  
231 -You are now ready to save the model. Save it (File -> Save) and close the **Entity Modeler** window. If you open the **Sources** in the main Eclipse window, you will notice that the **Sources** folder contains a package named **your.app.model**. (If this folder doesn't appear, you may need to set your preferences to automatically generate these source files; see the second suggestion on [[http:~~/~~/wiki.wocommunity.org/display/documentation/Useful+Eclipse+or+WOLips+Preferences>>url:http://wiki.wocommunity.org/display/documentation/Useful+Eclipse+or+WOLips+Preferences||rel="nofollow" shape="rect" class="external-link"]].)
97 +You are now ready to save the model. Save it (File > Save) and close the **Entity Modeler** window. If you open the **Sources** in the main Eclipse window, you will notice that the **Sources** folder contains a package named **your.app.model**.
232 232  
233 -That package have four Java classes: **_Author**, **Author**, **_BlogEntry** and **BlogEntry**. Those classes were generated by Veogen, a templating engine build on Velocity. The two classes that starts with a underscore are recreated every time you change the EOModel, so if you want to change something in those classes, you need to change the template (no need for that right now). But you can change freely the two classes that don't have the underscore, and this is what we will be doing.
99 +That package have four Java classes: **Author**, **Author**, **BlogEntry** and **BlogEntry**. Those classes were generated by Veogen, a templating engine build on Velocity. The two classes that starts with a underscore are recreated every time you change the EOModel, so if you want to change something in those classes, you need to change the template (no need for that right now). But you can change freely the two classes that don't have the underscore, and this is what we will be doing.
234 234  
235 235  What we are going to do is to write a simple method that returns the full name of an author, e.g. a method that simply concatenate the first name, a space and the last name of the author. To do so, double-click on **Author.java** and add the following methods:
236 236  
237 237  {{code}}
104 +
238 238  public String fullName() {
239 239   return this.firstName() + " " + this.lastName();
240 240   }
... ... @@ -244,6 +244,7 @@
244 244  Nothing fancy here. Now open **BlogEntry.java** and add the following method:
245 245  
246 246  {{code}}
114 +
247 247   @Override
248 248   public void awakeFromInsertion(EOEditingContext editingContext) {
249 249   super.awakeFromInsertion(editingContext);
... ... @@ -273,6 +273,7 @@
273 273  Remove the pound char in front of those two properties:
274 274  
275 275  {{code}}
144 +
276 276  #er.migration.migrateAtStartup=true
277 277  #er.migration.createTablesIfNecessary=true
278 278  
... ... @@ -281,14 +281,16 @@
281 281  After removing the pound char, the two properties should look like this:
282 282  
283 283  {{code}}
153 +
284 284  er.migration.migrateAtStartup=true
285 285  er.migration.createTablesIfNecessary=true
286 286  
287 287  {{/code}}
288 288  
289 -You are now ready to start the application so that it creates the database! To do so, right-click on **Application.java** (in the **your.app** folder) and select **Run As** -> **WOApplication**. In Eclipse's Console tab, you should see some output, including something similar to:
159 +You are now ready to start the application so that it creates the database To do so, right-click on **Application.java** (in the **your.app** folder) and select **Run As** > **WOApplication**. In Eclipse's Console tab, you should see some output, including something similar to:
290 290  
291 291  {{code}}
162 +
292 292  BlogRest[62990] INFO er.extensions.migration.ERXMigrator - Upgrading BlogModel to version 0 with migration 'your.app.model.migrations.BlogModel0@4743bf3d'
293 293  BlogRest[62990] INFO er.extensions.jdbc.ERXJDBCUtilities - Executing CREATE TABLE Author(email VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL, firstName VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL, id INTEGER NOT NULL, lastName VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL)
294 294  BlogRest[62990] INFO er.extensions.jdbc.ERXJDBCUtilities - Executing ALTER TABLE Author ADD PRIMARY KEY (id)
... ... @@ -299,7 +299,7 @@
299 299  
300 300  {{/code}}
301 301  
302 -If you see this and that the application is running (it should open a window in your favorite browser), migration worked and your database have been created, congratulations! You can now stop the application (click the square red button in Eclipse's Console tab) and continue to the next step.
