Jetlang provides a high performance java threading library. The library is based upon Retlang.
The library is a complement to the java.util.concurrent package introduced in 1.5 and should be used for message based concurrency similar to event based actors in Scala.
The library does not provide remote messaging capabilities. It is designed specifically for high performance in-memory messaging.
Features¶
* All messages to a particular Fiber are delivered sequentially. Components can easily keep state without synchronizing data access or worrying about thread races.
* Single Fiber interface that can be backed by a dedicated thread or a thread pool.
* Supports single or multiple subscribers for messages.
* Subscriptions for single events or event batching
* Single or recurring event scheduling
* High performance design optimized for low latency and high scalability
* Publishing is thread safe, allowing easy integration with other threading models.
* Low Lock Contention - Minimizing lock contention is critical for performance. Other concurrency solutions are limited by a single lock typically on a central thread pool or message queue. Jetlang is optimized for low lock contention. Without a central bottleneck, performance easily scales to the needs of the application.
* Powerful Async Request/Reply Support
* Single jar with no dependencies except the jdk (1.6+)
* Integrates with any JVM language - jruby, scala, clojure, groovy, etc
Mockito is a mocking framework that tastes really well. It lets you write beautiful tests with clean & simple API. Mockito doesn't give you hangover because the tests are very readable and they produce clean verification errors. Read more about features & motivations.
Writing unit tests can be hard and sometimes good design has to be sacrificed for the sole purpose of testability. Often testability corresponds to good design, but this is not always the case. For example final classes and methods cannot be used, private methods sometimes need to be protected or unnecessarily moved to a collaborator, static methods should be avoided completely and so on simply because of the limitations of existing frameworks.
PowerMock is a framework that extend other mock libraries such as EasyMock with more powerful capabilities. PowerMock uses a custom classloader and bytecode manipulation to enable mocking of static methods, constructors, final classes and methods, private methods, removal of static initializers and more. By using a custom classloader no changes need to be done to the IDE or continuous integration servers which simplifies adoption. Developers familiar with EasyMock will find PowerMock easy to use, since the entire expectation API is the same, both for static methods and constructors. PowerMock extends the EasyMock API with a small number of methods and annotations to enable the extra features. From version 1.1 PowerMock also has basic support for Mockito.
When writing unit tests it is often useful to bypass encapsulation and therefore PowerMock includes several features that simplifies reflection specifically useful for testing. This allows easy access to internal state, but also simplifies partial and private mocking.
Welcome to the newly open sourced SHOP.COM Cache System: sccache
What is it?
The SHOP.COM Cache System is an object cache system that...
* is an in-process cache and external, shared Cache
* is horizontally scalable
* stores cached objects to disk
* supports associative keys
* is non-transactional
* can have any size key and any size data
* does auto-GC based on TTL
* is container and platform neutral
Java SwingBuilder is an implementation of a Java Builder geared towards building UI interfaces using Java Swing.
Details
The main class is org.javabuilders.swing.SwingBuilder. It loads the object definition from a YAML file that is in the same package and has the same base name as the calling Java class. So, if you're building org.test.MyFrame.java it will look for org.test.MyFrame.yaml for the object build file (similar to the convention the Apache Wicket web framework uses).
This project contains custom Hibernate and JRuby extensions to let Hibernate work directly with org.jruby.RubyObject objects. That means that the Hibernate session accepts and returns plain old Ruby objects (no intermediary Java domain classes are needed). Another goal is to provide a Rubyish interface to the Hibernate configuration and functionality.
The idea to start this project comes from Ola Bini's blog http://ola-bini.blogspot.com/2007/04/activehibernate-any-takers.html. For more details please see http://rubymatic.blogspot.com.
Hannibal is a code generator that can generate scaffolding for web projects in different languages, including Java, PHP, SQL, and JavaScript. The code it generates follows Restful considerations.