Hey there, I have looked into this some more, and I now understand what you meant. I took a look around TServlet and thrift.js ; I am thinking to deploy the TServlet into TomCat or JBoss. However, I am not sure as to how this would work. From my understanding, TomCat instantiates the Servlet itself reflectively;
how can you tell the TServlet what Processor to process and what Protocols to use? The TServlet has Constructor arguments. How do we pass parameters to it? http://people.apache.org/~jfarrell/thrift/0.7.0/javadoc/org/apache/thrift/server/TServlet.html Thank You! On Tue, Jul 17, 2012 at 4:32 PM, Jake Luciani <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes you generate a JS client, It communicates via the JSONProtocol so you > must use that Protocol on the serverside. > > Also you need to use the TServlet java Server to access it from a web > browser. > > On Tue, Jul 17, 2012 at 4:22 PM, Juan Moreno > <[email protected]>wrote: > > > My Project is using Thrift and I am trying to understand the Javascript > > Client Architecture. > > My Question is basically this: > > 1. You define a .thrift file with your structures. > > 2. You Compile this file into Java(The Server/Service end) and > > Javascript(The Client end) > > 3. In Java Thrift Generates a Class for each struct and service. What > about > > in Javascript? Is this also the same? > > > > Can this Generated Javascript talk directly to the Java Server--that is, > > can it open a TSocket or start a Transport--or must there always > > be a REST Service proxy-ing between the two? > > > > Thanks! > > > > -- > > Juan Wellington Moreno > > *Software Engineer* > > > > > > -- > http://twitter.com/tjake > -- Juan Wellington Moreno *Software Engineer* Potomac Fusion 7230 Lee Deforester Drive, Suite 100 Columbia, MD 21046 Work: (410) 794-9040 ext 317 Work Direct: (410) 794-9017 Main: (347) 541-9256
