# rocker **Repository Path**: mirrors_fizzed/rocker ## Basic Information - **Project Name**: rocker - **Description**: Java 8 optimized, memory efficient, speedy template engine producing statically typed, plain java objects - **Primary Language**: Unknown - **License**: Not specified - **Default Branch**: master - **Homepage**: None - **GVP Project**: No ## Statistics - **Stars**: 0 - **Forks**: 0 - **Created**: 2022-01-06 - **Last Updated**: 2026-01-04 ## Categories & Tags **Categories**: Uncategorized **Tags**: None ## README # Rocker Templates by Fizzed [![Maven Central](https://img.shields.io/maven-central/v/com.fizzed/rocker?color=blue&style=flat-square)](https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.fizzed/rocker) ## Automated Testing The following Java versions and platforms are tested using GitHub workflows: [![Java 8](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java8.yaml?branch=master&label=Java%208&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java8.yaml) [![Java 11](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java11.yaml?branch=master&label=Java%2011&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java11.yaml) [![Java 17](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java17.yaml?branch=master&label=Java%2017&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java17.yaml) [![Java 21](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java21.yaml?branch=master&label=Java%2021&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java21.yaml) [![Java 25](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java25.yaml?branch=master&label=Java%2025&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java25.yaml) [![Linux x64](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/java8.yaml?branch=master&label=Linux%20x64&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/java8.yaml) [![MacOS arm64](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/macos-arm64.yaml?branch=master&label=MacOS%20arm64&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/macos-arm64.yaml) [![Windows x64](https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/fizzed/rocker/windows-x64.yaml?branch=master&label=Windows%20x64&style=flat-square)](https://github.com/fizzed/rocker/actions/workflows/windows-x64.yaml) The following platforms are tested using the [Fizzed, Inc.](http://fizzed.com) build system: [![FreeBSD x64](https://img.shields.io/badge/FreeBSD_x64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![FreeBSD arm64](https://img.shields.io/badge/FreeBSD_arm64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux arm64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_arm64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux armhf](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_armhf-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux riscv64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_riscv64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux MUSL x64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_MUSL_x64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux MUSL arm64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_MUSL_arm64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Linux MUSL riscv64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Linux_MUSL_riscv64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![MacOS x64](https://img.shields.io/badge/MacOS_x64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![OpenBSD x64](https://img.shields.io/badge/OpenBSD_x64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![OpenBSD arm64](https://img.shields.io/badge/OpenBSD_arm64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) [![Windows arm64](https://img.shields.io/badge/Windows_arm64-passing-brightgreen?style=flat-square)](buildx-results.txt) ## Overview Rocker is a Java 8+ optimized, near zero-copy rendering, speedy template engine that produces statically typed, plain java object templates that are compiled along with the rest of your project. No more "warm-up" time in production, slow reflection-based logic, or nasty surprises that should have been caught during development. Write your templates using an [intuitive, **tagless** syntax](docs/SYNTAX.md) with standard Java expressions for logic, iteration, and values. Use Rocker's special `?` presence operator for null-safe evaluation. All the heavy lifting is done by the Rocker parser during development -- which keeps the runtime dependencies down to just a handful of classes. Rocker will parse your templates and generate well-documented Java source files (so you can easily inspect and understand how it works). Includes the following features: * Templates are runtime compatible with Java 8+ -- using Lambdas and type inference under-the-hood * [Near zero-copy rendering](#near-zero-copy-rendering) * [Hot reload support in two flavors](#hot-reloading) * [Elegant, intuitive, tagless syntax](docs/SYNTAX.md) that infers when your logic ends for control / dynamic content. All dynamic / control code uses standard Java syntax. * A special `?` presence operator extends syntax for simplified handling of null values. * Parsed templates become normal POJOs with defined arguments -- allowing you to tap into your IDEs code completion, syntax highlighting, etc. * Support for injecting intermediate application-specific super classes during parsing & generating phase -- thereby creating your own app-specific template engine where you can make implicit variables/methods available to all templates. * Since templates are just Java classes -- your logic / dynamic content can call out to any other Java code. Your templates can be as advanced or as simple as you need. No reflection used. * No runtime configuration/engine required -- there isn't any sort of RockerEngine class required to execute templates. Each compiled template is ready-to-go and knows how to render itself. * Templates retain enough information about the original template to throw exceptions at runtime (during render()) that let you track down the problematic line in the original template source file. * GraalVM compatability if you leverage the new PlainText strategy of STATIC_BYTE_ARRAYS ## Sponsorship & Support ![](https://cdn.fizzed.com/github/fizzed-logo-100.png) Project by [Fizzed, Inc.](http://fizzed.com) (Follow on Twitter: [@fizzed_inc](http://twitter.com/fizzed_inc)) **Developing and maintaining opensource projects requires significant time.** If you find this project useful or need commercial support, we'd love to chat. Drop us an email at [ping@fizzed.com](mailto:ping@fizzed.com) Project sponsors may include the following benefits: - Priority support (outside of Github) - Feature development & roadmap - Priority bug fixes - Privately hosted continuous integration tests for their unique edge or use cases ## Performance Based on the following [template benchmark](https://github.com/fizzed/template-benchmark), Rocker is the clear winner. ~250% faster than Freemarker while also requiring orders-of-magnitude less memory. ![Template Comparison](docs/benchmark.png) ## Quick Start Most templates are used for websites, so here is a quick sample showing how Rocker templates work and can call each other during the rendering process. Create a template containing a common header and footer as well as a placeholder for body content. Create template `src/main/java/views/main.rocker.html` ```html @args (String title, RockerBody content) @title @content ``` The template we actually plan on showing to a user will render its content within the context of the common/header footer. In Java terms, it's passing a block of rendering code to be executed within another template. Create template `src/main/java/views/index.rocker.html` ```html @args (String message) @views.main.template("Home") -> {

Hello @message!

