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A Practical Introduction to Enterprise Java Beans

A Component Technology
IN 30 MINs
DO YOU WANT TO ANSWER MOST OF THE EJB QUESTIONS ?

THEN LET ME HELP YOU!

EJB

The Heart of J2EE BY

Kantimahanti Prasad
Kanti.Prasad@pramerica.ie or Kanti1@donegal.net
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

1. Learning objectives
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. Component Technology characteristics Standard Infrastructure needs Application Servers Containers J2EE Architecture and its components EJB Model, Overview & JNDI EJB Specifications, Roles EJB Design Approaches, Architecture Types of Beans EJB Interfaces & Session Contexts Life cycles of different Beans EJB Jar files & Deployment Descriptor Sample examples Components comparison

A STAR or a different color represents important points to NOTE

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

2. About the Author


Kantimahanti.N.S.Prasad
Worked in fortune 100 Corporates in Client Server Technologies. Specializes in Architecture, Designing, Development & Managing day-to-day activities. Presently doing a PhD at Queens Uty, U.K in Adaptable Software specific to Component Technologies and has a M.B.A (Computer Applications) from an U.S. Uty. Business domain strengths are in Investment banking & Insurance.
U NEVER FAIL TILL U QUIT

Process improvement strengths are in 6 - Sigma and CMM.

His present & past working experiences in various global locations are in corporates like Pramerica (Prudential U.S), J P Morgan Chase, A B N Amro Bank & SGS. He was a part time visiting faculty in affiliates of Sydney University, Australia and All India Management Institute teaching I.T, Project Management & Statistics. He has given some presentations on Project Management and TQM at various venues. He has won few Talent/STAR performance awards and plays almost all the sports what are under the Sun. He hails from Vizag/ Hyderabad India. His 3rd party tested Temperament Sorter results are below
https://www.advisorteam.com/temperament_sorter/testresult.asp?TID=740281673499&PID=15800 https://www.advisorteam.com/temperament_sorter/testresultc.asp?TID=740281662156&PID=13606

If you liked his presentation, tell others and if you have a comment, tell him. He can be reached at Kanti.Prasad@Pramerica.ie or Kanti1@donegal.net

3. Thank you note


He wishes to thank Paul Perrone , Paulo Merson & Ramesh Behra for making this tutorial look the way it does. He wishes to thank to Katherine Ballantyne, Choi Kwan who volunteers to edit all of his Articles & Presentations. He wishes to thank Joerg Mueller, Muruganandam, CharlesJohnson & Venu Gadium who had volunteered to do the editing of this presentation. Special thanks to all his Managers at Pramerica and Prudential U.S.

Thank you for downloading my Presentation

ARUNA

SUNAYANA

SADHGI

his Parents

Dr.Rao & Family

his Brothers his Sisters & his Cousins

DEDICATED TO
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

4. Component Technology
Components are deployable units that provide a business service to their clients.

Each component provides an interface in the form of operations, properties and events Components can be developed in any language such as JAVA,C++,VB Components are frequently organized into application frameworks for vertical domains Component models such as Active X and EJB standardize communication and allow for prebuilt purchased components

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

5. Component Characteristics
Components Characteristics include
Properties Operations Events Deployable Self description Reusability Shareable Distributable Self Containment

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

6. Component P O E
Components should have a mechanism for exporting
Properties
Operations Events

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

7. Deployable Components

Components are operation independent of


Hardware The underlying operating system Their Application Server The network protocol they use

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

8. Reusable Components

Component services can be used as a part of business logic of other components

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

9. Shareable Components

If multiple clients are using a component simultaneously, the component will provide the same quality of service to all the clients

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

10. Distributable Components


Components should provide services to clients running locally or remotely
Remote CLIENTS

EJB Container EJB


Local CLIENTS Possible Remote CLIENTS

Remote CLIENTS

Remote CLIENTS

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

11. SelfContained Components


Components should only contain the code necessary to implement their services Infrastructure services should be injected by the execution environment

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

12. Standard Infrastructure Needs


Standard infrastructure services include
Directory Services Distributed transaction management Security management Concurrent access management Persistence management Resource pooling (e.g. DB connections) Administration interface Load Balancing Fault tolerance

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

13. Applicatoin Servers


An application server provides the infrastructure and services to run components/applications Application Server products are mostly

J2EE based solutions

Non-J2EE solutions (PHP, Cold Fusion, Perl, etc.)

