Book Image

Learning Apache Thrift

Book Image

Learning Apache Thrift

Overview of this book

With modern software systems being increasingly complex, providing a scalable communication architecture for applications in different languages is tedious. The Apache Thrift framework is the solution to this problem! It helps build efficient and easy-to-maintain services and offers a plethora of options matching your application type by supporting several popular programming languages, including C++, Java, Python, PHP, Ruby, Erlang, Perl, Haskell, C#, Cocoa, JavaScript, Node.js, Smalltalk, OCaml, and Delphi. This book will help you set aside the basics of service-oriented systems through your first Apache Thrift-powered app. Then, progressing to more complex examples, it will provide you with tips for running large-scale applications in production environments. You will learn how to assess when Apache Thrift is the best tool to be used. To start with, you will run a simple example application, learning the framework's structure along the way; you will quickly advance to more complex systems that will help you solve various real-life problems. Moreover, you will be able to add a communication layer to every application written in one of the popular programming languages, with support for various data types and error handling. Further, you will learn how pre-eminent companies use Apache Thrift in their popular applications. This book is a great starting point if you want to use one of the best tools available to develop cross-language applications in service-oriented architectures.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Learning Apache Thrift
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
5
Generating and Running Code in Different Languages
Index

JavaScript


JavaScript is a scripting language used mainly for frontend development in web applications, but it has also gained popularity recently in server-side solutions with Node.js.

JavaScript code generated by the Apache Thrift compiler (Node.js aside) is strictly client-side, intended to be used in the web browser against the services written in other languages.

Generating the code

Apache Thrift's compiler offers few options for JavaScript. Run the following command to see them:

$ thrift --help

Look for the information about JavaScript generators:

  js (Javascript):
    jquery:          Generate jQuery compatible code.
    node:            Generate node.js compatible code.
    ts:              Generate TypeScript definition files.

Running the generator without any options will provide you with just plain JavaScript code. Let's explain the extra options:

  • Jquery: The generated code will be jQuery compatible

  • Node: Code for Node.js will be generated; technically, this is still JavaScript code...