j2ee Building components

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1Copyright 2015 © Adeppa

J2EE – Building J2EE – Building Component-based EnterpriseComponent-based Enterprise

Web ApplicationsWeb Applications

09/29/201509/29/2015

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Agenda1. Application servers2. What is J2EE?

Main component types Application Scenarios J2EE APIs and Services

3. EJB – a closer look4. Examples

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1. Application Servers In the beginning, there was darkness and

cold. Then, …

Centralized, non-distributed

terminalsmainframe

terminals

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Application Servers In the 90’s, systems should be client-

server

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Application Servers Today, enterprise applications use

the multi-tier model

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Application Servers “Multi-tier applications” have several

independent components An application server provides the

infrastructure and services to run such applications

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Application Servers Application server products can be

separated into 3 categories: J2EE-based solutions Non-J2EE solutions (PHP, ColdFusion, Perl,

etc.) And the Microsoft solution (ASP/COM and

now .NET with ASP.NET, VB.NET, C#, etc.)

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J2EE Application Servers Major J2EE products:

BEA WebLogic IBM WebSphere Sun iPlanet Application Server Oracle 9iAS HP/Bluestone Total-e-Server Borland AppServer Jboss (free open source)

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Web Server and Application Server

Web Server

(HTTP Server)

App Server 1

App Server 2

Internet Browser

HTTP(S)

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2. What is J2EE? It is a public specification that

embodies several technologies Current version is 1.3 J2EE defines a model for developing

multi-tier, web based, enterprise applications with distributed components

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J2EE Benefits High availability Scalability Integration with existing systems Freedom to choose vendors of

application servers, tools, components Multi-platform

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J2EE Benefits Flexibility of scenarios and support to several

types of clients Programming productivity:

Services allow developer to focus on business Component development facilitates maintenance

and reuse Enables deploy-time behaviors Supports division of labor

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J2EE Benefits

Don’t forget to say

that Java is cool!

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Main technologies JavaServer Pages (JSP) Servlet Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB)

JSPs, servlets and EJBs are application components

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JSP Used for web pages with dynamic content Processes HTTP requests (non-blocking

call-and-return) Accepts HTML tags, special JSP tags, and

scriptlets of Java code Separates static content from presentation

logic Can be created by web designer using

HTML tools

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Servlet Used for web pages with dynamic content Processes HTTP requests (non-blocking call-

and-return) Written in Java; uses print statements to

render HTML Loaded into memory once and then called

many times Provides APIs for session management

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EJB EJBs are distributed components used to

implement business logic (no UI) Developer concentrates on business logic Availability, scalability, security,

interoperability and integrability handled by the J2EE server

Client of EJBs can be JSPs, servlets, other EJBs and external aplications

Clients see interfaces

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J2EE Multi-tier Model

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J2EE Application Scenarios Multi-tier typical application

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J2EE Application Scenarios Stand-alone client

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J2EE Application Scenarios Web-centric application

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J2EE Application Scenarios Business-to-business

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J2EE Services and APIs Java Message Service (JMS)

Implicit invocation Communication is loosely coupled,

reliable and asynchronous Supports 2 models:

point-to-point publish/subscribe

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JMS Point-to-point

Destination is “queue”

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JMS Publish-subscribe

Destination is “topic”

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J2EE Services and APIs JNDI - Naming and directory services

Applications use JNDI to locate objects, such as environment entries, EJBs, datasources, message queues

JNDI is implementation independent Underlying implementation varies: LDAP,

DNS, DBMS, etc.

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J2EE Services and APIs Transaction service:

Controls transactions automatically You can demarcate transactions explicitly Or you can specify relationships between

methods that make up a single transaction

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J2EE Services and APIs Security

Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS) is the new (J2EE 1.3) standard for J2EE security

Authentication via userid/password or digital certificates

Role-based authorization limits access of users to resources (URLs, EJB methods)

Embedded security realm

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J2EE Services and APIs J2EE Connector Architecture

Integration to non-J2EE systems, such as mainframes and ERPs.

Standard API to access different EIS Vendors implement EIS-specific resource

adapters Support to Corba clients

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J2EE Services and APIs JDBC JavaMail Java API for XML Parsing (JAXP) Web services APIs

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3. EJB – a closer look

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Home Interface Methods to create, remove or locate

EJB objects The home interface implementation is

the home object (generated) The home object is a factory

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Remote Interface Business methods available to clients The remote interface implementation

is the EJB object (generated) The EJB object acts as a proxy to the

EJB instance

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EJB – The Big Picture

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EJB at runtime

Client can be local or remote

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EJB at runtime

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Types of EJBEJB Taxonomy

Sta te fulSta te le ss

Se ssionBea n

BMPC MP

EntityBea n M essa geDrivenBea n

Ente rp riseBea n

New!

