Ruby Java Bridge: Are there any?

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call interface? It's all on the same machine, I need only to communicate from ruby to the Java Client interface that comes with my database thingy (kowari). The data to be passed back and forth is all strings. The client interface is a Java Bean. Does that open up any possibilities?

regards,

Richard.

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written
in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get
answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java
process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me
go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call
interface? It's all on the same machine, I need only to communicate from
ruby to the Java Client interface that comes with my database thingy
(kowari). The data to be passed back and forth is all strings. The
client interface is a Java Bean. Does that open up any possibilities?

Sockets would probably be easiest with strings. However if the jruby
and cruby marshall formats are compatable you could use that across
shared memory.

···

On 4/13/05, Richard Cole <rcole@itee.uq.edu.au> wrote:

regards,

Richard.

--
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A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me
go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call
interface?

It is possible to compile java bytecodes to native objects via gcj, and
wrap that using Ruby's C interface (either manually, or via SWIG)

Depending on the application, you might consider JRuby. (A ruby implementation
in Java that allows direct calls to Java objects). There are, however,
definately applications for which it is NOT the solution at this point in
it's life.

···

On Wednesday 13 April 2005 12:32 am, Richard Cole wrote:

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written
in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get
answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java
process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me
go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call
interface? It's all on the same machine, I need only to communicate from
ruby to the Java Client interface that comes with my database thingy
(kowari). The data to be passed back and forth is all strings. The
client interface is a Java Bean. Does that open up any possibilities?

regards,

Richard.

Richard Cole wrote:

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call interface?

Try rjb,
http://arton.no-ip.info/data/rjb-0.1.9.zip
http://arton.no-ip.info/collabo/backyard/?RubyJavaBridge

···

--
Takaaki Tateishi <ttate@ttsky.net>

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written
in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get
answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java
process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me
go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call
interface? It's all on the same machine, I need only to communicate from
ruby to the Java Client interface that comes with my database thingy
(kowari). The data to be passed back and forth is all strings. The
client interface is a Java Bean. Does that open up any possibilities?

SOAP4R comes standard with Ruby 1.8.x
(for a brief introduction have a look at: http://www.simplesiteuk.com)

I haven't heard of any RMI lib freely available in native Ruby

There's also RJNI: Java binding for Ruby through JNI
http://thekode.net/ruby/rjni/index.html
(though unsupported at the moment, would be interesting for someone to
pick it up)

You may consider JRuby can be a good option for some projects:

There are some other JNI bindings available, can't recall the names
now, someone will probably help adding to the list in this thread.

cheers,
                          vruz

Wow,
RJB looks really nice!

So: Trying to get a handle on use cases for JRuby versus RJB...
JRuby is for embedding ruby in java applications, RJB is for embedding java in
ruby applications? Or is there overlap between the two?

···

On Wednesday 13 April 2005 12:48, Takaaki Tateishi wrote:

Richard Cole wrote:
> Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written
> in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get
> answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java
> process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me
> go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call
> interface?

Try rjb,
http://arton.no-ip.info/data/rjb-0.1.9.zip
http://arton.no-ip.info/collabo/backyard/?RubyJavaBridge

Takaaki Tateishi wrote:

Richard Cole wrote:

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call interface?

Try rjb,
http://arton.no-ip.info/data/rjb-0.1.9.zip
http://arton.no-ip.info/collabo/backyard/?RubyJavaBridge

Wow, cool library. That was just what I was looking for :). Can you think of any reason why I'm getting a SIGHUP? Here's my short ruby program, maybe there's something obvious.

···

----
require 'rjb'
include Rjb

def file_contents_of(filename)
  result = nil
  File.open(filename) { |file| return file.read() }
  return result
end
   queryString = file_contents_of('example.itql')
load("itql-1.1.0.jar")
iTQLInterpreterBeanClass = import('org.kowari.itql.ItqlInterpreterBean')
iTQL = iTQLInterpreterBeanClass.new
answer = iTQL.executeQuery(queryString)

vars = answer.getVariables
while answer.next do
  for i in 1..vars.length do
    puts "i=#{i} val=#{answer.getObject(i-1).toString()}"
  end
end
----

Output is:

[snip]
i=1 val=gr:org.apache.bcel.classfile.Signature%24MyByteArrayInputStream
i=1 val=gr:java.io.ByteArrayInputStream
itql.rb:19: SIGHUP (SignalException)

Each time I run the program the SIGHUP comes either on answer.next or answer.getObjects... and with a different amount of output.

regards,

Richard.

Richard Cole wrote:

Takaaki Tateishi wrote:

Richard Cole wrote:

Hi. Quick question. I've install a database like thingy (kowari) written in Java that I want to communicate with from a Ruby: send queries get answers. What's a good way to communicate from a ruby process to Java process, SOAP? RMI? Corba? A socket? Are there any wrappers that let me go from ruby straight to the JVM presumably via the java native call interface?

Try rjb,
http://arton.no-ip.info/data/rjb-0.1.9.zip
http://arton.no-ip.info/collabo/backyard/?RubyJavaBridge

Wow, cool library. That was just what I was looking for :). Can you think of any reason why I'm getting a SIGHUP? Here's my short ruby program, maybe there's something obvious.

Don't know where SIGHUP is coming from, but putting a signal handler in at the top of the ruby script allowed me to ignore SIGHUP, i.e:

trap('SIGHUP') {
  # puts "SIGHUP Raised!"
}

and now the program is producing the correct output, i.e. correctly iterating through the result set.

regards,

Richard.

I"m not familiar with RJB, but JRuby can work "both ways". In fact, I use it
exclusively for times when I need to call Java code from a Ruby application.

David

···

On Wednesday 13 April 2005 09:30 am, Luke Galea wrote:

Wow,
RJB looks really nice!

So: Trying to get a handle on use cases for JRuby versus RJB...
JRuby is for embedding ruby in java applications, RJB is for embedding java
in ruby applications? Or is there overlap between the two?