Website: http://open-dolphin.org see also the user guide, which is linked from the website.
Team: Dieter Holz, Andres Almiray, Dierk Koenig
Mailinglist: [email protected], please subscribe at http://lists.canoo.com/mailman/listinfo/dolphin .
JIRA: http://www.canoo.com/jira/browse/DOL
Twitter: @OpenDolphin
If you use Java 7u6 or later, you are all set. Otherwise, JAVAFX_HOME must be set to a 2.1.0 version. (Version 2.2 also works fine.)
gradlew PushDemo
To see a choice of demos use:
gradlew listDemos
gradlew clean build
Running the push demo with the grails server integration
- gradlew build
- cd dolphin-grails
- grails run-app &
- cd ..
- gradlew GrailsClientPushDemo
You can create an IDEA project for the full dolphin code by running
- gradlew idea
or for eclipse via
- gradlew eclipse
Bridging the world of Java Enterprise and Java Desktop.
- visualization code resides on the client (View)
- domain models and controllers remain on the server
- presentation models are shared between client and server
- a server may "push" commands to the client by means of a long poll
A video introduction is at http://people.canoo.com/mittie/dolphin.mov. The API has meanwhile improved and the privacy disclaimer is no longer applicable.
Dolphin introduction in the 2012 JavaOne strategy keynote (around minute 18): http://medianetwork.oracle.com/video/player/1871687106001
Dolphin technical session at JavaOne 2012 by Arvinder Brar (Navis), Jasper Potts (Oracle) and Dierk Koenig (Canoo): https://oracleus.activeevents.com/connect/sessionDetail.ww?SESSION_ID=4853 (slides and screencast capture)
Dolphin technical session at W-JAX 2012, Munich, Nov 6th: http://entwickler.com/konferenzen/ext_scripts/v2/php/sessions-popup.php?module=wjax2012&id=24020 (German)
The multi-project build consists of these subprojects
- shared (code that is needed on both client and server)
- client (visualization)
- server (domain model and control logic)
- combined (for testing the client-server combination)
- demo-javafx (again divided in client - server - shared - combined)
A good place to start are the demos. See https://github.com/canoo/open-dolphin/tree/master/subprojects/demo-javafx where "combined" contains starter and configuration. From there have a look into the referenced client and server classes.
Presentation models (PMs) are used on both, client and server. Presentation models consist of Attributes that capture only simple data types and meta information.
On the client side, the visualization code (e.g JavaFX) binds against the Presentation model, i.e. its Attributes.
Commands are sent between client and server. They are concerned with create, read, update, and delete actions for PMs.
PresentationModels are created via
dolphin.presentationModel 'myPmId', name:'Dolphin'
Presentation models may synchronize for example to capture the selection in a master-detail scenario. This is done by "applying" the sourcePM to the targetPm like so
dolphin.apply sourcePm to targetPm
There are both Java-friendly and Groovy-friendly API methods in the "Dolphin" facade.
Attributes have a dirty flag that can be used to detect when the attribute contains a value different that its original one. This flag is observable trough standard POJO bindings (i.e, PropertyChangeListener).
PresentationModels also have a dirty flag which is dependent on the dirty status of any of the attributes the model holds. This flag too is observable trough standard POJO bindings (i.e, PropertyChangeListener).
Dolphin makes the assumption that changes to PresentationModel and Attributes will occur inside the UI thread when in the client side of the application. Changes on the server must occur in the same thread without enforcing one in particular.
The client side runs under an JavaSE event model, whereas the server side follows a JavaEE request-response model. An important part of dolphin is to bridge these two worlds.
The communication between these worlds happens solely through command objects that are sent between them.
ClientModelStore (CMS) and ServerModelStore (SMS) are automatically kept in sync. Changes to the CMS automatically trigger a respective command being sent to the server, which in turn updates the SMS accordingly.
The server does never change the SMS on its own. Instead, the server may send commands to the client, which make the client update the CMS (which in turn automatically syncs with the server as mentioned above). The reason for this approach is the communication delay between client and server. We need to make sure that one side is the master and always ahead of the other side and we have chosen the client to be that master.
- Any PresentationModel id must be unique inside the ModelStore.
- Any Attribute id must be unique inside the ModelStore.
- All commands from client to server are sent asynchronously.
- Commands are always sent in strict sequence such that we can rely on all value changes being synced to the SMS before a command is processed on the server that depends on these values.