173 +If you see this and that the application is running (it should open a window in your favorite browser), migration worked and your database have been created, congratulations You can now stop the application (click the square red button in Eclipse's Console tab) and continue to the next step.
303 303  
304 304  = Creating REST controllers and routes =
305 305  
... ... @@ -336,14 +336,15 @@
336 336  * **indexAction**: to list all (or a sublist) of the objects.
337 337  
338 338  {{info}}
339 -In Project Wonder, **Action** at the end of a method is a convention for REST and Direct Actions, when you call those methods from certain components, you don't need to add the **Action** part.
210 +In Project Wonder, *Action* at the end of a method is a convention for REST and Direct Actions, when you call those methods from certain components, you don't need to add the *Action* part.
340 340  {{/info}}
341 341  
342 -For this tutorial, we will implement the **createAction** and **indexAction** methods. But first, we need to create a key filter. A key filter will... filter the input and the output of REST request so that you don't have to send all attributes for a blog entry. For example, we want to show the details for an author, but we don't want to show the password for the author (in real-life, the password would be encrypted)!
213 +For this tutorial, we will implement the **createAction** and **indexAction** methods. But first, we need to create a key filter. A key filter will... filter the input and the output of REST request so that you don't have to send all attributes for a blog entry. For example, we want to show the details for an author, but we don't want to show the password for the author (in real-life, the password would be encrypted)
343 343  
344 344  Add this method in **BlogEntryController**:
345 345  
346 346  {{code}}
218 +
347 347  protected ERXKeyFilter filter() {
348 348   ERXKeyFilter personFilter = ERXKeyFilter.filterWithAttributes();
349 349   personFilter.setAnonymousUpdateEnabled(true);
... ... @@ -360,6 +360,7 @@
360 360  Now, let's implement the **createAction** method:
361 361  
362 362  {{code}}
235 +
363 363  public WOActionResults createAction() throws Throwable {
364 364   BlogEntry entry = create(filter());
365 365   editingContext().saveChanges();
... ... @@ -373,6 +373,7 @@
373 373  Last step in the controller: implementing the **indexAction** method. Again, the code is simple:
374 374  
375 375  {{code}}
249 +
376 376  public WOActionResults indexAction() throws Throwable {
377 377   NSArray<BlogEntry> entries = BlogEntry.fetchAllBlogEntries(editingContext());
378 378   return response(entries, filter());
... ... @@ -389,6 +389,7 @@
389 389  A route in ERRest is simply a way to define the URL for the entities and to specify which controller the route should use. When your controller extends from **ERXDefaultRouteController**, it's easy to register a controller and a route. In **Application.java**, in the **Application** constructor, add the following code:
390 390  
391 391  {{code}}
266 +
392 392  ERXRouteRequestHandler restRequestHandler = new ERXRouteRequestHandler();
393 393   restRequestHandler.addDefaultRoutes(BlogEntry.ENTITY_NAME);
394 394   ERXRouteRequestHandler.register(restRequestHandler);
... ... @@ -398,13 +398,13 @@
398 398  
399 399  The **addDefaultRoutes** method do all of the required magic, and use convention. That's why we had to name the controller **BlogEntryController**, because the convention is <EntityName>Controller.
400 400  
401 -We are now reading to add and list blog postings! Start the application and take notice of the URL. It should be something like _[[http:~~/~~/yourip:someport/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa_>>url:http://youripsomeport||shape="rect"]]
276 +We are now reading to add and list blog postings Start the application and take notice of the URL. It should be something like //[[http:~~/~~/yourip:someport/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa>>http://yourip:someport/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa_]]//
402 402  
403 403  == Adding posts and authors with curl ==
404 404  
405 405  Since we didn't implement any HTML for our REST routes, we will create blog entries with //curl//, an open source HTTP client that is bundled with Mac OS X (you can use another client, like wget, if you like too). So let's create a blog entry.
