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I want to use PHP in the frontend(for UI and calling services) and java at the backend(for database interaction and creating REST services) for my web application.
I want to know the advantages and disadvantages of this kind of approach.
If thats the case, I will strongly recommend to look at Groovy with Grails.
Assuming that the time is the main concern. By using Groovy with Grails, you can get faster development, and with all the power of Java, seamlessly.
Ease of development
Higher productivity
No need to have two teams one for PHP and other for Java. Java folks will get Groovy very fast
Get the power of popular and state-of-the-art frameworks like, Spring and Hibernate
Run it on JVM
Everything of Java is available
Grails unit tests
[Edited]
From your comments to the question, it seems like you are looking for some powerful web templates, as available in Joomla or Drupal CMSs.
Ug, that sounds messy. Things like security have to either be implemented cleverly or duplicated (think form validation vs server side validation, you probably want both). Pure Java or pure PHP solutions will have things like that built in.
Next, it becomes a bit tricky to debug certain things. If you have an issues you have two logical "stacks" to sieve through.
Finally, I personally don't know of web server that runs both Java and PHP so you I bet you'll have to have two webservers which means twice the configuration and twice as many fail points.
Advantages:
Site could scale better in java, because PHP does not have a proper thread model.
Java is a strongly typed language with a lot of good IDEs to help you write code properly. It also has a very good testing framework support.
Disadvantages:
Two codebases(PHP and java). Can add extra complexity.
I have a startup considering building a Java backend and a Rails frontend. The Java backend will take care of creating a caching layer for the database and offer other additional services. The Rails frontend will mostly be for creating the webapp and monitoring tools.
What startups/companies out there are using this kind of setup? What are some gotchas in terms of development speed, deployment, scalability, and integration?
(What would be helpful for me is personal experience or informal case studies. I'd like to de-priorities answers addressing alternatives like Grails or JRuby unless it turns out to be a big part of the equation)
Thanks!
I've never done any rails development but here are my thoughts. Why not just use Grails? I've done a fair amount of Grails development and it works well for rapid prototyping. It also offers all the power of Java, Spring, and Hibernate. Instead of dealing with communication between two different technologies you could take advantage of the fact that Grails uses Spring and Hibernate under the covers to deal with caching as well as any other requirements these technologies support. If you have Java developers Grails should not be to hard to pick up. The grails plugin story is decent. All of them are stored in a central place and are easy to obtain but quality differs depending on the plugin author. You also have to remember that since Grails uses Groovy which is syntactically similar to Java and runs on the JVM it is very easy to use existing java code including the multitude of available Java libraries. I don't know this for certain but I assume there are a lot more libraries out there for use with Java and there for with Grails then are available for the Ruby language and Rails. I can't make a resource usage call for you but my question would be how many people do you have with experience designing Rails systems that use Java on the back end with all the gotchas that will go along with that? You may find that you have no one who is proficient at debugging when something goes wrong in communication between the two technologies.
I have used similar pair for one of my projects, but instead of RoR I used Python. I don't think there's large difference.
In general, there's nothing specific in this kind of programming. Two most important things you must care about:
good modularity;
well thought-out protocol between RoR and Java.
First is about exact functionality decomposition between parts of the system. We've got some troubles because of not understanding what part of a job must be done by Java, and what part by Python. In general, you must tie together all functions that are close to each other, and thing that are far must be connected in a very few places. I guess you know rules of good modularity, but in case of composing different languages this must be thought-out much more carefully. You can also be interested in creating several distinct Java services (e.g. one for database caching and another one for all the rest) to be able freely combine them or even use in other projects later.
Second is about communication between your parts. I can see two ways to communicate: through database and through pure network protocol. The former need some network communication anyway, so we used pure network protocol, without any other way to connect parts.