} ``` Hey, what about the `RockerBody content` argument? We cover it in more detail in the [syntax readme](docs/SYNTAX.md), but for now just understand that its the only special type of argument and instructs Rocker that a template expects a "body" to be passed to it. The Rocker parser will generate a Java source file for each template. They will be `target/generated-sources/rocker/views/main.java` and `target/generated-sources/rocker/views/index.java`. In your application, you can render the index template like so. ```java static public void main(String[] args) { String output = views.index.template("World") .render() .toString(); } ``` The output will equal: ```html Home

Hello World!

``` Once you generate the Java sources and peek inside the code, it's simple to see how this works. The views.index class creates a views.main template instance and hands off rendering to it -- while also passing a block of itself that it will render when views.main calls the `@content` variable. The syntax is identical to how a lambda is defined in Java 8 (implemented with lambdas for Java 8 and anonymous inner classes for Java 6/7). Rocker does a number of things behind the scenes to make sure templates that create other templates share the same rendering context (output buffer, application-specific context/implicit state). ## Syntax Checkout the [SYNTAX.md](docs/SYNTAX.md) file for a comprehensive deep dive on the rocker syntax. ## Framework integrations Rocker has a growing list of frameworks that it has been seamlessly integrated with. If you want to link to a new framework added, please file an issue or submit a PR: * Ninja Framework: https://github.com/fizzed/ninja-rocker * Jooby: http://jooby.org/doc/rocker * Spark Framework: https://github.com/perwendel/spark-template-engines * Micronaut Framework: https://github.com/micronaut-projects/micronaut-views ## Near zero-copy rendering Static (plain text) for each Rocker template is (by default) stored internally as static byte arrays already converted into your target charset (e.g. UTF-8). When a template is rendered -- the static byte arrays are reused across all requests. Rocker renders to an optimized output stream that stores a composite (linked list) view of the reused byte arrays plus your dynamic content. Since templates consist mostly of static content rendered into the same charset over and over again, rather than allocating new memory, copying that content, and then converting it into your target charset for each request -- Rocker simply uses a pointer to it over and over again. This technique produces fast and memory efficient renders. Let's say you have a template consisting of 9000 bytes of plain static text and 1000 bytes of dynamic content. Without this optimization, it would require ~100MB of memory to service 10000 requests (10000 bytes x 10000 requests). With this optimization, it would require ~10MB of memory to service 10000 requests (1000 bytes x 10000 requests). Besides lower memory, you also cut out 90MB of memory copies and 90MB of UTF-8 String->byte conversions. A pretty useful optimization. ## No reflection Everything is compiled by your project's compiler along with your other Java source code. Any dynamic code in your template is ultimately converted into standard Java and compiled. No reflection used. ## Hot reloading Version 0.10.0 introduced support for hot reloading templates during development. Hot reloading allows you to modify the template source code, save it, and have the changes active on the next request -- without having to restart your JVM. Rocker offers two different flavors of hot reloading for flexibility. ### Flavor 1: static interface, dynamic rendering The major feature of Rocker templates is that your templates are compile-time checked for usage, arguments, logic, etc. by the Java compiler. In version 0.10.0 the underlying structure of a template was modified where a template generates two underlying classes. Each template generates a model class (its interface) and an implementation class (its renderer). Your application will only interact directly with the model, therefore allowing Rocker to dynamically recompile and reload the implementation class. The major benefit of flavor one is that your application code remains the same and is compile-time checked by the Java compiler, while the template content can be modified and automatically reloaded at runtime. Only in the case where you actually change the template arguments, will you need to restart your application. ### Flavor 2: dynamic interface, dynamic rendering If you prefer the convenience of fully dynamic templates, flavor two supports hot reloading of both the template model class (its interface) as well as the implementation class (its renderer). Your application will lose some of the compile-time checking and a small performance hit, but gain the convenience of everything being reloadable. The way your application will use templates is different as well. ```java import com.fizzed.rocker.Rocker ... // dynamic interfaces, dynamic implementation String rendered = Rocker.template("views/index.rocker.html") .bind("val", "ValueA") .render() .toString(); ``` The template path and arguments will be