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Aside: Java standards process Sun’s original church and state model (now Oracle!)
Church: Java community process State: Sun commercial business
Java Community Process www.jcp.org Java Service Request (JSR)
Unique id often used to describe pre-standards or recent standards. e.g. JSR 168 is the Portlet specification
Test suite required for compliance Reference implementation
Works but not much more
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JEE
Stands for “Java, Enterprise Edition”
It is a collection of standards JDBC, JNDI, JMX, JMS
It is a component technology Enterprise JavaBeans`, servlets
It is an “application server” Following in the footsteps of Component Transaction Monitors
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The JEE Architecture Provides the benefits of components based development for
n-tier applications
These components are: Simpler to develop, portable, reusable
Business logic components: Enterprise JavaBeans
Presentation logic components Servlets JSP
These components are: Configured via Deployment Descriptors Deployed into containers
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JEE Components Application clients and applets run on the client Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages (JSP ) are
presentation layer components that run on the presentation server
Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB ) components represent business components and run on the business logic server
JEE components are written in Java in the same way ordinary Java programs are created
All JEE components are deployed into containers Containers provide components with services such
as life cycle management, security, deployment, and threading
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Client-tier/web-tier Components Client can communicate with the application logic tier either
directly or through servlets or JSP that are located in the presentation tier.
Servlets are special classes to realise the request-response model (get, post of HTTP). JSP is a developer-friendly html-friendly wrapper over the
servlet classes.
Javascript is a client-side scripting language which runs in the browser Javascript is not part of JEE. Javascript could be generated by a servlet or JSP.
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Application logic tier Components
This is defined by the logic that pertains to the (business) application that is being developed.
Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) can be used to implement this tier.
This tier receives the data from the client-tier and processes the data and sends it to the RM-tier and takes the data from the RM and sends it to the client-tier.
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Resource Management System
In general this corresponds to the database (relational database) and other information management system.
The other information management systems may include Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and legacy system connected through open database connectivity.
Or through the Java Connector Architecture (JCA)
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Static HTML Web Server Architecture Web servers where designed to provide web browsers with HTML.
The HTML was read from text files by the server and sent to the client using HTTP. The web server does not modify the HTML. This is now termed static HTML serving
Client Server
Web Browser
Web Server
HTTP Get or Post
HTTP
HTML
files on disk
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HyperText Transfer Protocol (HTTP)
1) Specify Get / Post
2) Request header
3) Form Data (Parameters)
request
response
1) Status code
2) Response header
3) Content-Type
4) HTML pages / Other files
Web Client Web Server
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HTML -- Hyper-Text Markup Language
A device independent way to represent documents Specifies the formatting of document
e.g., titles, paragraphs, fonts, colors, lists, tables Hyperlinks permit references to other documents References objects to be inserted into document
e.g., images, applets, frames Forms allow user input
e.g., Text Fields, Buttons, Menus Action causes new HTTP request
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A simple example of HTML
<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>HTML Reference Library</TITLE></HEAD><BODY><H1>HTML books for everyone</H1<p>HTML library</p><UL><LI>HTML for beginners, Do it yourself!<LI>HTML for experts</UL><H2>Where can i buy it?</H2><Menu><li>IBM book storage </Menu></body></HTML>
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Requirement for dynamic pages
The Web pages need to be based on data submitted by the user E.g., results page from search engines and order-confirmation pages at on-line
stores
The Web page need to be built from data that changes frequently (E.g., a weather report)
The Web page uses information from databases or other server-side sources for on-line shopping, employee directories, personalized and internationalized
content Web browsers are dumb clients
Not designed to modify web pages Stateless so they process each request in isolation without reference or memory of
what request came before it.
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Dynamic Web-page Architecture The web page is accessed an external program is run by the web
server. The web server must be able to initiate and communicate with this
program The program generates the HTML and the Web Server passes the
HTML back to the client This process is transparent to the web browser, it does not know it
has been dynamically generated. Common implementations: CGI Common Gateway Interface and
Servlets is another way.
