Fr. 76.00

Enterprise JavaBeans 3.1 - 6th Edition

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

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Informationen zum Autor As Senior Software Engineer at JBoss, a Division of Red Hat, Andrew Lee Rubinger is primarily responsible for development of the company's EJB 3.x implementation. He was an early adopter of Java EE technologies and an active contributor in the tech community. Bill Burke is a Fellow at the JBoss division of REd Hat Inc. A long time JBoss contributor and architect, his current project is RESTEasy, RESTful Web Services for Java. Klappentext Learn how to code, package, deploy, and test functional Enterprise JavaBeans with the latest edition of this bestselling guide. Written by the developers of JBoss EJB 3.1, this book not only brings you up to speed on each component type and container service in this implementation, it also provides a workbook with several hands-on examples to help you gain immediate experience with these components. With version 3.1, EJB's server-side component model for building distributed business applications is simpler than ever. But it's still a complex technology that requires study and lots of practice to master. Enterprise JavaBeans 3.1 is the most complete reference on this specification. You'll find a straightforward, no-nonsense explanation of the underlying technology, including Java classes and interfaces, the component model, and the runtime behavior of EJB. * Develop your first EJBs with a hands-on walkthrough of EJB 3.1 concepts * Learn how to encapsulate business logic with Session Beans and Message-Driven Beans * Discover how to handle persistence through Entity Beans, the EntityManager, and the Java Persistence API * Understand EJB's container services such as dependency injection, concurrency, and interceptors * Integrate EJB with other technologies in the Java Enterprise Edition platform * Use examples with either the JBossAS, OpenEJB, or GlassFish v3 EJB Containers Zusammenfassung Written by the developers of the JBoss EJB 3.1 implementation! this book brings you up to speed on each of the component types and container services in this technology! while the workbook in the second section provides several hands-on examples for putting the concepts into practice. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface Why Enterprise JavaBeans? Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Component Types Chapter 3: Container Services Chapter 4: Developing Your First EJBs Server-Side Component Models Chapter 5: The Stateless Session Bean Chapter 6: The Stateful Session Bean Chapter 7: The Singleton Session Bean Chapter 8: Message-Driven Beans EJB and Persistence Chapter 9: Persistence: EntityManager Chapter 10: Mapping Persistent Objects Chapter 11: Entity Relationships Chapter 12: Entity Inheritance Chapter 13: Queries, the Criteria API, and JPA QL Chapter 14: Entity Callbacks and Listeners Container Services Chapter 15: Security Chapter 16: JNDI, the ENC, and Injection Chapter 17: Transactions Chapter 18: Interceptors Chapter 19: Timer Service Chapter 20: EJB 3.1: Web Services Standards Chapter 21: EJB 3.1 and Web Services Examples FirstEJB Example Stateless Session EJB: Encryption Example Stateful Session EJB: FTP Client Example Singleton Session EJB: RSS Cache Example Message-Driven EJB: Status Update Listeners Example Java Persistence APIs: Employee Registry Example Security: Secured School Example Transactions: Blackjack Game Example Interceptors: TV Channel Service Example Timer Service: Credit Card Processor Example Colophon ...

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  • Preface




  • Why Enterprise JavaBeans?




    • Chapter 1: Introduction




    • Chapter 2: Component Types




    • Chapter 3: Container Services




    • Chapter 4: Developing Your First EJBs






  • Server-Side Component Models




    • Chapter 5: The Stateless Session Bean




    • Chapter 6: The Stateful Session Bean




    • Chapter 7: The Singleton Session Bean




    • Chapter 8: Message-Driven Beans






  • EJB and Persistence




    • Chapter 9: Persistence: EntityManager




    • Chapter 10: Mapping Persistent Objects




    • Chapter 11: Entity Relationships




    • Chapter 12: Entity Inheritance




    • Chapter 13: Queries, the Criteria API, and JPA QL




    • Chapter 14: Entity Callbacks and Listeners






  • Container Services




    • Chapter 15: Security




    • Chapter 16: JNDI, the ENC, and Injection




    • Chapter 17: Transactions




    • Chapter 18: Interceptors




    • Chapter 19: Timer Service




    • Chapter 20: EJB 3.1: Web Services Standards




    • Chapter 21: EJB 3.1 and Web Services






  • Examples




    • FirstEJB Example




    • Stateless Session EJB: Encryption Example




    • Stateful Session EJB: FTP Client Example




    • Singleton Session EJB: RSS Cache Example




    • Message-Driven EJB: Status Update Listeners Example




    • Java Persistence APIs: Employee Registry Example




    • Security: Secured School Example




    • Transactions: Blackjack Game Example




    • Interceptors: TV Channel Service Example




    • Timer Service: Credit Card Processor Example






  • Colophon




  • Info autore










    As Senior Software Engineer at JBoss, a Division of Red Hat, Andrew Lee Rubinger is primarily responsible for development of the company's EJB 3.x implementation. He was an early adopter of Java EE technologies and an active contributor in the tech community.
    Bill Burke is a Fellow at the JBoss division of REd Hat Inc. A long time JBoss contributor and architect, his current project is RESTEasy, RESTful Web Services for Java.


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