We had experimented a lot with SOAP, but it gave hundreds of errors: this protocol is quite ok to connect services written in one language (i.d. Java to Java), but terrible for connecting services in different languages - automatic tools for generating WSDLs gave different results for Java and Python, and manual creating of scheme was hard and labor-intensive.
So we used to REST. It uses all the features of HTTP protocol such as all four main HTTP methods (POST, GET, PUT, DELETE), error codes and many other things, so it covers almost everything you may want. The only restriction with REST is that it can't hold state, so you may need to implement your own sessions mechanism.
If you're not very comfortable with REST and seek some real example, see Facebook Graph API and for implementing REST services in Java you can use Restlets.
Perhaps I'm stating the obvious here, but the biggest gotcha here is the actual fact you're combining two technologies. Not only will development be slower - Rails and all Java frameworks are expecting to have a full Ruby/Java application - but for the other issues you mention (deployment, scalability, integration), the existing tools and solutions will not work, or at least not very well.
If you have a compelling reason to combine the two, go ahead but expect to spend more time on these issues than with a single technology solution. If you don't, pick either Rails or Java.
I would strongly urge you to consider having the frontend and backend in the same JVM for performance reasons.
For Rails, JRuby can run Rails, and you can have it in a Java EE container providing fast communication between components.
Having multiple architechtures which do not run in the same process requires you to do network based communication which takes much, much longer than just passing a reference to an object (I do not expect you to want to use shared memory).
Twitter.com is supposedly using a Java backend, and Rails for their web interface. Here are some resources:
http://www.radicalbehavior.com/5-question-interview-with-twitter-developer-alex-payne/
http://blog.adsdevshop.com/2008/05/02/twitter-is-not-abandoning-rails/
http://twitter.com/#!/ev/status/801530348
More specifically, they use Scala on the backend (which compiles to Java byte code):
http://www.artima.com/scalazine/articles/twitter_on_scala.html
I don't think there is anything wrong with this approach. However, you will be supporting two different platforms/VMs. I have seen this kind of situtation result in a sort of fracturing of expertise within an organization. And you end up paying to a lot to have two sets of expertise in house.
If the problem of segmenting expertise concerns you, I would suggest running JRuby of Rails. It is very mature now - and runs better than Rails on Ruby 1.8.x.
We have used Ruby on Rails for front-end and Core-Java SOAP Api for backend. It worked very well.
The main issue is not with performance but with the people. It is very difficult to hire expert people in Ruby on Rails for everything, instead you hire few or you can easily mould to just learn Rails UI.
As startup point of view, it is best strategy. So many believe ROR is best for startups... but very few knew it because in most of MNC's we use Java, so there is pressure to learn Rails and Code, or hire very few ROR developers. So instead you can use ROR for frontend (only few people do that, or it is easy to learn) and use experienced Java developers for DB updates and business logic.
A legacy web application written using PHP and utilizing MySql database needs to be rewritten completely. However, the existing database structure must not be changed at all.
I'm looking for suggestions on which framework would be most suitable for this task? Language candidates are Python, PHP, Ruby and Java.
According to many sources it might be challenging to utilize rails effectively with existing database. Also I have not found a way to automatically generate models out of the database.
With Django it's very easy to generate models automatically. However I'd appreciate first hand experience on its suitability to work with legacy DBs. The database in question contains all kinds of primary keys, including lots of composite keys.
Also I appreciate suggestions of other frameworks worth considering.
Use sqlalchemy. On any framework you choose. It can reflect your database as ORM.
I’m currently rebuilding a legacy PHP web application with a MySQL database my self.
The PHP code was kind of spaghetti and is now rewritten in Java as it type safe, promotes well-structured code, has excellent tooling and has superior unit testing capabilities. For database to Java mapping I use Hibernate/JPA.
The web application is incrementally delivered to production. Meaning we run both Java and large parts of the old PHP code together until the application is fully converted.
But in order to use hibernate effectively we needs the database to be logical correct (something MySQL MyIsam does not enforce). So with each production release I run an refactoring scripts for the database (also used to build the development environment and do unit testing) and update the PHP code with a new version that works with the schema changes.
