Wow, it is extremely light weight! Surprised that it doesn't even use JSR 330.
John Zhuge Software Engineer, Cloudera On Sat, Nov 26, 2016 at 2:37 PM, Saikat Kanjilal <sxk1...@hotmail.com> wrote: > https://github.com/pmazak/Spit-DI > > > http://paulmazak.blogspot.com/2015/06/dependency-injection-on-hadoop.html > <http://paulmazak.blogspot.com/2015/06/dependency-injection-on-hadoop.html> > Dependency Injection on Hadoop (without Guice) > <http://paulmazak.blogspot.com/2015/06/dependency-injection-on-hadoop.html> > paulmazak.blogspot.com > Does your Java map-reduce code look like a bunch of dominoes strung > together, in which you can't play one piece until you have the other ... > > > > > I've used spring in the past but this seems like a framework that has some > potential. > <https://github.com/pmazak/Spit-DI> > GitHub - pmazak/Spit-DI: Spit is a lightweight dependency ... > <https://github.com/pmazak/Spit-DI> > github.com > Spit-DI - Spit is a lightweight dependency injection class for Java. > > > > > ------------------------------ > *From:* John Zhuge <jzh...@cloudera.com> > *Sent:* Saturday, November 26, 2016 2:23 PM > *To:* common-dev@hadoop.apache.org > *Subject:* Re: DI framework > > Guice is being used in production by YARN; in testing in by MapReduce and > YARN. > > John Zhuge > Software Engineer, Cloudera > > On Sat, Nov 26, 2016 at 12:52 PM, John Zhuge <jzh...@cloudera.com> wrote: > > > Hi all, > > > > Has there been any discussion on whether to use a DI (Dependency > > Injection) framework? Which DI framework? Anybody got experience with > > Dagger 2? > > > > Thanks, > > John Zhuge > > Software Engineer, Cloudera > > >