runtime-checked. Please note that each bindable value must match the name and type declared in your template. In case your bindable map may contain more values that than the required ones a relaxed bind is available. The relaxed alternative will not fail rendering if an attribute is extra to the required list. For example: ``` @args (String name) Hello ${name}! ``` Will render in relaxed mode as: ```java Map map = new HashMap(); map.put("name", "Joe"); map.put("age", 42); Rocker.template("views/hello.rocker.html") .relaxedBind(map) .render(); // -> Hello Joe! ``` ### Activate hot reloading Support for hot reloading is added to your generated templates by default in version 0.10.0. If you'd like to disable support, set the configuration/system property rocker.optimize to true during your build. Since the code is present in your templates by default, you merely need to turn it on at runtime. #### Add dependency The rocker-compiler dependency needs to be added to your build. This dependency only needs to be present during development and can be removed in production. In Maven, this means you'll want to add the dependency in the provided scope. ```xml com.fizzed rocker-compiler 2.2.1 provided ``` #### Enable at runtime Activate hot reloading at runtime. You can activate hot reloading either with a system property or programmatically. For activating hot reloading with a system property in maven. ``` mvn -Drocker.reloading=true ...rest of args... ``` Alternatively, you can activate hot reloading programmatically. ```java import com.fizzed.rocker.runtime.RockerRuntime ... RockerRuntime.getInstance().setReloading(true); ``` ### Try out hot reloading There is a simple example demonstrating hot reload in action. This project uses [Blaze](https://github.com/fizzed/blaze) to help script tasks. Run the following java -jar blaze.jar hot_reload Point your browser to http://localhost:8080 Then modify & save rocker-test-reload/src/test/java/views/index.rocker.html and refresh your browser. ## Getting started Rocker consists of two components - the parser/generator and the runtime. To use Rocker in your project, add the runtime dependency to your application, then enable the parser in your build tool followed by creating your first template. ### Add dependency Rocker is published to Maven central. To add as a dependency in Maven: ```xml com.fizzed rocker-runtime 2.2.1 com.fizzed rocker-compiler 2.2.1 provided ``` To add as a dependency in Gradle: ```groovy repositories { mavenCentral() } dependencies { compile group: 'com.fizzed', name: 'rocker-runtime', version: '2.2.1' // add rocker-compiler dependency as needed } ``` ### Integrate parser/generator in build tool Rocker supports Maven and Gradle out-of-the box. #### Maven Add the following to your pom ```xml com.fizzed rocker-maven-plugin 2.2.1 generate-rocker-templates generate-sources generate ``` By default, Rocker will recursively process any template files ending with `.rocker.html` in `src/main/java`. The directory the template is saved will become the standard Java package the generated Java classes will be placed into. The generated Java source files will be saved to `target/generated-sources/rocker`. The plugin will take care of adding this generated directory to your sources root. The following properties are supported: * `templateDirectory` is the base directory to recursively start from when locating and parsing template files. The Java `package` a template will be generated to will use this directory as its base. So if you have `${templateDirectory}/views/mytemplate.rocker.html` then Rocker will generate `${outputDirectory}/views/mytemplate.java`. Defaults to `${project.build.sourceDirectory}`. * `outputDirectory` is the directory the parser will generate sources for templates. Defaults to `${project.build.directory}/generated-sources/rocker` * `classDirectory` is the directory the hot reload feature will (re)compile classes to at runtime. Defaults to `${project.build.outputDirectory}` * `failOnError` determines whether any parsing/generating errors cause Maven to fail. Defaults to true. * `skip` determines whether execution of the plugin should be skipped. Defaults to false. * `touchFile` is the file to "touch" after successfully generating Java sources. Useful for triggering other workflow. Many IDEs will not automatically reload generated sources for code completion unless either explicitly told to reload OR if the maven pom.xml file is changed. Thus, this value is by default set to `${basedir}/pom.xml`. It's usually harmless to keep this enabled. * `skipTouch` disables touchFile. Defaults to false. * `addAsSources` will add the outputDirectory to maven as sources to be compiled. Defaults to true. * `addAsTestSources` will adds the outputDirectory to maven as test sources to be compiled. Defaults to false. If true, this is evaluated before addAsSources and effectively tells maven to compile your templates as test code. The following properties are also supported, but it's important to understand these are essentially passthrough overrides to the parser and they all default to Rocker's default value. * `javaVersion` is the Java version you'd like your templates compile & runtime compatible with. Defaults