The Security Annotation Framework (SAF) is an instance-level access control framework driven by Java 5 annotations. It can be easily integrated into Spring applications which primarily use the SAF to control access to their domain object instances. SAF security annotations define locations in the source code where the SAF shall perform permission checks at runtime. An annotation-driven approach to instance-level access control promotes the separation of an application’s security logic from its business logic. This significantly increases the testability and reusability of application components. It further allows the implementation of instance-level access control features into existing applications without modifying existing business logic.
Artifactory is a Maven2 proxy repository with advanced features. It is based on JCR (using JackRabbit as the implementation), with a web UI based on Wicket, and embeded Jetty for quick start. All artifacts are stored in an embedded Derby DB.
Maven Archetypes for Web Applications
This page contains maven archetypes to help you quickly and easily get started on a web project that uses the jetty plugin. Each archetype allows you to generate a template for your project based on the included sample web application. (This supposes that maven 2.x is already installed in your system)
sbt is a simple build tool for Scala projects that aims to do the basics well. It requires Java 1.5 or later.
Features
* Fairly fast, unintrusive, and easy to set up for simple projects
* Configuration is done in Scala
* The default source directory layout is the same as maven's so you can always switch to maven should you need/want to
* Regardless of what sources you have added, changed, or removed, sbt should (in theory) recompile the right sources using information extracted from compilation with a compiler plugin
* Supports ScalaCheck, specs, and ScalaTest.
* Can generate documentation with scaladoc
* Packages jars (classes, sources, or api docs)
* Can start the Scala interpreter with the right classpath (dependencies and compiled classes)
* Multiple project/subproject support
* Parallel task execution, including parallel test execution
* Dependency management support: basic inline declarations, configuration with Maven (partial support) or Ivy, or manual management.