As a web framework I use Stripes as it’s simple, elegant and easy to learn.
I have very good experience with Django. Every time I needed it was up to the task for interfacing with existing database.
Autogenerated models are the start, as MySQL is not the strictest with its schema. Not that it will not work only that usually some of the db restrictions are held in app itself.
My first thought would be to use Hibernate and Java, but I may be biased because that is what my experience is in. You generally map your Model classes via Hibernate after you create the database anyway, so it might not be a bad choice.
I'll let it explain itself to you: Hibernate's website
I suppose that any PHP Framework (I'm a PHP guy, so I will only talk about PHP) could be OK for you ; but you should use one that's well-supported, has a large community, ...
To make things short, I'm thinking about one off this list :
Symfony
Zend Framework
CakePHP
Kohana
Code Igniter
Now, if you're asking "which framework is the best", it's a question that doesn't really have an answer : it's mainly a matter of personnal preferences...
Still, here's a couple of questions+answers that could bring you some interesting informations :
Best PHP framework for an experienced PHP developer?
What PHP framework would you choose for a new application and why?
To use a PHP framework or not?
PHP Framework Decision - Analysis paralysis!
PHP - MVC framework?
Which PHP Framework is right for this project?
Also, note that choosing a Framework is an important decision -- which means you should take some time to evaluate each framework and how it'll answer your specific need.
Really : you should definitely not rush that decision.
You know, there's a whole Ruby web dev world away from Rails, e.g.:
Sinatra
Ramaze
Webby
With such a general question it's always a bit hard to help...
Try web2py, extremely easy to prototype any webapp, and IMO a bit easier to grasp (overall) than other similar web frameworks, HTH
There are no clear cut winners when picking a web framework. Each platform you mentioned has its benefits and drawbacks (cost of hardware, professional support, community support, etc.). Depending on your time table, project requirements, and available hardware resources you are probably going to need some different answers.Personally, I would start your investigation with a platform where you and your team are most experienced.
Like many of the other posters I can only speak to what I'm actively using now, and in my case it is Java. If Java seems to match your projects requirements, you probably want to go with one of the newer frameworks with an active community. Currently Spring Web MVC, Struts2, and Stripes seem to be fairly popular. These frameworks are mostly, if not totally, independent of the persistence layer, but all integrate well with technologies like hibernate and jpa; although you have to do most, if not all, of the wiring yourself.
If you want to take the Java road there are also pre-built application stacks that take care of most of wiring issues for you. For an example you might want to look at Matt Raible's AppFuse. He has built an extensible starter application with many permutations of popular java technologies.
If you are interested in the JVM as a platform, you may also want to look at complete stack solutions like Grails, or tools that help you build your stack quickly like Spring Roo.
Almost all of the full stack solutions I've seen allow for integration with a legacy database schema. As long as your database is well designed, you should be able to map your tables. The mention of composite keys kind of scares me, but depending on your persistence technology this may or may not be an issue. Hibernate in Java/.NET supports mapping to composite keys, as does GORM in grails (built on hibernate). In almost all cases these mappings are discouraged, but people who build persistence frameworks know you can't always scorch earth and completely recreate your model.
To build a Web Application, what kind of open source web application frameworks / technologies are currently present that would be:
Faster to learn.
Ease of use.
Have widgets for rapid development(From a GUI perspective).
Database integration.
I would want this web app to communicate to a Java client.
I am not bound to Java on the server side and free to try out any good rapid application framework.
To summarize, I haven't done much work for the server side hence am not conversant with the tools and technologies for the same.
What would you suggest?
Any and every input would be welcome!...
