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Nano Vaadin - Ramp up in a second.

A nano project to start a Vaadin project. Perfect for Micro-UIs packed as fat jar in a docker image.

target of this project

The target of this project is a minimal rampup time for a first hello world. Why we need one more HelloWorld? Well, the answer is quite easy. If you have to try something out, or you want to make a small POC to present something, there is no time and budget to create a demo project. You don´t want to copy paste all small things together. Here you will get a Nano-Project that will give you all in a second.

Clone the repo and start editing the class BasicTestUI or BasicTestUIRunner. Nothing more.

How does it work?

This project will not use any additional maven plugin or technology. Core Kotlin and the Vaadin Dependencies are all that you need to put a Vaadin app into a Servlet-container.

Here we are using the plain meecrowave as Servlet-Container. http://openwebbeans.apache.org/meecrowave/index.html

As mentioned before, there is not additional technology involved. No DI to wire all things together.

But let´s start from the beginning.

Start the Servlet-Container

The class BasicTestUIRunner will ramp up the Container.

Here all the basic stuff is done. The start will init. a ServletContainer at port 8080. If you want to use a random port, use randomHttpPort() instead of httpPort = 8080 The WebApp will deployed as ROOT.war.

public class BasicTestUIRunner {
  private BasicTestUIRunner() {
  }

  public static void main(String[] args) {
    new Meecrowave(new Meecrowave.Builder() {
      {
//        randomHttpPort();
        setHttpPort(8080);
        setTomcatScanning(true);
        setTomcatAutoSetup(false);
        setHttp2(true);
      }
    })
        .bake()
        .await();
  }
}

The Servlet itself will only bind the UI Class to the Vaadin Servlet.

  @WebServlet("/*")
  @VaadinServletConfiguration(productionMode = false, ui = MyUI.class)
  public static class MyProjectServlet extends VaadinServlet { }

The UI itself will hold the graphical elements.

  @PreserveOnRefresh
  @Push
  public static class MyUI extends UI {
   @Override
    protected void init(VaadinRequest request) {
      //set the main Component
      setContent(new BasicTestUI());
    }
  }

After this you can start the app invoking the main-method.

The UI itself

The UI itself is quite easy. There is only a button you can click. For every click, the counter will be increased.

public class BasicTestUI extends Composite {


  public static final String BUTTON_ID = buttonID().apply(BasicTestUI.class, "buttonID");
  public static final String LABEL_ID  = buttonID().apply(BasicTestUI.class, "labelID");


  private final Button button = new Button();
  private final Label  label  = new Label();

  private int counter = 0;

  public BasicTestUI() {
    label.setId(LABEL_ID);
    label.setValue(valueOf(counter));

    button.setId(BUTTON_ID);
    button.setCaption(BUTTON_ID);
    button.addClickListener(e -> label.setValue(valueOf(++counter)));

    setCompositionRoot(new VerticalLayout(button, label));
  }
}

Happy Coding.

if you have any questions: ping me on Twitter https://twitter.com/SvenRuppert or via mail.

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