Jodd
Jodd is set of open source Java micro-frameworks and tools; compact, yet powerful.
Jodd = tools + ioc + mvc + db + aop + tx + json + html < 1.7 Mb
Read about Jodd:
Official web site (site, documentation, information): http://jodd.org/
GitHub page (5 min overview): http://oblac.github.io/jodd
Jodd micro-frameworks (30 min overview): http://joddframework.org
Jodd Modules
Jodd is split into many modules, so choose what to use.
Some tools and utility modules are:
jodd-core contains many utilities, including JDateTime.
jodd-bean, our infamous BeanUtil, type inspectors and converters.
jodd-props is the super-replacement for Java Properties.
jodd-mail for easier email sending.
jodd-upload, handles HTTP uploads.
jodd-servlet with many servlet utilities, including nice tag library.
jodd-http, tiny HTTP client.
and some micro-frameworks:
jodd-madvoc - slick MVC framework.
jodd-petite - pragmatic DI container.
jodd-lagarto - HTML parser with Jerry and CSSelly.
jodd-decora - pages decorator.
jodd-htmlstapler - static page resources handler.
jodd-proxetta - dynamic proxies and Paramo.
jodd-db - thin database layer and object mapper.
jodd-json - JSON parser and serializer.
jodd-vtor - validation framework.
Jodd Bundle
If you are already using many Jodd jars, you can simply
just use the bundle jar: jodd-all. It's a single jar with
all modules included; where all dependencies are optional. Why not :)
Building Jodd from source
Jodd is built with Gradle on JDK8,
targeting Java 1.8. You don't have to install anything,
the only prerequisites are Git
and Java JDK.
Check out sources
Simply clone Jodd Git repo:
git clone https://github.com/oblac/jodd.git jodd
Compile and test, build jars
You can build the Jodd project with:
gradlew build
This will build all jars and run all unit tests.
To skip the tests (for faster build), execute:
gradlew build -x test
Build full release with reports
To generate full release, including running integration tests and generating various reports,
you need Docker v1.12+.
docker-compose -f etc/docker-compose.yml up
gradlew clean release
Integration tests requires some infrastructure (like databases), hence Docker is
used.
Install Jodd into your local Maven
gradlew install
Contribute
Feel free to contribute! Follow these steps:
First time only:
fork the Jodd repo (upstream) to your GitHub account (origin).
clone origin as your local repo
Every other time:
update both origin and local repos from upstream
create new branch for a feature or bug fix
commit often :)
once when work is done, push local changes to your origin
send us a pull request (PR)
We will pickup up from there :)