Apache CXF: An Open-Source Services Framework

Overview

Apache CXF is an open source services framework. CXF helps you build and develop services using frontend programming APIs, like JAX-WS and JAX-RS. These services can speak a variety of protocols such as SOAP, XML/HTTP, RESTful HTTP, or CORBA and work over a variety of transports such as HTTP, JMS or JBI.

News

April 18, 2011 - Apache CXF 2.4.0 is released!

The Apache CXF team is proud to announce the availability of the latest version: 2.4.0

There are a lot of new features and improvements in 2.4.0 including major WS-Security enhancements, startup performance improvements, memory footprint improvements, JiBX databinding, a new log browser, better OSGi support, etc...

Please see the migration guide for a complete description of the new features and for details about migrating from 2.3.x to 2.4.0.

Downloads are available here.

Features

CXF includes a broad feature set, but it is primarily focused on the following areas:

CXF implements the JAX-WS APIs (TCK compliant). CXF JAX-WS support includes some extensions to the standard that make it significantly easier to use, compared to the reference implementation: It will automatically generate code for request and response bean classes, and does not require a WSDL for simple cases.

It also includes a "simple frontend" which allows creation of clients and endpoints without annotations. CXF supports both contract first development with WSDL and code first development starting from Java.

For REST, CXF also supports a JAX-RS (TCK compliant) frontend.

To get started using CXF, check out the downloads, the user's guide, or the mailing lists to get more information!

Goals

General

Support for Standards

JSR Support
WS-* and related Specifications Support

Multiple Transports, Protocol Bindings, Data Bindings, and Formats

Flexible Deployment

Support for Multiple Programming Languages

Tooling

Getting Involved

Apache CXF is currently under heavy development. To get involved you can subscribe to the mailing lists. You can also grab the code from the Source Repository. You also need to read about Building CXF. For Eclipse users, you should read about Setting up Eclipse.