ClientServer
Web Browser
Web Server
HTTP Get or Post
HTTP
Information about the request
External HTML
generatorHTML
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Servlets
Servlets are programs written in Java which run on the web server and communicate using with the web browser using HTTP and HTML
The servlet runs inside a container called a Servlet Engine The communication services, security etc are provided by the container Container runs within the JVM Hides coding issues around with Sockets, TCP/IP or Java serialisation.
Servlets communicate with the browser using only HTML and HTTP Compatible with all web browsers
Servlets run only on the server Servlets do not need any component to be stored or installed on the
client
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Client Server
Servlet Lifecycle I:
Web Browser Web Server
Servlet Container
Servlet
Service
InitHTTP
Get or Post
1. Web browser sends HTTP Post or Get message to Web Server2. Web server redirect the request to the servlet. If the servlet is not
already loaded it loads it and calls the servlet's init method3. The web browser passes the HTML request to the servlet's service
method
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Client Server
Servlet Lifecycle II:
Web Browser Web Server
Servlet Container
Servlet
doGet
doPost
Service
Init
Destroy
HTTP
HTML HTML
4. Service method calls the doGet or doPost method of the servlet5. Method executes and generates HTML which is passed back to the web
browser.6. Threads in Service method exit
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Client Server
Servlet Lifecycle III:
Web Browser Web Server
Servlet Engine
Servlet
doGet
doPost
Service
Init
Destroy
4. When the servlet container decides to unload the servlet it calls the destroy method
At shutdown or if memory is short Will not happen until all active threads finish (exit or time out)
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Writing a Servlet
All Servlets extend the Servlet class Normally extends HttpServlet which is derived from Servlet class
HttpServlet class provides default implementations of Init: Need to override if some additional initialisation required such
as open a database connection. Destroy: Need to override if some additional cleaning up required
such as closing a database connection. Service: Not normally be overridden doGet: Normally over-ridden as HTTP Get is the default web
browser request which causes the doGet method of the servlet to be invoked.
doPost: Over-ridden if HTTP Post is responded to.
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Worlds simplest Servletimport java.io.*;import javax.servlet.*;import javax.servlet.http.*;
public class HelloWorldExample extends HttpServlet { public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws IOException, ServletException { response.setContentType("text/html"); PrintWriter out = response.getWriter(); out.println("<html>"); out.println("<head>"); out.println("<title>Hello World!</title>"); out.println("</head>"); out.println("<body bgcolor=\"white\">"); out.println("<h1>Hello World!</h1>"); out.println("</body>"); out.println("</html>"); }}
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Passing a Parameter to Servlets You can pass parameters to the servlet by creating a link to the servlet
and encoding one or more parameters in the link
<a href="http://www.comp.dit.ie:8186/rbradley/servlet/param?p1=hello"> click here for a parameter example! </a>
The servlet can access the parameter called p1 by using the getParameter method in request.
String parameter=request.getParameter("p1");
The name of the parameter
The HttpServletRequest Object
Get parameter always returns a String
The name of the parameter
The value of the parameter
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Need for scripting
When the balance of the response document is HTML Embed simple code in HTML pages rather than write lots of Java
to create HTML
HTML pages are modified by the code which determines elements and data to display.
Classes and/or subroutines may be called to compute information for inclusion in the web page. Existing APIs can be invoked.
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Some Approaches to Scripting
JavaServer Pages (JSP)
Active Server Pages (ASP) uses VBScript, Jscript, COM or ActiveX components, ODBC.
ASP.NET Similar to JSP, using C#
PHP C-like syntax, many functions available
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What are JSPs?
JSPs are design time entities which are converted into servlets when loaded by the web server
JSPs look much more like standard HTML pages Code is contained within <% %> markers and are referred to a scriptlets
Each JSP page states which programming language is contained within its scriplets <%@page language="java" %> While theoretically it can be any language, in practice the language is
normally Java
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Simple JSP Example
<%@page language="java" import="java.util.Date" %><HTML><BODY><H1>Welcome to JSP</H1>
<B> Current Time is <%= new Date().toString() %> </B></BODY></HTML>
Welcome to JSP
Current Time is Tue April 24 19:00:55 GMT+00:00 2001
Welcome to JSP
Current Time is Tue April 24 19:00:55 GMT+00:00 2001
Specifies which language the scriptlets are written in
Java import statement
Java scriptlet embeds invocation of method to get the date as a string
Displays
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Servlet with equivalent functionalityimport java.io.*;import javax.servlet.*;import javax.servlet.http.*;Import java.util.Date;
public class ServWelcome extends HttpServlet { public void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws
IOException, ServletException { response.setContentType("text/html"); PrintWriter out = response.getWriter(); out.println("<HTML>");
out.println("<BODY>"); out.println("<H1>Welcome to Servlets</H1>");
out.println(" <B>Current Time is "+ new Date().toString()+"</B>); out.println("</BODY>"); out.println("</HTML>"); out.close(); }}
Outputting of HTML with outprintln() statements is awkward.
