Thursday, April 30, 2009

SpringOne EU 2009 wrapup

So here's a small summary of the highlights at SpringOne EU 2009. Fortunately for me the conference was in Amsterdam so I could come by bike :-).

Keynote Rod Johnson:
There where some interesting statements from Rod about Oracle's acquisition of Sun. For Java itself it actually doesn't matter. Java is now open source so cannot be taken away from us. And open source is the space where most of the innovation is happening now anyway. He compared Larry Ellison with Genghis Khan asking "what would Genghis Khan do?". Let us just assume the worst about it. We are already independent anyway.
He also had a positive message for us java developers. Despite all the fuss from dynamic languages we are a stable and proven platform. Frameworks like Spring help us build systems better and easier.
There were some new tech annoucements to help us out. Spring Roo is a command line tool to quickly generate scaffolding code for you app so you can get quickly started. Interesting that text input had been chosen instead of a GUI. As developers this gives us more power and flexibility. Roo has been released tonight!
Also the SpringSource Tool Suite will be available for free from now on. From what I've seen in the demos it looks pretty nice. Unfortunately the source code will not be available. Will the source ever be available? What's that about SpringSource?

Monday:
Introduction to Spring MVC and Spring 3.0. Everything can be configured using annotations and thanks to convention over configuration there is a lot less to configure. Ben Alex raced through his new tool Roo and we can vote to change the name (I voted to keep Roo).

Tuesday:
Adrian Colyer gave an interesting and entertaining talk about deploying into the cloud (app engine, amazon, etc). He had 4 demos - no less. Another new web feature in Spring 3.0: REST. Nice annotation based syntax with some powerful features such as content negotiation to allow for different views. The talk on Terracotta was more or less a sales pitch but yet it was interesting to learn about the technology. Cool demos too.

Wednesday:
Very interesting introduction to Groovy from the head of Groovy development: Guillaume Laforge. Groovy is very much like Ruby to me. The combination with Grails seems even more perfect. Grails is build on top of Spring MVC. A dynamic web framework on a stable stack. Unfortunately the talk about Grails was a bit chaotic. There were some complex demos about mixing Java with Groovy code but I really expected an introduction to the framework like the one for Groovy. I'm going to look into Grails anyway.
Two fascinating talks about Spring Integration and ActiveMQ. It's about the patterns as proposed in the book Enterprise Integration Patterns. Messages queues, channels, routers, etc. The talks were packed with information and excitement, very technically stimulating. This is probably because I myself recently developed a queueing system in Java with ActiveMQ. It has gone into production last week.
For the final talk there was an excellent recap of the AOP choices you have with Spring. AspectJ is a DSL for AOP, it's a superset of Java so you can write any Java code with it. Interesting. I've learned about AOP before, but never actually felt the need to use it to solve a problem. Guess when you have a hammer everything starts looking like a nail.

That's it for now. It was a fun and interesting conference. Hope to do some more of these in the future.

Monday, April 20, 2009

You don't have to remember anything when you write unit tests

I'm a fan of English rapper Mike Skinner (The Streets), he gives some good advice in his songs. For example:
If you never tell a lie to her, you don't have to remember anything.

That's easy right; you never have to be paranoid about creeping inconsistencies into your story if you just stick to the facts.

It's kind of the same with unit testing. Ever have the feeling 'I sure hope no-one will break this subtle case' when you're writing code with some twisted logic. You try to clarify it with comments, but still it doesn't feel right and it keeps hogging your mind. Well when you write a test you don't have to bother worrying anymore, the test will fail when you break the code and if you cover your subtle cases you're safe.

It is hard to convince developers to write unit tests. Some feel like writing tests is a waste of time. I felt the same way, until the first time the tests found errors that I did not expect. Every time a test fails is like a little gift to yourself; some fustrating hours have been saved thanks to the test harness.