Microsoft Solutions (COM, ASP.Net VB.Net,C# etc.)

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

14. Object Pooling


An application server may create a pool of bare objects that may be used as EJBs when requests are made

App Server EJB Container


EJB EJB CLIENT Network CLIENT EJB EJB

Pool
EJB EJB
DB

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

15. Directory of Application Servers


Application Servers provide clients access to software or other applications that run only on the server
Examples include web servers, e-mail servers and database servers Popular Application Servers are:
I.B.M. Web Sphere BEA Web Logic Sun Java System Application Server 7.x Jboss

The full list with vital statistics are available at


http://www.devx.com/enterprise/html/16268 http://www.javacommerce.com/articles/serverlist.htm

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

16. Container
A Container :

Container means a pre developed Software
Fish cannot survive outside water & EJBs cannot survive outside containers

provides the environment in which a bean executes generates Home Object generates EJB Object Implicit Middleware manages individual bean instances
gained through declaration

To increase capability. clustering is taken care by the vendor

&
Container provides System services like
Security Connection Pooling Threading

Transaction

Persistence

App Server EJB Container


EJB EJB STUB CLIENT Network Container intercepts requests EJB

Container knows what to do, as you describe everything in a special descriptor file
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

17. J2EE Overview


Deployment Descriptors (DDs)

Web Server Independence Application Server Independence Database Independence Enterprise Resource Management Services Distributed Communication Services

Enterprise Components
services standards component-based

J2EE Container/Server J2EE Interfaces Management Services Deployment/Configuration J2SE Language/Interfaces J2SE Runtime Operating System Platform Hardware Platform
Deploy Tools

Common Programming Services


Operating System Independence Hardware Independence

Data

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

18. J2EE 1.4 APIs


J2EE defines a model for developing multi-tier, web based, enterprise applications with distributed components
Applet Container HTTP/S Applet J2SE Application Client Container HTTP/S Client
RMI/ IIOP RMI/ IIOP

Web Container JSP Servlet

EJB Container EJB


JAX- J J RPC A A X C SAAJ R C W J E M B S S

JSP Servlet ENGINE JAX- J J W J Java Mgmt J J J C RPC A A E M Mail N D T O


SAAJ X C B S R C S JAF

JMX A D N B I C

Java Mgmt J J J C N D Mail T O D B JAF JMX A N


I

J2SE 3 TIER

J2SE 4 TIER

JAX- J W Mgmt J J C RPC A E D M O X B JMX B SAAJ S N R S C

EIS
DAO DB

J2SE

2 TIER
MainFrames

For all the APIs refer http://java.sun.com/j2ee/1.4/docs/tutorial/doc/index.html


Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

19. Enterprise JavaBeans Model


EJB is Suns J2EE transactional, vendor-neutral, enterprise component architecture providing
Modelling of business entities as well as synchronous and asynchronous processes Persistence via explicit code (bean-managed) or via services of the EJB server (container-managed) Vendor neutrality and inter operability XML driven deployment and configuration

EnterpriseJava Beans
EJBs need a Container EJBs are deployable components EJBs are assembled to form a complete Appl EJBs are based on RMI IIOP and JNDI Technologies
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

!=

Java Beans
JBs do not need a container JBs are development components JBs are Classes with no argument constructor JBs have a get and a set method on them