406 406  
407 -To create a blog entry, you need to use the POST HTTP method. We will use JSON as the format since it's a bit less chatty than XML. So if the URL to the application is //[[http:~~/~~/192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa_>>url:http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa_||shape="rect"]], the full _curl// command will be:
282 +To create a blog entry, you need to use the POST HTTP method. We will use JSON as the format since it's a bit less chatty than XML. So if the URL to the application is //[[http:~~/~~/192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa>>http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa_]], the full curl// command will be:
408 408  
409 409  {{code}}
410 410  curl -X POST -v -d '{ "title": "First post", "content": "Some text", "author": { "firstName": "Pascal", "lastName": "Robert", "email": "probert@macti.ca" } }' http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.json
... ... @@ -413,6 +413,7 @@
413 413  The response should look this:
414 414  
415 415  {{code}}
291 +
416 416  HTTP/1.0 201 Apple WebObjects
417 417  Content-Length: 249
418 418  x-webobjects-loadaverage: 0
... ... @@ -425,6 +425,7 @@
425 425  To get a list of blog entries:
426 426  
427 427  {{code}}
304 +
428 428  curl -X GET http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.json
429 429  
430 430  {{/code}}
... ... @@ -436,6 +436,7 @@
436 436  Now, let's build a HTML view for blog posts (you don't want your readers to get your posts by JSON, right?). Again, we will use convention to make it work easily. Open up **BlogEntryController** and add the following method:
437 437  
438 438  {{code}}
316 +
439 439  @Override
440 440   protected boolean isAutomaticHtmlRoutingEnabled() {
441 441   return true;
... ... @@ -443,11 +443,12 @@
443 443  
444 444  {{/code}}
445 445  
446 -Switching the return value of this method says that we will follow a certain convention for HTML components. The convention for automatic HTML routing is that the component should be named <EntityName><Action>Page.wo. So in our case, the component will be **BlogEntryIndexPage**. Right-click on the project name in Eclipse and select **New** -> **WOComponent**. Change the name to **BlogEntryIndexPage** and check the **Create HTML contents** button. Click **Finish**.
324 +Switching the return value of this method says that we will follow a certain convention for HTML components. The convention for automatic HTML routing is that the component should be named <EntityName><Action>Page.wo. So in our case, the component will be **BlogEntryIndexPage**. Right-click on the project name in Eclipse and select **New** > **WOComponent**. Change the name to **BlogEntryIndexPage** and check the **Create HTML contents** button. Click **Finish**.
447 447  
448 448  The next step to get it to work is to make **BlogEntryIndexPage** to implement the **er.rest.routes.IERXRouteComponent** interface.
449 449  
450 450  {{code}}
329 +
451 451  import er.rest.routes.IERXRouteComponent;
452 452  
453 453  public class BlogEntryIndexPage extends WOComponent implements IERXRouteComponent {
... ... @@ -457,6 +457,7 @@
457 457  So now, the automatic HTML routing will send the request for **ra/blogEntries.html** to the **BlogEntryIndexPage** component. But we don't have any content in this component, so let's make a method to fetch all blog entries per creation date in descending order. So in **BlogEntryIndexPage.java**, add the following method:
458 458  
459 459  {{code}}
339 +
460 460  public NSArray<BlogEntry> entries() {
461 461   EOEditingContext ec = ERXEC.newEditingContext();
462 462   return BlogEntry.fetchAllBlogEntries(ec, BlogEntry.CREATION_DATE.descs());
... ... @@ -467,6 +467,7 @@
467 467  We need to use that method in a WORepetition, and for that loop, we need a BlogEntry variable to iterate in the list, so add the following code to **BlogEntryIndexPage.java**:
468 468  
469 469  {{code}}
350 +
470 470  private BlogEntry entryItem;
471 471  
472 472   public BlogEntry entryItem() {
... ... @@ -482,6 +482,7 @@
482 482  The Java part is done, so let's add the loop inside the component. Open **BlogEntryIndexPage.wo** (it's located in the **Component** folder) and right after the <body> tag, add:
483 483  
484 484  {{code}}
366 +
485 485  <wo:loop list="$entries" item="$entryItem">
486 486   <p><wo:str value="$entryItem.title" /></p>
487 487   <p><wo:str value="$entryItem.author.fullName" /></p>
... ... @@ -491,13 +491,14 @@
491 491  
492 492  That component code will loop over the blog entries and display the title of the entry + the name of the author. Save everything and run the application.