There is no single "right" answer to this question. As a Java programmer of some 10+ years when asked this question my usual answer is... PHP. There are several reasons for this:
Low resource usage (Apache, nginx);
Cheaper hosting;
Really low barrier to entry;
It's really Web-oriented rather than being general purpose that can be used for Web (like Java);
The fact that PHP scripts aren't persistent (like Java servlets are) between requests makes them much more forgiving and less likely to cause memory leaks and other problems;
No deployment step (like Python, Perl, etc). I'd say this is about the best thing about dynamic scripted languages. Just save the file and click reload on your browser;
PHP might be inconsistent in syntax and several other things but it's also mature and used by some really large sites on the Web (eg Facebook, Yahoo, Flickr, Wikipedia);
PHP is by far the most popular Web development language.
Widgets can be done by any manner of Javascript frameworks like YUI, ExtJS, SmartClient, jQuery UI, etc;
PHP fits well with MySQL.
That being said, a lot of these apply to other languages too (eg Python/Django).
I don't think you necessarily need a framework for PHP but if you do I'd look at one or more of:
Kohana: it's like a more modern version of the more popular CodeIgniter;
Zend Framework: it's modular so you can use as much or as little of it as you like;
Smarty: it's a powerful templating system.
Django has a few notable 'rapid' items including automatically generated administrative interface, bundled ORM (lowers dev time by not having to write SQL and some other code), and a large community with several re-usable apps.
Where Django (or Ruby on Rails or any other MVC framework for that matter) isn't going to be rapid is the learning curve when you first come to developing on them. Django (and RoR) have quite a bit of seperation-of-concerns and if you're not used to that sort of environment, it takes a while to learn the framework. If you're using an ORM that's something to get used to as well, and then of course for any framework you go with there's the API to learn as well.
PHP on the other hand is a little more intuitive in terms of where you put the code and how pages make up your web app. It'll basically let you slap code wherever you want so in the beginning it will probably be faster. In the end it will be quicker but your final product will be sloppier and probably require re-factoring later on.
This comes down to a question of what's the use of the framework. If it's for a hobby site, just go with what's easy (php), otherwise you might want to consider a well-supported MVC framework.
As others have pointed out, jquery is probably the pick for pre-made GUI widgets.
Edit -- And apparently now Django (as of 1.1) has a very awesome set of unit testing tools it comes bundled with. Things like an extended TestCase specifically for Django, a test client (you can do test page request w/o an actual client or server), a tool to give you a % of test coverage you have of the project, and a bunch of other neat stuff.
You've already tagged your question with "java", "php", "python", and "ruby-on-rails", so researching and learning more about those tools would probably help to answer your question.
However, I believe that rapidly building an application is almost never actually the correct goal. Normally, what you want to do is build an application that can be rapidly maintained -- that is, maintained with the lowest possible overall development cost over time.
I would say part of the learning curve will go into understanding concepts. I have been learning about web-apps for some months now, and with my improved understanding of concepts right now, most frameworks show very much similarities. Here are my results so far:
PHP: Great to learn about concepts for doing forms, http-post-requests, http-get-requests. easy interaction with database layer, and it is possible to obtain a working basic application in couple of hours. Almost no hassle with build-systems and web-server configuration.
Ruby-on-Rails: Great to learn about REST and more complicated CRUD applications. Great to learn about the complexity behind MVC and especially simple and powerful interaction with the database layer by using ActiveRecord. Introduction of meta-programming (code-that-writes-code, code-scaffolding) is great. Nice opportunities for free cloud-deployment, e.g. heroku.com and there is a very active community
Java: Powerful interaction with web-server possible (Tomcat, JBoss, ...) MVC is rather complicated here, and in general many configuration-steps necessary (build systems, ORM layer, ...) Grails is a great simplifaction and introduces meta-programming for Java. Jboss Seam introduces REST for Java (but have not looked into this yet)
There are tons, which ones are "good" depend on what you need.
There's Ruby on Rails, which is pretty handy.
For python there's django.
For PHP (I spend a lot of time dealing with PHP), you can look at:
symfony
cakePHP
Solar
Zend Framework
Which are all good in certain situations, and annoying in others.
