This title provides advanced, in depth coverage of Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) applications. It presents the EJB architecture from the point of view of the person developing EJB applications.
This book simplifies the creation of well-designed enterprise applications using the upgraded Enterprise JavaBeans 2.0 specification. Experienced Java platform mentors Gail Anderson and Paul Anderson use detailed code examples to introduce every key skill involved in creating components, stand-alone Java platform clients, and JavaServer pages. They introduce powerful EJB platform design patterns and show how to apply them in real-world projects while avoiding critical errors in application design. Each chapter includes a "Design Guidelines and Patterns" section designed to help readers assess tradeoffs associated with design decisions, and key point summaries that tie together important concepts. In short, Anderson and Anderson give readers everything they need to build EJB 2.0 platform applications with maximum robustness, scalability, and performance.
This third edition explains the underlying technology, Java classes and interfaces, component model, and runtime behavior of Enterprise JavaBeans. In addition, the book contains an architecture overview, information on resource management and primary services, design strategies, and XML deployment descriptors.
Includes more than 30 percent revised material and five new chapters, covering the new 2.1 features such as EJB Timer Service and JMS as well as the latest open source Java solutions The book was developed as part of TheServerSide.com online EJB community, ensuring a built-in audience Demonstrates how to build an EJB system, program with EJB, adopt best practices, and harness advanced EJB concepts and techniques, including transactions, persistence, clustering, integration, and performance optimization Offers practical guidance on when not to use EJB and how to use simpler, less costly open source technologies in place of or in conjunction with EJB
Applied Enterprise JavaBeans Technologyshows how to leverage the full power of EJB 2.0 to build industrial-strength applications that are distributed, transactional, and secure. Exceptionally comprehensive and accurate, this book starts from first principles and progresses to the state-of-the-art, revealing normally hidden aspects of the EJB architecture that offer immense power to developers. It includes a full-scale case study, in-depth coverage of integration, and extensive cross-references to the official EJB 2.0 specifications.
This introduction to Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB's) discusses the component paradigm, which is the basic idea behind EJB's, covers basics and focuses on issues beyond specification.
Enterprise JavaBeans, Fourth Edition, is the definitive guide to EJB 2.1. It shows you how to build complex, mission-critical systems using snap-together software components that model business objects and processes. EJB 2.1 makes several important steps forward in EJB technology: message-driven beans are much more flexible, a time service has been added, and EJBs have been integrated with web services. Enterprise JavaBeans delivers on a promise chat was astonishing a few years ago: not only can EJBs run without modification on any operating system, they can run on any J2EE application server. However, after writing EJBs, you have to deploy them in an application server, and deploying EJBs can be a painful task. This edition includes the Jboss Workbook, which shows you how to deploy the examples on the open source JBoss Application Server. If you've done any enterprise software development in the past few years, you already know the extent to which EJB has changed the field. Use this book to catch up on the latest developments. If you're new to enterprise software development, or if you haven't been working with EJB, this book will bring you up to speed on this exciting technology for building business systems.
As dot.com companies grapple with rigid market conditions and we keep hearing how the big technology players are being punished on Wall Street, it becomes easy to think of the Internet as a fad. The Internet frenzy may have subsided, but interest in the Internet as a business and marketing tool is still strong. It will continue to impact organizati