20. EJB Overview


EJB simplified distributed development
Develop EJB implementation logic Define Home/Local Remote/Local interfaces Container delegates client calls Container manages resources/lifecycle/callbacks

EJB Client Client Process


Home create remove find
Remote invoke
LocalHome

EJB Impl
create timeout remove passivate activate find load invoke store

Local

create remove find STUB

invoke STUB

EJB Client

Network

Delegate Delegate Delegate Delegate

EJB Pool

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

J2EE EJB Container/Server

21. When to use EJB


If any of these requirements hold for your application the application must be scalable and distributable Transactions will be required to ensure data integrity the application will have a variety of clients

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

22. Java Naming and


Directory Interface (JNDI)
JNDI Provides a standardized way of accessing resources in a distributed environment Protocol and naming service agnostic DNS NDIS LDAP X.500 Implemented by the javax.naming package and three other packages below it javax.naming.InitialContext is the entry point to the EJB Server bind associates a name with an object lookup finds an object given the name
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

23. EJB Specification


The EJB specification defines interfaces between
the EJB and its container the container and the application server the container and the client

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

24. EJB Roles


Service & Tool Provider
provides Server, Container and integrates with distributed facilities

EJB Provider
creates EJB components

Application Assembler
assembles apps from per-built EJB comp

Deployment Specialist
deploys apps and understands architecture issues

supplies tools

builds application Application Assembler

deploys system

Tools Provider

Deployer

System Administrator maintains deployment

supplies Application Server develops EJBs EJB Provider


Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Application Server Provider

25. EJB Design Approaches


EJB model is based on three basic design approaches for building distributed component systems
Stateless server approach Persistent Object approach Session-oriented approach
Implementing one of these interfaces indicates your JAVA class is an EJB.

The EJB specification provides these as


Stateless session Beans Stateful session Beans
All EntityBeans
implements Interface

Message driven beans Entity Beans


All MessageDrivenBeans
implements Interface

All SessionBeans
implements Interface

javax.ejb.EntityBean
extends

javax.ejb.SessionBean
extends

javax.ejb.MessageDrivenBean
extends

javax.ejb.EnterpriseBean interface
extends It is only a marker Interface java.io.Serializable and there are no methods to Implement. Serialization is the reason EJB is distributable.

As all these are extending the two Interfaces hence they have the behavior of both the Interfaces.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

26. EJB Architecture


Naming Service such as LDAP

Naming

Transaction PersistenceServer Security A


SERVICES

H
Server B JNDI Initial Context
H

App Server
8
Home Interface

EJB Container Home Object (FACTORY) 5 creates 10 EJB


(Business Logic Class)

1
H

EIS DB MainFrames

4 6
RMI/IIOP Remote Interface

Application Client EJB

Home Obj Stub

7 11

EJB Object (Wrapper)

9 delegates request

Obj Stub

Container implements/autogenerates code for the Interfaces

we have written

We will write only this Container manages TRANSACTIONS, PERSISTENCE, SECURITY & POOLING
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

27. EJB Flow Chart


Start

C
1 6

ask JNDI Server for the Home Object JNDI Server returns ref of Home Stub ask Home for the EJB Object creates EJB Object returns reference of Remote Stub

invokes a business method thru Remote Stub goes to the JNDI Server and gets the EJB Object Remote Interface then wraps a request to the Bean class

7
3 8

Clients receives the required info


9

C
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

End

28. Client View of EJB


ENTITY BEANS are like NOUNS as they represent data or data related logic.