Speaking only in terms of speed of development, Ruby on Rails is the fastest one out there.
I would vote for Grails.
You can build an runnable Java Web application within 5 to 10 minutes by using the following online Java web application generator:
http://www.webappexpress.net
I'd like to know how you address the seemingly low productivity of Java EE-based web application development compared to other technology stacks (Seaside, Ruby on Rails, etc).
The constraints are:
The finished web application must be deployable on Java EE compliant application containers
If possible, previous investment in Java-based solution should be preserved, i.e. native interoperability with Java-based systems and libraries should be possible
Due to team structure, Java as implementation language is preferred, although less exotic JVM-based languages (i.e. Groovy) might be acceptable as well
The resulting system needs to be architecturally sound
The resulting system needs to be extensible and maintainable
To not let this dwindle into a philosophical discussion, I'm only interested in suggestions that are based on practical experience. Possible examples include domain specific languages, frameworks and MDSD.
If you point to an abstract class of solutions (like MDA / MDSD), please provide details on how you implemented it as well as information about common pitfalls and best practices.
If you disagree on the assumption that Java EE-based web application development implies inferior productivity, I'd like to hear your reasoning as well.
EDIT:
As there are a lot less answers than I expected, I'll accept accounts of abortive attempts as well, basically extending the question to "How (not) to improve productivity when developing Java EE based web applications?".
I believe the Java EE Java stack is actually very good. There are a few reasons explaining the low productivity of Java EE:
Being “the enterprise stack”, it is often used to create boring, ugly, “good enough” applications and, in general, enterprises tend not to attract great developers who love programming, and think and care about what they do. The quality of software in the enterprise world is not great.
Being the enterprise stack where the money is, software vendors try to sell something to them. They create huge, complex and expensive solutions not because they are good, but simply because they could sell them to enterprises.
Enterprises are often very risk averse and everything they do better be “standardized”. Standards are created either after some technology proved to be successful or before. In both cases, it’s bad for enterprises (and Java). Enterprises end up using either good technology too late or a downright failed technology. The latter case is also very dangerous because it creates a false perception that a technology (otherwise a complete failure) must be good if it is standardized and everyone is using it.
Historically, Java EE platform seemed to have attracted a lot of architecture astronauts and developers in big companies promoted to architects whose only purpose was to create more layers, more frameworks, more abstractions and more complexity.
It’s not that there are no good Java tools and frameworks; it’s that there are too many bad ones, too many over-engineered ones, too many bureaucratic processes and methodologies, too many useless standards.
In such a messy world it’s not just the particular selection of tools you choose that affects your productivity. It’s mainly about you, about your values, about how you can reject the majority of solutions proposed to you by the community, vendors, co-workers and managers. It’s about you going against the current, about your common sense, about you questioning every mainstream belief and “best practice”.
That said, tools alone are not going to change your productivity much, and conversely, the right people can be productive with inferior tools too.
My advice:
Don’t use a technology only because it’s standard, because everyone uses it, or because it’s officially recommended by Sun. Use a technology only if you personally think it’s the best tool for your job. This way you may find yourself rejecting technologies such as JSF, JSP, Web services, JMS, EJB, JTA, OSGi, MDA.
Keep it simple, use your common sense, question everything. Do you really need to publish your objects for remote access? Do you really need to create another abstraction layer so that you can switch from Hibernate to TopLink? Do you really need to convert your data to/from XML ten times every time you need them? Do you really need XML schema? Do you really need everything to be configurable are interchangeable? At runtime? By non-developers?
Keep the process simple. Be agile. Do you really need that documentation? Do you really need to describe every screen in a huge table, have it approved, type it in to some home-made tool and then generate JSP? Do you have competent programmers or you design everything first and programmers only “translate” to Java?
WYSIWYG design of HTML doesn’t work.
