
Professional Java 2 Enterprise Edition with BEA WebLogic Server
Francisco & Peter Gomez & Zadrozny
Résumé
The Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE) specification is one
of Java's success stories; a standard for enterprise web
application development that has wide industry
support.
J2EE is basically a collection of specifications for web
services, business objects, data access, and messaging.
They define the way in which web applications communicate
with the servers that host them. J2EE focuses on two things
- creating a standard that allows web applications to be
portable between servers, and giving the server control of
component lifecycle and other resources, in order that it
can handle issues of scaling, concurrency, transaction
management, and security.
This book is based around one of the most popular J2EE and
EJB implementations, BEA WebLogic Server. The authors work
for BEA in Europe, providing technical support for
customer's implementations of Weblogic-based solutions.
They have first-hand knowledge of the practical
difficulties developers face in applying J2EE and WebLogic
to their projects, and in debugging and testing these
applications. This book is a distillation of their
real-world expertise.
Who is this book for?
This book is for professional Java developers who want to
see the development of a full J2EE example and its
configuration and deployment on BEA WebLogic Server.
Coverage of the APIs involved, reasoning behind the
architecture decisions made, and how the example is tested,
is included.
Java knowledge is assumed, as is a basic tutorial
understanding of the J2EE APIs. Some experience of
enterprise level / web application programming is
expected.
What does this book cover?
- Moving a client/server app to the web using J2EE
APIs
- Interfacing multiple front ends to the underlying
business logic
- How to create business logic components with Enterprise
JavaBeans
- Using Java Message Service for reliable and broadcast
messaging
- WebLogic Server-specific programming and configuration
detail
- Security concerns for an e-commerce site
- The Grinder, a stress-tester for web applications
- Results of stress-tests compare application
architectures under different loads
- Full working example developed and tested in the book
Contents
- Introduction
- Chapter 1: Webifying Applications
- Chapter 2: Setting the Scene - Pizzas to Go
- Chapter 3: Creating a Web Front End
- Chapter 4: Stored Procedures Mutate to Session
Beans
- Chapter 5: Easy Data Access with Entity Beans
- Chapter 6: ASP Pizzas to JSP
- Chapter 7: Java Message Service
- Chapter 8: Security
- Chapter 9: The Wireless Pizzas
- Chapter 10: Stress Testing
- Chapter 11: Grinding the Pizzas
- Chapter 12: Grinding in a Cluster
- Appendix A: HTTP
- Appendix B: JSP Syntax Reference
- Appendix C: Support, Errata, and p2p.wrox.com
- Index
L'auteur - Francisco & Peter Gomez & Zadrozny
Peter Zadrozny and Francisco Gomez work for BEA in Europe, providing technical support for customer's implementations of Weblogic-based solutions. They thus have first-hand knowledge of the problems developers face in applying WebLogic, EJBs and in tuning, debugging and testing these applications.
Caractéristiques techniques
PAPIER | |
Éditeur(s) | Wrox Press |
Auteur(s) | Francisco & Peter Gomez & Zadrozny |
Parution | 15/11/2000 |
Nb. de pages | 528 |
Format | 18,4 x 23,5 |
Couverture | Broché |
Poids | 894g |
Intérieur | Noir et Blanc |
EAN13 | 9781861002990 |
ISBN13 | 978-1-861002-99-0 |
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