App Server
EJB Container
EJB Home or EJB Local Home Session Bean instance e.g Bank teller Credit Card authorization

Application Client

RMI/ IIOP

EJB Object or EJB Local Object

Entity Bean instance

e.g Bank account balance Purchase order

JMS Destination

Message Driven Bean instance

e.g Stock trade messages Work flow messages

SESSION BEANS are like VERBS as they represent action or business process related logic. MESSAGE DRIVEN BEANS have message oriented logic. If all the processing is done in the same Application server then we use EJB Local(Object & Home) interfaces. Using local interfaces are optional. Local interfaces pass by REFERENCE and EJB (Object/Home) pass by VALUE. Using local interfaces avoids stubs, skeletons, network and so it is faster.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

29. EJB Client


EJB clients
utilizes the Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) to look up for the references to home interfaces use home and remote EJB interfaces to utilize all EJB-based functionality

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

30. EJB Home Interface


EJB home interfaces extends javax.ejb.EJBHome
EJB home interfaces provide operations for clients to create EJBs remove EJBs find handles to EJB remote interface objects have its stub placed into JNDI at startup

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

31. EJB Remote


EJB remote interfaces extends javax.ejb.EJBObject
EJB remote interfaces provide business-specific functionality of an EJB are similar to RMI Remote interface

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

32. EJB Implementation


EJB implementation
Class in which EJB developer codes the business methods defined in the beans component interface(s) to provide any application specific business method invocation creation removal finding activation passivation, database storage database loading logic

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

33. Session Context


The Container has already reference to the bean The bean interacts with the Container through SessionContext and
retrieves home interfaces gets and sets transactions attributes obtains security attribute

The setSessionContext method is used to inform the bean about the session context

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

34. Stateless Session EJB


Stateless session EJBs have the following behaviour
provide a single use service do not maintain state on behalf of the client are relatively short lived do not survive EJB server crashes any two instances of the same stateless session EJB type are always identical each instance can be shared by multiple clients

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

35. Stateless Session EJBs View


EJB Client Client Process EJB Client
Home Remote LocalHome Local

Stateless Session
Logic
input

Network

EJB Pool

output

J2EE EJB Container/Server EJB Impl Developer View EJB gets requests and generates responses An instance can service multiple clients over time EJB Client Developer View creates it, uses it and then its done EJB Container View can pull instances from pool upon client request can shrink/grow pool as needed A few pooled beans can service thousands of clients

36. Life Cycle of Stateless Session Bean


Each method call is an invocation from the container to the Bean Container decided it needs more instances in the pool to service clients Bean Instance does not exiist Class.newInstance() ejbRemove() Client called remove() on the EJB object (or the client times out)

setSessionContext() ejbCreate()

Pool of equivalent method ready instances Client called another Transactional business method on the EJB Object.

Transactional Business Method

37. Stateful Session EJBs View


Stateful Session EJB Client Client Process EJB Client
Home Remote LocalHome Local

Logic State
input output

Network

EJB Pool

J2EE EJB Container/Server EJB Impl Developer View EJB gets requests and generates responses An instance can service multiple clients over time EJB Client Developer View creates it, uses it and then its done EJB Container View can pull instances from pool upon client request can shrink/grow pool as needed

38 .Life Cycle of Stateful Session Bean


Each method call is an Invocation from the container to the Bean Client called create(args) on the home Interface. Bean Instance does not exiist Class.newInstance() ejbRemove() Client times out Client called remove() on the EJB object (or the client times out)

setSessionContext() Client called a non-transactional business method on the EJBObject ejbCreate(args)

Containers limit of instantiated beans are reached, so it must swap your bean out.

Non-Transactional Business Method


Client called a transactional business method on the EJB Object

Bean instance is ready to service method calls

ejbPassivate()
Bean instance is in the passive state

ejbActivate() beforeCompletion() afterCompletion(true) afterCompletion(false)

afterBegin() If transaction ended in a commit..

Client called a method on a passivated bean, so Container must swap your Bean back in

Bean instance is within a transaction and ready to service method calls Client called another Transactional business method on the EJB Object.

We need to write all the methods that are there in the Implemented class If transaction ended in an abort.

Transactional Business Method

If we implement Javax.ejb.SessionSynchronization then we need to write these methods.