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Choosing JSP or Servlets
JSPs require less initialisation Simple things are easier to do in JSP than Servlets Much harder to debug Typical of scripts!
JSP mixes code into the HTML Best for lots of HTML (avoids the need to write lots of out.println("..")) and less Java
code Large JSP pages can be difficult to find and read the code Debugging JSP is difficult because the code is translated into another form (servlet)
before being run
Servlets mix HTML into the code Large servlets can be difficult to find and read the HTML Best for little HTML output and lots of Java code
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Client Server
JSP Lifecycle I:
Web Browser Web Server
Servlet Engine
Servlet
1. Browser sends a HTTP Get or Post including a URL with a ,jsp extension.2. Web server detects .jsp extension in the URL, it delegates the request to
JSP engine.
JSP Engine
JSP Page
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ClientServer
JSP Lifecycle II:
Web Browser
Web Server
Servlet Engine
Servlet
3. The JSP page is translated into a Java Servlet4. The generated Servlet is loaded by the Servlet engine and handles the
request
JSP Engine
JSP Page
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ClientServer
JSP Lifecycle III:
Web Browser
Web Server
Servlet Engine
Servlet
5. Translation and compilation takes place only when the JSP is called first time or when it is modified. All subsequent requests are handled by the Servlet generated
There is a slight delay in response first time due to translation and compilation phase If there are any changes, Java/HTML page recompiles automatically
JSP Engine
JSP Page
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Enterprise Java Bean(EJB) An enterprise bean is a server-side component that contains
the business logic of an application.
At run-time, an enterprise bean resides in an EJB container.
An EJB container provides the deployment environment and runtime environment for enterprise beans including services such as security, transaction, deployment, concurrency etc. EJB container provides services to bean and manages its life cycle
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Reminder: components, models and frameworks
Interface that satisfies contracts
Component implementation
Component model
Independent deployment
Component-typeSpecific interface
Coordination Services (transactions, persistence..)
ComponentFramework
EJBEJB
EJB container
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Session Beans Created by a client and exist only for the duration of a
single session Perform operations on behalf of the client inside the
container Transient state: Do not represent data that is stored in a
database. A logical extension of the client
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Session Beans Simple and easy to program.
For transient functions such as controller Represents “conversational” state Typically one per request Data is non-persistent Lifetime is limited by the client’s: once the client exits, the
session bean and data are gone.
Light-weight.
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Entity Bean (up to EJB v3.1)
Entity Beans Entity beans represent the business objects that need
persistence (need to be stored in a database.) Represents persistent data in a database, as well as methods
that act on that data
Entity Beans are “Transactional” in behavior Can be shared among clients Persistent: data exists permanently after client quits. E.g. Corresponds to a row a relational database. The persistence (storing into the database) can be automatically
done by the “container” (CMP) or explicitly by the bean (BMP)
Entity Bean(EJB v3.1)
Move away from Entity beans and to use Java Persistence API to support persistence of data
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Message-Driven Bean A message driven bean is an enterprise bean that allows J2EE applications to
process messages asynchronously. Common mode of communication in enterprise applications
It acts as a listener – for messages sent by any other system or component via a JMS messaging system
Retains no data or conversational state.
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Core services: More later Container managed persistence
Container does database operations automatically Mapping back to the database is defined in the component’s
“deployment description” Should work with any database.
