And also you should look a little to the next release 1.1 (support of
spring) is not released yet !


http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.java.restlet/2308/match=1.1 download the
zip (beta version) and you will see new spring class (restlet extension).

bye



On 8/23/07, regis regis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Sample code
> Here you can link to sample code contributions based on Restlets
>
> http://wiki.java.net/bin/view/Javawsxml/Restlet
> Integration with Spring 2.0 and Apache Tomcat 
> 5.5<http://restlet.tigris.org/nonav/issues/showattachment.cgi/67/Restlet-example.zip>
>
> I use and it works very well !
>
> bye
>
> On 8/23/07, Kim Pepper < [EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> > I'm just starting out with the Restlet framework after reading the
> > excellent RESTful Web Services book. I've had a lot of experience with
> > Spring MVC and Hibernate web applications, but it doesn't cut it for RESTful
> > web applications.
> >
> > However, I want to reuse the spring managed objects and Data Access
> > Objects from my existing projects. I also want to remove the dependency on
> > Servlets and use the Restlet framework supported by Jetty or AsyncWeb.
> >
> > I'm confused by the need for the SpringContext? I assume you can just
> > create a
> > ClassPathXmlApplicationContext passing the applicationContext.xml. All
> > you need is the map of url => SpringFinder beans for each of your resources.
> > Am I missing something?
> >
> > Also, has anyone tried wiring an entire application with Spring? A few
> > BeanFactory's here and there would do the trick!
> >
> > -- Kim
> >
>
>

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