Execute javascript on IIS server

ⅰ亾dé卋堺 提交于 2019-12-01 17:59:35

Have a look at bringing the browser to the server, Rhino, and Use Microsoft's IIS as a Java servlet engine.

The first link is from John Resig's (jQuery's creator) blog.

Update August 2 2011

Node.js is coming to Windows.

The idea to reuse client JS on the server may sound tempting, but I am not sure that jQuery itself would be ready to run in server environment.

You will need to define global context for jQuery somehow by initializing window, document, self, location, etc.. I am not sure it is doable.

Besides, as Cheeso has mentioned, Active Server Pages is a very outdated technology, it was replaced with ASP.Net by Microsoft in the beginning of the century. I used to maintain a legacy system using ASP 3.0 for more than a year and that was pain. The most wonderful pastime was debugging: you will hardly find anything for the purpose today and will have to decript beautiful errors like in IIS log:

error '800a9c68'
Application-defined or object-defined error

Nevertheless, I can confirm that I managed to reuse client and server JScript. But this was code written by me who knew that it was going to be used on the server.

P.S. I would not recommend move that way. There are plenty templating frameworks which are familiar to those who write HTML and JavaScript.

JScript runs on IIS via something called ASP.
Active Server Pages.
It was first available in 1996.

Eventually ASP.NET was introduced as a successor. But ASP is still supported.

There is no DOM for the HTML page, though.

You might need to reconsider your architecture a bit.

Weston C

I think the only viable solutions you're likely to find anywhere near ready to go involve putting IIS in front of Java. There are two browser-like environments I'm aware of coded for Java:

1) Env-js (see http://groups.google.com/group/envjs and http://github.com/thatcher/env-js ) I believe this one has contributions from jQuery's John Resig and was put together with jQuery testing/support in mind.

2) HTMLUnit (see http://htmlunit.sourceforge.net/ ) This one's older, and wasn't originally conceived around jQuery, but there are reports in the wild of using it to run jQuery's test suite successfully (http://daniel.gredler.net/2007/08/08/htmlunit-taming-jquery/ ).

If you want something pure-IIS/MS, I think your observation about windowsScript host and/or something like the semi-abandoned JScript.NET is probably about as close as you're going to come, along with a port (which you'll probably have to start) of something like Env-js or HTMLUnit.

Also, I don't know if you've seen the Wikipedia list of server-side JavaScript solutions:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server-side_JavaScript

Finally... you could probably write a serviceable jQuery-like library in any language that already has some kind of DOM library and first-class functions (or, failing that an eval facility). See, for example pQuery for Perl (http://metacpan.org/pod/pQuery ). This would get you the benefits of the jQuery style of manipulating documents. Skill transfer is great and JavaScript has a wonderful confluence of very nice features, but on the other hand, having developers who care enough to learn multiple languages is also great, and js isn't the only nice language out there.

I think it's mainly a browser based script so probably you are better of using technologies based on VB or .NET to perform or generate HTML from templates. I'm sure there are because in the java world there are a few of these around (like velocity). You'd then use jQuery to create or add client side functionality and usability so it makes the website more usable than it would have been.

What exactly do you mean by

"A customer uses JavaScript with jQuery to create a complex website"

Half the point of jQuery is to make it easy for the developer to manipulate the DOM, and therefore add interactive enhancements to a web site. By running the Javascript on the server and only rendering HTML you will lose the ability to add these enhancements, without doing a round trip to the server (think WebForms postback model...ugh).

Now if what you really mean is the customer uses a site builder based on jQuery, why not have that tool output flat HTML in the first place?

Carlos

Take a look at this technology. You can invoke scripts to run at server, at client, or both. Plus, this really implements the firefox engine on the server. Take a look at it.

Aptana's Jaxer is the first AJAX web server so far. I have not tryed it yet, but I will. Looks promising and very powerful.

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