493 493  
494 -If you go to [[http:~~/~~/192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html>>url:http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html||shape="rect"]], you will see the list of blog entries!
376 +If you go to [[http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html]], you will see the list of blog entries
495 495  
496 496  Now that we have a list of blog entries, let's make a page to show the content of a blog entry. Create a new component named **BlogEntryShowPage**.
497 497  
498 -Open **BlogEntryShowPage.java** and make sure the class implements **er.rest.routes.IERXRouteComponent**.
380 +Open **BlogEntryShowPage.java** and make sure the class implements&nbsp;**er.rest.routes.IERXRouteComponent**.
499 499  
500 500  {{code}}
383 +
501 501  import er.rest.routes.IERXRouteComponent;
502 502  
503 503  public class BlogEntryShowPage extends WOComponent implements IERXRouteComponent {
... ... @@ -507,6 +507,7 @@
507 507  We need to add other methods to receive the BlogEntry object from the controller. In **BlogEntryShowPage.java**, add:
508 508  
509 509  {{code}}
393 +
510 510  private BlogEntry blogEntry;
511 511  
512 512   @ERXRouteParameter
... ... @@ -525,6 +525,7 @@
525 525  The Java part of the work is done, so save the Java class. It's time to work on the component part. Open **BlogEntryShowPage.wo** and between the <body></body> part, add:
526 526  
527 527  {{code}}
412 +
528 528  <h1><wo:str value="$blogEntry.title" /></h1>
529 529   <p><wo:str value="$blogEntry.content" /></p>
530 530   <p>Created on: <wo:str value="$blogEntry.creationDate" dateformat="%Y/%m/%d" /></p>
... ... @@ -535,6 +535,7 @@
535 535  Our view component is done, the only thing remaining is a link for the blog entry list (BlogEntryIndexPage) to the view page (BlogEntryShowPage). Save **BlogEntryShowPage.wo** and open **BlogEntryIndexPage.wo**. We are going to add a link on the title, you will replace to replace this:
536 536  
537 537  {{code}}
423 +
538 538  <p><wo:str value="$entryItem.title" /></p>
539 539  
540 540  {{/code}}
... ... @@ -542,10 +542,11 @@
542 542  with:
543 543  
544 544  {{code}}
431 +
545 545  <p><wo:ERXRouteLink entityName="BlogEntry" record="$entryItem" action="show"><wo:str value="$entryItem.title" /></wo:ERXRouteLink></p>
546 546  
547 547  {{/code}}
548 548  
549 -Save the component and run the app. Go to [[http:~~/~~/192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html>>url:http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html||shape="rect"]] to get the list of posts, and you should see a link on the title. Click on it, and now you get the full details of the blog entry!
436 +Save the component and run the app. Go to [[http://192.168.0.102:52406/cgi-bin/WebObjects/BlogRest.woa/ra/blogEntries.html]] to get the list of posts, and you should see a link on the title. Click on it, and now you get the full details of the blog entry
550 550  
551 -The REST part of this tutorial is now complete, [[you can now move to the next part of the tutorial>>doc:Your First Framework]].
438 +The REST part of this tutorial is now complete, [[you can now move to the next part of the tutorial>>Your First Framework]].