Container managed transactions One transaction per method call to EJB
Container managed security EJB-container manages roles Rights are applied per role to EJB EJB can check permissions by using API provided by container
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Linking servlets and EJBs Servlet uses JNDI to find the EJB Client creates or finds EJB Client uses EJB business methods from the component interface JSP example
© IBM
<%@ page import="javax.naming.*,javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject, foo.AccountHome, foo.Account"
%>
<%! AccountHome accHome=null; public void jspInit() { InitialContext cntxt = new InitialContext( ); Object ref= cntxt.lookup("java:comp/env/ejb/AccountEJB");
accHome = (AccountHome)PortableRemoteObject.narrow(ref,AccountHome.class); }
%>
<% Account acct = accHome.create(); acct.doWhatever(...);
%>
Initialise the JSP
Get the reference to the session bean (EJB)
Create an instance of the session bean
Call the method doWhatever()
Enterprise services
To link applications together a number of additional services are required Naming Transactions Security Management
Common functional requirements for all distributed applications
Typically provided by a centralised server
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JEE Enterprise Services
These are API definitions for these centralised services The implementation is not specified
Typically allow existing enterprise services to be accessed easily from Java Services such as naming, security, messaging etc.
In most cases, these services can be accessed explicitly or left to the container to interact with.
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Enterprise Service 1:Naming and Directory Services
Naming and Directory Services allow Allows an application to find the resources its needs Allows searching for components based on name or attribute
Terminology: A name is “Test Topic” (JMS topic) “www.ibm.com” (DNS address) “/usr/local/java/bin/javac” (File name)
Terminology: Binding is Associating a name with an object.
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Java Naming and Directory Interface
JNDI is an interface and can utilise different naming services DNS, NIS, LDAP
Reference Compact object representation, with information about how to
access the object
Context A context is a set of name-to-object bindings, with an associated
naming convention. E.g. Unix naming convention, “/abc/def”
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Example of calling an EJB from a JSP
<%@ page import="javax.naming.*,javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject, foo.AccountHome, foo.Account"
%>
<%! AccountHome accHome=null; public void jspInit() { InitialContext cntxt = new InitialContext( ); Object ref= cntxt.lookup("java:comp/env/ejb/AccountEJB");
accHome = (AccountHome)PortableRemoteObject.narrow(ref,AccountHome.class); }
%>
<% Account acct = accHome.create(); acct.doWhatever(...);
%>
Initialise the JSP
Get the reference to the session bean (EJB)
Create an instance of the session bean
Call the method doWhatever()
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Enterprise Service 2:JMS - The Java Messaging Service
A Java API that allows applications to create, send, receive, and read messages Interface specification only No vendor interoperability Vendor-agnostic: the same API to access different MOM
vendors.
Two Domains Publish/Subscribe
Use pub/sub messaging when each message can be processed by zero, one, or many consumers.
Point-to-Point Use when every message must be processed successfully by one
consumer.
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What is messaging?
“e-mail for applications”
Asynchronous communication The sender and receiver do not have to be available at the same time in
order to communicate.
Loosely coupled The sender does not need to know anything about the receiver, nor does
the receiver need to know anything about the sender; they only need to know what message format and what destination to use.
Enterprise messaging requires additional Qualities of Service Guaranteed delivery and fault tolerance Load balancing Scalability Transactional support
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Point-to-Point Messaging
Asynchronous RPC Queue - “destination” Producer is a “sender” Consumer is a “receiver”
© IBM
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Publish/Subscribe Messaging Topic – “destination”
Typically associated with a set of related messages
E.g. IBM stock prices, weather reports etc
Producer is a “publisher” Consumer is a “subscriber” Publishers and subscribers
are generally anonymous Unless the message
includes the information
© IBM
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Enterprise Service 3: JDBC
JDBC is the Java API that provides vendor independent connectivity to relational databases
JDBC functionality provides basic connectivity and core database-related classes
The Standard Extension provides additional functionality JNDI can be used to manage data sources and connections Connection pooling provided by database vendors to enhance
performance Support for distributed transactions, including support for the
standard two phase commit protocol used by the Java Transaction API (JTA).
