- From: Achim Berndzen <achim.berndzen@xml-project.com>
- Date: Fri, 31 Mar 2017 09:52:36 +0200
- To: Hank Ratzesberger <hank@werx.io>
- Cc: xproc-dev@w3c.org
Hi Hank, welcome to this list. there are some solutions using REST with XProc I know of. As Christoph said, I showed one of them at XML Prague. It is based on a implementation of http://expath.org/spec/webapp and com.sun.net.httpserver.HttpServer. The original implementation of the WebApp specification using XMLCalabash is by Florent Georges is http://servlex.net . XMLCalabash itself has of course Piperrack, which is a web server for running XProc pipelines. Also based on XMLCalabash is Conal Tuohy project XProc-Z (https://github.com/Conal-Tuohy/XProc-Z). Looking forward to hear how your project develops. Greetings from Germany, Achim ------------------------------------------------ Achim Berndzen achim.berndzen@xml-project.com http://www.xml-project.com > Am 27.03.2017 um 17:55 schrieb Hank Ratzesberger <hank@werx.io>: > > Hi, > > I'm writing to this list for the first time, and breaking the first rule, since I have not looked at the archives to see if this topic has come up previously, but if you will indulge me... > > Last year I attempted to run JBoss Data Virtualization, which provides a way to make SOAP and REST messages, JNDI and Hibernate sources, all kinds of data sources look like sql database tables. Well to me it seemed a perfect solution for 20 years ago. > > If xproc were sitting in a servlet container with some way to configure endpoints and processing scripts it could create the kinds of documents applications use (which is mostly json but svg pdf html csv also) indeed if you have seen some of these Hibernate queries it's obvious there's some backflips to create the right json for some front end UI. > > Another use case is BPMN as a front controller to manage the logic state. > > Well that's my salvo. Thank you > Hank.ratzesberger
Received on Friday, 31 March 2017 07:53:08 UTC