I'm a huge fan of beanshell as I find it to be the swiss army knife of tools for Java. It's an experimentation tool, a debugging tool, a scripting language, a configuration language, it slices, it dices.
If you aren't familiar with beanshell, download it and play around with it. It basically brings the lightweight world of dynamic programming to Java - and the code you write is Java and can access any Java.
The specific use that I wanted to mention this morning though, is that the latest version of beanshell is distributed with a servlet which allows for trivial remote access.
All you need to do is drop the bsh.jar file into your WEB-INF/lib, and add the lines:
<servlet> <servlet-name>bshservlet</servlet-name> <servlet-class>bsh.servlet.BshServlet</servlet-class> </servlet> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>bshservlet</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/eval</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping>
Now you can visit http://yourserver/yourapp/eval and you'll see a small beanshell application where you can essentially run any Java command against your web app's JVM.
Lets say e-mail isn't working from your application. Using this tool, you can simulate all of the steps of sending e-mail by hand, inside the JVM using the same classes your application would use. This gives you an easy way to get an inside-looking-out-view of your application.
Now, my next step is to do same thing, but using a language which is a bit more powerful.
Hi Ben,
ReplyDeleteWhy would you prefer SISC ?
I'm a noephyte and is ignorant on the matter :-)
You enlighten us ?
Can it also be controlled through a servlet ?
Thanks !
Stephane (from France)
Stephane - what do you mean? Are you comparing scheme implementations or something?
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