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JDBC Code Example
Connection con = DriverManager.getConnection(url, "myLogin", "myPassword");
String createTableCoffees = "CREATE TABLE COFFEES " + "(COF_NAME VARCHAR(32), SUP_ID INTEGER, PRICE FLOAT, " + "SALES INTEGER, TOTAL INTEGER)"; Statement stmt = con.createStatement(); stmt.executeUpdate(createTableCoffees);
ResultSet rs = stmt.executeQuery( "SELECT COF_NAME, PRICE FROM COFFEES"); while (rs.next()) {
String s = rs.getString("COF_NAME"); float n = rs.getFloat("PRICE"); System.out.println(s + " " + n);
}
Connect to the DB
Create the query string
Execute query
Execute another query and get return set
Parse return set into java variables
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Enterprise Service 4: Transactions
A transaction is a set of operations that moves data from one consistent state to another
The set of operations is considered indivisible If one or more operations fail, the entire set is undone
Success: the transaction "commits" Failure: the transaction "rolls back"
The effects of a committed transaction are persistent
Transactional Client: A program which invokes methods on transactional objects
Transaction Manager: A program that coordinates transaction processing
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Java Transaction API (JTA)
JTA is used by application developers Specifies the interface between the transaction manager
and all involved objects Main class: the UserTransaction interface.
Java Transaction Service (JTS) is used by developers of transaction managers Developers of application servers, EJB containers, etc.
Very few people in the world! Not used by application developers
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Transactions and EJBs
Transactionality can be handled implicitly by the container Container-managed transaction demarcation (CMT)
The EJB container manages transactions automatically Interaction with databases
Including two-phase commit (2PC) for databases with JDBC drivers that support XA
Starting and ending transactions Creating and propagating the transaction context
However, bean-managed transaction demarcation (BMT) and client-managed transaction demarcation are also available.
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Security Basics: Authentication and Authorization
Proof Of Identity (Authentication) Verifies the identity of the user, by using
Shared secret (password) Token (Kerberos Ticket or RSA Public Key)
Grant of Access (Authorization) Identity verified, system has to decide what resources (data,
applications etc) the user should be allowed access, based on time of day, IP address etc.
Usually defined on the basis of roles Each user may have many roles Each role has predefined access attributes E.g. a user may have two roles of system admin and pay-roll
admin. In the second role, the user can execute the pay-roll software.
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Security Basics: Terminology
A principal is something that can be authenticated For example, a user or a server
Each principal has an associated set of security attributes Used to identify which resources the principal can access Also used for auditing
A principal is identified using credentials A credential contains or references security attributes Credentials are acquired via authentication Credentials can also be acquired through delegation from
another principal
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Challenges of distributed security
Perimeter security is only the start Primarily focused on external attack Internal security focuses on auditing and policing good
behaviour.
Need to ensure authentication can be achieved securely Single sign-on or passing around of authentication data.
Each task must be associated with a principal with valid credentials and authorisations.
Across multiple domains, systems and applications.
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J2EE Container-Based Security
Security for components is provided by the container in which they run
When an EJB method is invoked, it is always with a given security identity A principal and one or more roles
Supports declarative security: defined using deployment descriptors Includes definition of security roles, access control rules and
authentication requirements Mapped by the application deployer to the specific runtime environment
Supports programmatic security: explicit use of security APIs by application code Provides increased flexibility
e.g., the same method can function differently for different pricipals
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Enterprise Service 5: Java Authentication and Authorization Service (JAAS)
JAAS has two purposes: Authentication of users, to reliably and securely determine who is
currently executing Java code, regardless of how the code is running
Authorization of users to ensure they have the permissions required to do the actions performed
JAAS authentication is pluggable Different underlying authentication technologies can be used
transparently to the client. Usually implemented on Identity Servers.
JAAS authorization extends the existing Java security architecture Role based access control - based not just on what code is
running, but also on who is running it
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Enterprise Service 6: Java Connector Architecture
JCA allows resource adapters that support access to Enterprise Information Systems (EIS) to be plugged into J2EE products Defines a connection management contract between a J2EE
server and a resource adapter to allow connection pooling to EIS systems
A transaction management contract between the transaction manager and an EIS that supports transactional access Also supports transactions that are managed entirely by an
EIS. A security contract that enables secure access to an EIS