39. Stateful vs Stateless


Stateful Bean
A stateful bean contains a conversational state that is retained across method calls and transactions. The create method takes arguments e.g. create(String id) , create(int I , String id) There can be one or more arguments in a create method e.g An EJB that unzips 100 bytes of data An EJB that checks to see if a stock symbol is valid

Stateless Bean
A stateless bean does not have any state between calls to its methods.

The create method does not take arguments e.g create() There can be no arguments in a create method e.g An EJB that books a flight and rents a car at a travel agents web site.

Method by method comparison can be seen in EJB20Matrix.doc at http://www.volantec.biz/cmp20.htm

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

40. Entity Bean


Entity Bean has the following behaviour
They are a representation of persistent data They can survive a crash Multiple clients can be using EJBs that represent the same data The EJB instance contains a copy of the data in the persistent store has a Primary key like in a Database record.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

41. BMP Entity EJBs


(BMP = Bean-Managed Persistence)
EJB Client
LocalHome Local

Entity Bean (BMP)


Hand Coded Logic
input output

Client Process EJB Client


Home Remote

Network

EJB Pool

J2EE EJB Container/Server

Persisted objects (via hand-coding)

data

EJB Impl Developer View encapsulates data from a data source as objects implements object-relational mapping (often JDBC) implements inserts, deletes, queries and updates EJB Client Developer View creates, finds, updates and removes entity objects EJB Container View persists and manages concurrent access of instances

42. Primary key class

Applicable only to entity beans Uniquely differentiates instances sharing the same EJBHome Class must be a legal value type in RMI-IIOP

Implements java.io.Serializable all the members should be public It should implement hashCode() and equals(.. ) methods does not implement java.rmi.remote

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

43. Shared Entity Bean


When multiple clients share an Entity EJB they
receive their own instance share the underlying data do not have to handle synchronization

App Server
CLIENT Network CLIENT EJB

EJB Container
EJB
DB

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

44. Life Cycle of BMP Entity Bean


Each method call is an Invocation from the container to the Bean Container decided it needs another Entity Bean insinstance Does not exiist Container decided it doesnt need the Entity Bean instance anymore

newInstance()

unsetEntityContext() JVM will garbage collectt and call finalize() Client called a finder Method on the home interface

setEntityContext() Client called instance independent ejbHome() Business method ejbHome() Client called create() on the home interface (this will Create new database data) ejbCreate() Container determined that the database is out of synch with the bean. The Bean needs to load the new Database data.

Pooled

ejbFind()

Activates the Bean ejbActivate()

Passivates the Bean ejbStore()\ ejbRemove()

Client called remove() on the EJB object (this will destroy Database data)

ejbPostCreate()

ejbLoad()

ejbPassivate()

ejbLoad() Client called a business method on a EJBObject

Ready

ejbStore()

Business Method

Container determined that the database is out of synch with the bean. The Bean needs to store its Data into the Database

45. CMP Entity EJBs


(CMP = Container-Managed Persistence) Entity Bean (CMP)
Generated Logic
input output

EJB Client
LocalHome Local

Client Process EJB Client


Home Remote

Network

EJB Pool

J2EE EJB Container/Server Persisted objects (via container services) data

Persistence DDs

EJB Impl Developer View specifies CMP fields and relations among entities in DDs specifies queries via EJB-QL in DDs uses tools to map standard object view to specific relational view EJB Client Developer View creates, finds, updates and removes entity objects EJB Container View persists and manages concurrent access of instances

46. Life Cycle of CMP Entity Bean


Each method call is an Invocation from the container to the Bean NOTE : BMP has no ejbSelect() Container decided it needs another Entity Bean in does not exiist Container decided it doesnt need the Entity Bean instance anymore

newInstance()

unsetEntityContext() JVM will garbage collectt and call finalize()

setEntityContext() Client called instance independent ejbHome() Business method ejbHome() Client called create() on the home interface (this will create new database data) ejbCreate() Container determined that the database is out of Synch with the bean. The Bean needs to load the new Database data.

