Ulf Dittmer wrote:Yes, but what would Spring add that Jersey/JAX-RS doesn't do? In other words, what exactly are you trying to implement with Spring but struggling to get done? Spring doesn't do REST, Jersey/JAX-RS does. You should have no problems using Spring's DI in your JAX-RS classes, if that's what you mean.
That's actually inaccurate. Spring MVC does do REST. Called Spring MVC REST. I find it much easier than JAX-RS. But that is my opinion.
Mark