Graphical programming in general doesn’t work. This includes UML as blueprint and UML as programming language, MDA, drawing page flow diagrams. Code generation is bad.
Never design a framework prior to using it, always harvest a framework.
Prefer frameworks that have only little XML configuration.
Strive for low LOC count. Look at actual characters in your code. Is every character important? Think. What can you do to make your code smaller? Do you need that class? What does it do? Why do you need to do that?
Testing is not sacred cow; you don’t need 100 % test coverage. Test only what makes sense. If it’s difficult to test, make it simpler; or don’t test it at all. Don’t test visual appearance.
And finally, some concrete Java recommendations:
For presentation layer try Tapestry. Why do I love it? Because with Tapestry you can create beautiful code. It’s designed specifically for that, so that your code can be beautiful. Your code. By beautiful I mean everything that matters – it’s short, easy to change, easy to read, easy to create your abstractions, and still flexible, it doesn’t try to hide the fact that you are developing for the web. Of course, it’s still you who makes your code beautiful.
Feel free to use Hibernate, especially for CRUD and large apps. Don’t bother with JPA. It’s not a silver bullet though, with ORM you are always going to trade one set of problems with another.
Only a little Spring, you shouldn’t need much since you’ve carefully avoided all the Java EE traps. Use dependency injection sparingly.
After all of that, you may find the Java language too verbose and not very helpful when abstracting away you copy/pasted code. If you want to experiment, try Scala. The problem is that the main selling point of Scala is that you get all the benefits of modern languages while still keeping type safety, and at the same time, there is no solid IDE support. Being used to super-cool Java IDEs, it doesn’t make much sense to switch to Scala unless there’s an IDE support that is stable and reliable. Stable enough is not enough.
Frameworks like Spring, Hibernate, Wicket certainly help to simplify and accelerate web development as they provide a high degree of testability and integrate very well. But it's not enough to reach RoR productivity, even if you have a good set of development practices. There is still too much technical stuff and plumbing required.
Grails is maybe the missing piece in this picture to get closer to RoR. It's my next experimentation.
BTW, my MDA experiences are the contrary of a productivity improvement so I won't mention them (actually, MDA was killing our productivity).
Javarebel can greatly reduce time spent during web development using Java.
Let me quote here the official website:
JavaRebel is a JVM plugin (-javaagent) that enables you to see changes to your code immediately, without the need to redeploy an application or perform a container restart. If you're tired of watching the logs roll by, and want to see your changes so that you can keep going - JavaRebel is your new best friend.
One important point when discussing Java EE productivity: you should be using Java EE 5 and EJB3.x since they provide for new level of productivity (and functionality) compared to previous releases.
Staying within standard Java EE specs is absolutely important, e.g. using Hibernate instead of JPA is not beneficial to productivity. There is no limitation to fall back to Hibernate features when using JPA, but by using Hibernate instead of JPA you are locked in into single persistence provider with no cheap way out. The whole idea behind using standards is the same: conceptual flexibility (by plugging in different implementations) with available extensibility (by using proprietary extensions if absolutely necessary). Java EE 5 and EJB3 are huge steps in this direction. Of course, you want to minimize any proprietary features but if some seem absolutely necessary it's a good sign that they will be part of spec in next release...
Main obstacles to Java EE productivity are in its enterprise focus (offers a lot more than than needed for majority of projects) and in its legacy (backward compatibility). There is also a lot more to be done in presentation tier with JSF and state management - watch for JSR-299 to address these among other improvements.
Grails is a Java webapp framework very much modelled after Ruby on Rails, with similar principles (DRY, CoC) and productivity gains, but based on existing Java frameworks (Spring, Hibernate, several others).
I've been working on an exploratory project using Grails for a few weeks now (no previous experience in Grails or Groovy), and I'm quite impressed. There are a few rough edges - it's not as mature as RoR, but you can get results quickly and there's never the feeling that the framework is getting in your way.