Client called a finder method on the home Interface, or bean called its own ejbSelect() method to locate Database data

Pooled

ejbFind() or ejbSelect()

Activates the Bean ejbActivate()

Passivates the Bean ejbStore()\ ejbRemove()

Client called remove() on the EJB object (this will destroy Database data)

ejbPostCreate()

ejbLoad()

ejbPassivate()

ejbLoad() Client called a business method on a EJBObject

Ready

ejbStore()

Container determined that the database is out of Synch with the bean. The Bean needs to store its Data into the Database

Business Method Or ejbSelect()

47. BMP vs CMP


Bean Managed Persistance
BMP offers a tactical approach The developer takes care of handling persistence BMP uses hard coded queries so we can optimize our queries

Container Managed Persistance


CMP is more strategic Vendor takes care of everything by using O-R or OODB mappings using metadata. A developer cannot optimize performance as the vedor takes care of it

We should start developing CMP beans, unless we require some kind of special bean, like multi-tables, that cannot be completely realized with a single bean. Then when we realize that we need something more or that we prefer handling the persistence (performance issue are the most common reason), we can change the bean from a CMP to a BMP

Method by method comparison can be seen in EJB20Matrix.doc at http://www.volantec.biz/cmp20.htm Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

48. Message Driven Bean


MDB has the following behaviour Is stateless is a JMS listener when a JMS message arrives the method onMessage() is executed does not survive EJB server crashes provides a single-use service is relatively short lived is only a bean class no interfaces

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

49. Message Driven EJBs


Producer Process Messaging Service
Message

Message-Driven Bean
Message Queue Message

Handler Logic
input

Message Messaging API Producer

Network

Message Listener

EJB Pool

J2EE EJB Container/Server

Asynchronous messaging
EJB Impl Developer View gets async requests via messaging paradigm-specific interface An instance can service multiple clients over time EJB Client Developer View Messages sent to endpoint & handled by messaging service Specific to particular messaging paradigm used EJB Container View pulls instance from pool and delivers message

50. Life Cycle of Message Driven Bean


Each method call is an Invocation from the container to the Bean

Container decided it needs another Message DrivenBean Instance


newInstance()

Does not exiist

ejbRemove() setMessageDrivenContext()

ejbCreate()

Pooled

onMessage()

51. Deployment
Deployment involves taking an EJB compliant bean and
creates XML that describes the EJB packages the bean and XML into a Jar generates container files for the EJB configures properties of the EJB Server

Declaring without programming helps the application assembler to change the XML file easily. BEAN Provider declares components middleware service requirements in a DEPLOYMENT DESCRIPTOR File. Bean Provider describes how the Container should perform the LifeCycle Management, Persistence, Transaction and Security.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

52. Other interfaces and classes

Local interfaces are used for access within server context


javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome javax.ejb.EJBLocalObject

E.g.: Inter component calls Servlet invocation

Interfaces for serializing EJB references


HomeHandle - reference to EJBHome Handle - reference to EJBObject

EJBMetaData interface provides mechanism to gather information about the bean


reference to EJBHome object Home, component interface and primary key classes functions to determine bean type

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

53. Exceptions

System exceptions are unchecked and propagated to the client as java.rmi.RemoteException Application exceptions are checked and propagated to the client as a descendant of java.lang.Exception EJB-specific exceptions include FinderException, CreateException, RemoteException (all in javax.ejb package) Business method exceptions are at the discretion of the EJB developer

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

EXAMPLE 1 STATELESS BEAN

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

54. Steps to Develop an EJB


Start C Write .java files for the BEAN, HOME and REMOTE interfaces Configure your EJB Server. E.g DB connections thread pooling etc Then copy the EJB Jar file

1 5 2

Write the Deployment descriptor

Start your EJB container and 6 confirm that it has loaded the EJB Jar file. Connect to your EJB by writing a test 7 Client .java file compile it and run it .