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Session Bean Stateful session bean:

Retains conversational state (data) on behalf of an individual client

If state changed during this invocation, the same state will be available upon the following invocation

Example: shopping cart

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Session Bean Stateless session bean:

Contains no user-specific data Business process that provides a generic

service Container can pool stateless beans Example: shopping catalog

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Entity Bean Represents business data stored in a

database persistent object Underlying data is normally one row of a

table A primary key uniquely identifies each bean

instance Allows shared access from multiple clients Can live past the duration of client’s session Example: shopping order

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Entity Bean Bean-managed persistence (BMP): bean

developer writes JDBC code to access the database; allows better control for the developer

Container-managed persistence (CMP): container generates all JDBC code to access the database; developer has less code to write, but also less control

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Message-Driven Bean Message consumer for a JMS queue or

topic Benefits from EJB container services

that are not available to standard JMS consumers

Has no home or remote interface Example: order processing – stock info

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4. Examples JSP example Servlet example EJB example

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JSP example

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JSP example<%@ page import="hello.Greeting" %><jsp:useBean id="mybean" scope="page"

class="hello.Greeting"/><jsp:setProperty name="mybean" property="*" /><html><head><title>Hello, User</title></head><body bgcolor="#ffffff" background="background.gif"><%@ include file="dukebanner.html" %><table border="0" width="700"><tr><td width="150"> &nbsp; </td><td width="550"> <h1>My name is Duke. What's yours?</h1></td></tr>

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JSP example<tr> <td width="150" &nbsp; </td> <td width="550"><form method="get"><input type="text" name="username" size="25"> <br><input type="submit" value="Submit"><input type="reset" value="Reset"></td> </tr></form> </table><% if (request.getParameter("username") != null) {%><%@ include file="response.jsp" %><% }%></body></html>

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Servlet examplepublic class HelloWorldServlet extends HttpServlet {

public void service(HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse res) throws IOException {

res.setContentType("text/html"); PrintWriter out = res.getWriter(); out.println("<html><head><title>Hello World Servlet</title></head>"); out.println("<body><h1>Hello World!</h1></body></html>"); }

}

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EJB Example// Shopping Cart example

// Home interface public interface CartHome extends EJBHome {

Cart create(String person) throws RemoteException, CreateException;

Cart create(String person, String id) throws RemoteException, CreateException;}

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EJB Example// Remote interfacepublic interface Cart extends EJBObject {

public void addBook(String title) throws RemoteException;

public void removeBook(String title) throws BookException, RemoteException;

public Vector getContents() throws RemoteException;}

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EJB Example// Enterprise bean classpublic class CartEJB implements SessionBean { String customerName, customerId; Vector contents; private SessionContext sc;

public void ejbCreate(String person) throws CreateException { if (person == null) { throw new CreateException("Null person not allowed."); } else { customerName = person; } customerId = "0"; contents = new Vector(); }

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EJB Example public void ejbCreate(String person, String id) throws CreateException { if (person == null) { throw new CreateException("Null person not allowed."); } else { customerName = person; } IdVerifier idChecker = new IdVerifier(); if (idChecker.validate(id)) { customerId = id; } else { throw new CreateException("Invalid id: " + id); } contents = new Vector(); }

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EJB Example public void addBook(String title) { contents. addElement(title); }

public void removeBook(String title) throws BookException { boolean result = contents.removeElement(title); if (result == false) { throw new BookException(title + " not in cart."); } }

public Vector getContents() { return contents; }

. . .}

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EJB Example// EJB client (stand-alone application)public class CartClient { public static void main(String[] args) { try { CartHome home = (CartHome)initial.lookup("MyCart"); Cart shoppingCart = home.create("Duke DeEarl", "123"); shoppingCart.addBook("The Martian Chronicles"); shoppingCart.addBook("2001 A Space Odyssey"); shoppingCart.remove(); } catch (BookException ex) { System.err.println("Caught a BookException: " + ex.getMessage()); } catch (Exception ex) { System.err.println("Caught an unexpected exception!"); } }}

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Questions

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Sources & Resources Java 2 Platform Enterprise Edition

Specification, v1.3 Designing Enterprise Applications with the

Java 2, Enterprise Edition. Nicholas Kassen and the Enterprise Team

Does the App Server Maket Still Exist? Jean-Christophe Cimetiere

The State of The J2EE Application Server Market. Floyd Marinescu

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Sources & Resources The J2EE Tutorial. Sun Microsystems IBM WebSphere Application Server

manuals BEA WebLogic Server manuals www.java.sun.com/j2ee www.theserverside.com