Maybe it's best illustrated by this concrete example: I wanted to edit a 2D array of domain objects in a grid on a single webpage and found that the automatic mapping of the resulting HTML request data to the domain objects (provided by Spring MVC, I believe) had a bug that caused some data to be mapped to the wrong objects. I looked around on the web for an hour, but apparently nobody had encountered or solved the problem. Eventually I decided to forego the automatic mapping and do it "manually" - and then found that it took me no more than about 10 lines of code...
It's often cited that RoR and similar frameworks based on dynamic languages are more productive environments, but I am really interested to know if there are hard data to back this up. This wouldn't be easy, as one should be made certain that she is not comparing apples with oranges. Things like type of project (web 2.0, enterprise application) and team size should be taken into consideration. However, for small projects it is more than evident that such frameworks are indeed far more productive than Java EE. So this is a short list of arguments used to support this and what you can do for them in the Java world.
Ruby is a more intuitive and concise language. You can do the same thing with much less code.
I don't think you can have the same thing in Java, unless of course you use a dynamic language that runs in the JVM (JRuby, Scala, Groovy). Otherwise, your IDE can help. In Jave an IDE is an essential tool and it will pay you back if you learn to use it well (code generation, snippets, refactoring). In fact there are many things you can do with a Java IDE that are simply impossible to do with a Ruby or Python IDE. Plus you have the benefits of a static typed language. It may take more time to type, but it helps you avoid common mistakes.
Ruby is much more fun to use. Makes the developer happier and more productive.
Same as above. Highly subjective argument in my opinion though.
Convention over configuration makes things faster
A dependency injection framework like Spring or Guice can help
Scaffolding, MVC already there for you.
Again Java MVC frameworks can help
Databases made easy. Load database items as objects. Can change the database on the fly.
Hibernate, iBatis or another ORM framework can help. With Hibernate Tools you can achieve similar functionality with what you have in RoR with yml files
Load new modules instantly
Maven or Ant Ivy can help
Easy deployment for testing
Your IDE or Jetty can help. In fact debugging is easier with Java
Testing integrated with the framework. Use of mock objects facilitate testing
A dependency injection framework can help with mock objects. JUnit was a pioneer of unit frameworks. I don't think that Java is less easy to test.
I would definitely go for Spring together with Hibernate for persistency related stuff.
Why Spring?
The advantage of using Spring instead of another framework is that Springs philosophy is to be "non-invasive". Usually when you're using a framework most probably you'll start to depend on that framework which can be a bad issue if the application is considered to run for a longer time where you then have also to do maintenance etc. Spring uses the so-called "Inversion of Control" (IoC) pattern. Basically your code doesn't (it can but it doesn't have to) call Spring, but Spring will call you (Hollywood principle: "don't call me, I'll call you"). So for instance you can use normal POJOs (Plain Old Java Objects) and you don't have to inherit from any framework-related classes/interfaces.
Another big problem (if not the biggest) in Software Engineering are dependencies. You'll fight for reducing them as much as possible since they will make your life harder (especially in maintenance later on). Spring reduces dependencies among your components drammatically by managing the instantiation of components through configuration files and the dependency injection pattern. I wouldn't want to go on, the best thing is that you start reading some tutorials at the official Spring website. Initially it may need some time in the understanding but once you got it you'll earn a lot of benefits.
Since Jython 2.5 you can use django to satisfy the requirements you listed. It's pretty easy to generate war files from django projects and deploy them on J2EE application servers.
Just wanted to pitch in another idea... you can actually use JRuby and Rails (similar to the previous comment about Django and Jython).
If you use JRuby with Rails and JRuby Rack (and maybe some other utilities... I wasn't the one to actually get the integration going initially), you can deploy JRuby Rails additions to an existing Java web app. We have a legacy JSP application deployed with Tomcat, and are now starting to add new pages using Rails with just that setup (in addition to extending the JSP side when necessary). So far it has been quite successful, though we don't have any of the major high traffic pages implemented in Rails, so I don't know how well it will scale.