Compile all the STEP 1 files into .class files Using the Jar utility create an EJB Jar file containing STEP 2 & STEP 3 files C

4
End

Please download the trial Application Server software from the links provided on the Reference slide at the end.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

55. Hello World Object Model using RMI


We will apply the previous slide flow chart procedure to make up our first EJB example

These Interfaces comes with Java 2 Platform


java.rmi.Remote java.io.Serializable Javax.ejb.EnterpriseBean Javax.ejb.SessonBean

These Interfaces comes with EJB distribution


Javax.ejb.EJBObject Javax.ejb.EJBHome

Supplied by the Bean Provider / Developer/ We will write !

We Hello world Remote Interface

need to CODE only Interface this block Hello World Home

Hello World Bean Implementation Class

Generated for us by the Container verdors tools


Hello world EJB Object Hello World Home Object

NOTE : Object implementation is Vendor specific. The container may implement either A single object for each client or A single object for all the clients.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

56. Hello World Object Model using LOCAL


If all the processing is done in the same Application server then we use EJB Local (Object & Home) interfaces. Using local interfaces are optional. Local interfaces pass by REFERENCE and EJB (Object/Home) which is the previous slide model you saw will pass by VALUE. As these interfaces does not extend Java.rmi.Remote the overhead of creating stubs, skeletons,network traffic is avoided and so it is faster but the drawback is if our code relies on Local interfaces then we cannot call a bean remotely.

No Network so LOCAL IMROVES PERFORMANCE

These Interfaces comes with Java 2 Platform


java.rmi.Remote java.io.Serializable

These Interfaces comes with EJB distribution


Javax.ejb.EJBLocalObject Javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome

Javax.ejb.EnterpriseBean
Javax.ejb.SessonBean

Supplied by the Bean Provider / Developer/ We will write !


Hello world LocalInterfaceWe need Hello to World Local Home Interface CODE only this block
Hello World Bean Implementation Class

Generated for us by the Container verdors tools


Hello world EJB LocalObject Hello World Local Home Object

NOTE : Object implementation is Vendor specific. The container may implement either A single object for each client or A single object for all the clients.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

57. HelloBean Home Interface


EJB Example requirement : When the client interacts with the EJB we need to return a Hello World greeting. To provide an EJB with the above requirement we have to create Remote & Home Interfaces , Bean Business logic class and a deployment descriptor. For clarity please see the previous slide Hello World Object Model using RMI.
This is the Home Interface for the Home EJB (HelloBean).
Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon package examples ; import java.io.Serializable; import java.rmi.RemoteException; Importing the required files import javax.ejb.CreateException; import javax.ejb.EJBHome; public interface HelloHome extends javax.ejb.EJBHome Our interface HelloHome is extending EJBHome means it has all the behaviour of EJBHome { Hello create() throws java.rmi.RemoteException, javax.ejb.CreateException; Interface methods should end with a semicolon ;

This method creates/manufactures the EJBObject and returns it . This create() method corresponds to the ejbCreate() method in HelloBean. As for every Interface we need implementation,Note so Container implement (autogenerate code) for Remote this Home Interface for us, which is the EJBHome Object In Home will Interface we are throwing 2 exceptions and Create .

NOTE : Rules of Interfaces states that there should be no implementation so you will find only method signatures.
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

58. HelloLocalHome Interface


So now lets code the HelloLocalHome Interface
This is the LocalHome Interface for the Home EJB (HelloBean).

package examples ; Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon import javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome; import javax.ejb.CreateException; import javax.ejb.FinderException; import java.util.Collection;
Our interface HelloLocalHome is extending EJBLocalHome means it has all the behaviour of EJBLocalHome

public interface HelloLocalHome extends javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome { HelloLocal create() throws javax.ejb.CreateException;


This method creates/manufactures the EJBLocal Object and returns . This create() method corresponds to the As for every Interface we need implementation, so Container will implement (autogenerate code) for this it Local Home for us, which isa the LocalHome Interface methods should end with semicolon ; Object ejbCreate() method in HelloBean. Note LocalHome Interface we are throwing Create and not Remote there is no network NOTE : Rules of In Interfaces states that there should be only no implementation so youexception will find as only method signatures.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

59. HelloBean Remote Interface


So lets code the Remote Interface
Clients interact with the EJB Object through this Remote interface that is why we need to write this interface .