to the Java version of the JVM executing maven (e.g. "1.8"). * `optimize` determines if hot reloading support will be removed from the generated templates. False by default. * `extendsClass` is the class that all template implementations should extend. Useful for application-specific intermediate classes that you'd like all templates to extend. Defaults to Rocker's default. * `extendsModelClass` is the class that all template models should extend. Useful for application-specific intermediate classes that you'd like all template models to extend. Defaults to Rocker's default. * `plainTextStrategy` is the strategy used for embedding plain text as part of templates. Default is STATIC_BYTE_ARRAYS_VIA_UNLOADED_CLASS but if you need GraalVM compatability, you would try STATIC_BYTE_ARRAYS * `discardLogicWhitespace` determines whether whitespace in templates that is determined to be only a part of logic/control blocks should be discarded. Helps make rendered content look more professional, while still keeping much of your formatting intact. Defaults to Rocker's default. * `targetCharset` is the target charset for template output. Defaults to Rocker's default. * `suffixRegex` is the regular expression to use to find templates to parse. Defaults to Rocker's default. * `markAsGenerated` adds a @Generated annotation to the generated classes. The Retention is CLASS so that the annotation can be used by tools that only rely on the class files and not on the source code. Defaults to Rocker's default. #### Gradle Thanks to `@victory` and `@mnlipp` for contributing the gradle plugin. `@etiennestuder` also had an [alternative Gradle plugin](https://github.com/etiennestuder/gradle-rocker-plugin) you may want to consider as well. Rocker's gradle plugin is published to gradle.org. Just add the following to your build script: ```groovy plugins { id "com.fizzed.rocker" version "2.2.1" } sourceSets { main { rocker { srcDir('src/main/java') } } } rocker { // (All settings are shown with their defaults) // // Skips building templates all together skip false // Base directory for generated java sources, actual target is sub directory // with the name of the source set. The value is passed through project.file(). outputBaseDirectory = "$buildDir/generated-src/rocker" // Base directory for the directory where the hot reload feature // will (re)compile classes to at runtime (and where `rocker-compiler.conf` // is generated, which is used by RockerRuntime.getInstance().setReloading(true)). // The actual target is a sub directory with the name of the source set. // The value is passed through project.file(). classBaseDirectory = "$buildDir/classes" failOnError true skipTouch true // must not be empty when skipTouch is equal to false touchFile "" javaVersion '1.8' extendsClass null extendsModelClass null optimize null discardLogicWhitespace null targetCharset null suffixRegex null postProcessing null markAsGenerated null } ``` ### Create first template The template syntax is described in detail below, but for now create a new file in `${templateDirectory}/views/HelloWorld.rocker.html` @* Example of hello world *@ @args (String message) Hello @message! ### Use compiled template Time to compile your project and starting using the template. You can call it from java like so: ```java static public void main(String[] args) { String output = views.HelloWorld .template("World") .render() .toString(); } ``` ### Use optimized output Rocker is heavily optimized (by default) to output templates as byte arrays. The default `RockerOutput` a template will render to is of the type `com.fizzed.rocker.runtime.ArrayOfByteArraysOutput`. This is an excellent choice for byte arrays or asynchronous IO. However, the framework has the capability for optimized rendering to Strings (or other custom outputs). To efficiently render to a String: ```java import com.fizzed.rocker.runtime.StringBuilderOutput; static public void main(String[] args) { StringBuilderOutput output = views.HelloWorld .template("World") .render(StringBuilderOutput.FACTORY); String text = output.toString(); } ``` To efficiently render to an OutputStream: ```java import com.fizzed.rocker.runtime.OutputStreamOutput; static public void main(String[] args) throws Exception { final OutputStream os = new FileOutputStream(new File("test")); OutputStreamOutput output = views.HelloWorld .template("World") .render((contentType, charsetName) -> new OutputStreamOutput(contentType, os, charsetName)); } ``` Please note that if there is an exception during the render the OutputStream would have a partial template rendered (up to the point of the exception). In most cases it would be better to render to the default `com.fizzed.rocker.runtime.ArrayOfByteArraysOutput` and write its buffer of byte arrays out directly to your OutputStream. ## Other demos? There are numerous demos of Rocker in action. From parsing templates into a model to asynchronously sending results in an HTTP server. This project uses [Blaze](https://github.com/fizzed/blaze) to help script tasks. Run the following for a complete list: java -jar blaze.jar -l ## License Copyright (C) 2025+ Fizzed, Inc. This work is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for details.