We have full access to the session, and have even set up mechanisms to invoke JSPs from Rails pages (such as existing header and footer type JSP includes). It takes some effort and trial and error to fully integrate the 2, but if Rails and JRuby is an option, I highly recommend it (as a personal fan of Ruby).
A colleague has dabbled in JBoss Seam, which is a framework by Gavin King (the guy who brought us Hibernate), which was meant to emulate Rails. Having seen both, I feel Rails is a lot easier to develop with.
Use AOP (Aspect Oriented Programming) for cross cutting aspects like logging, authorization etc. You can either use Spring AOP or AspectJ. It makes code clutter free and maintainable.
I've used Jboss Seam for the past couple of years and find it to be very productive way to develop in Java EE (utilising EJB3, Hibernate, Facelets). I also do the odd bit of PHP coding on the side and can honestly say that I'm more productive with Seam (although that's probably also an indication of my PHP skills.)
For me a couple of the highlights would be:
Hot deploy of code (an absolute must-have)
DRY with Facelets
Annotation based configuration
Extensive drop-in components (especially ajax4jsf)
IDE Support from Jboss Tools
There are tools in the IDE and from the command line to build skeleton code in a similar way to RoR.
Well, I'm not really a Java guy, so I can't say much, except for... JSF
We tried to use it for some time and it was a disaster. Almots all basics steps had to be passed with lots of pain, no documentation, no examples, no community knowledge. We used then one plugin for Eclipse (Exadel Studio), we had a look at a few other JSF frameworks, they were all incompatible and poorly documented. As a matter of fact, of all those we tried, only Sun framework (forgot its name, based on NetBeans) could create a new JSF project even compilable out of the box. The rest required many days of configuration of apache and other things, which for an unexperienced person is a real challenge (though I managed it).
Our team spent a few months on something which was done later in just a few weeks with ASP.NET. People were both inexperienced in JSF and ASP.NET.
If JSF ecosystem is still that bad as it was in 2007, I would recommend avoiding it altogether, productivity is out of the question anyway. Maybe stick with JSP or something that is time-proved and well developed?
I would go with the Lift framework written in Scala. You will see a great productivity boost just by switching to Scala. Scala is also very stable and it's extremely easy to call Java code from your Scala code. Not only that but it's quite similar to Java but with some added features. For some examples you should refer to 5 Things a Java developer needs to know about Scala. Twitter will move part of it's codebase to Scala.
You will never "get stuck" on a piece of code because you can just think about how you would do it in Java and write similar code. First class functions and actors will give you an even greater productivity boost and are both in Scala. Scala is of course statically typed and has a performance that is similar to Java.
I will quote the author of the Lift framework for an description of it:
Lift borrows from the best of existing
frameworks, providing
Seaside's highly granular sessions and security Rails fast flash-to-bang
Django's "more than just CRUD is included"
Wicket's designer-friendly templating style (see Lift View
First)
And because Lift applications are
written in Scala, an elegant new JVM
language, you can still use your
favorite Java libraries and deploy to
your favorite Servlet Container. Use
the code you've already written and
deploy to the container you've already
configured!
Some basic rules:
Kick out the appserver - a HUGE win in turnaround and quality. Keep a web container if you have to, but configure everything in Spring and/or Hibernate so the web.xml is minimal.
Test everything, which you can now do because of step 1 (no deploy-time XMLs or code generation needed: everything is configured in the development already).
Use Wicket to implement your web tier - nobody needs JSP any more; Wicket is 10 times more productive plus easy to test (see step 2).
Use SCRUM and agile development methodologies
The result is Java productivity as high as 4GLs allow - we at Atomikos have several migration projects we did like this. Because we migrated from 4GL platforms to Java/Java EE, we could compare the estimates in both.
Also see this blog post: http://blog.atomikos.com/?p=87
HTH
Guy