As Remote interface is used to interact with the Bean we need to mirror all the method signatures what are there in a Bean class so that is why we are writing only one method in this Remote interface. Note EJB specification states that all remote calls should throw RemoteException so we are throwing it. As for every Interface we need implementation, so Container will implement (autogenerate code) for this Remote Interface for us, which is the EJBObject

package examples ; Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon import java.util.*; Importing the required files import javax.ejb.EJBObject; import java.rmi.RemoteException; public interface Hello extends javax.ejb.EJBObject Our interface Hello is extending EJBObject means it has all the behaviour of EJBObject { public String hello() throws java.rmi.RemoteException; As our requirement wants a business logic to greet Hello World a single method would be sufficient . } Interface methods should end with a semicolon ;
NOTE : Rules of Interfaces states that there should be no implementation so you will find only method signatures.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

60. HelloLocal Interface


Clients interact with the EJB Object through this Local interface when there is no network involved. .

package examples ; Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon import javax.ejb.EJBLocalObject; public interface HelloLocal extends javax.ejb.EJBLocalObject Our interface Hello is extending EJBLocalObject means it has all the behaviour of EJBLocalObject { Interface methods should end with a semicolon ; public String hello() ; As our requirement wants a business logic to greet Hello World a single method would be sufficient . } As Local interface is used to interact with the Bean we need to mirror all the method signatures what
are there in a Bean class so that is why we are writing only one method in this Local interface. Note As there is no remote calls no Remote Exception is thrown As for every Interface we need implementation, so Container will implement (autogenerate code) for this Local Interface for us, which is the EJB Local Object

NOTE : Rules of Interfaces states that there should be no implementation so you will find only method signatures.

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

61. The Bean Class


So now lets code the actual EJB Class
This is where we will code our Business logic

package examples ; Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon import java.util.*; Importing the required files import javax.ejb.*; public class HelloBean implements javax.ejb.SessionBean NOTE : Note If it is: Entity this is Bean a class we and will not implement an Interface javax.ejb.EntityBean like the other two and (Home if it is /Message Remote). driven This is bean implementing we will implement SessionBean javax.ejb.MessagedrivenBean so it is a Session Bean As per the below note in red we need to write all the methods what are in javax.ejb.SessionBean . { private SessionContext This ctx; ejbCreate() corresponds to the Homeobject Create(). NOTE : in Stateless Bean no arguments are sent public void ejbCreate() { System.out.println(ejbCreate()); } much to clean up. public void ejbRemove() { System.out.println(ejbRemove());} There is nothing These are called Management or In Statelss Bean ejbActivate public void ejbActivate() { System.out.println(ejbActivate());} Call back methods and ejbPassivate Do not apply public void ejbPassivate() { System.out.println(ejbPassivate()); } public void setSessionContext(javax.ejb.SessionContext ctx) { Storing the Context in a variable so that it can be queried later . this.ctx = ctx; } NOTE : Because it is a Session Bean we are using setSessionContext for Entity Bean we use setEntityContext and for Message Driven Bean we use setMessageDrivenContext. public String hello() { System.out.println(Hello()); return Hello World! ; } Our Business method which matches } our Remote Interface method signature Java does not support multiple inheritance so you can extend only one class. To overcome
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

this they had given us the Implementation option . So when we use implement we need to implement or write all the methods what are there in the interface we implemented.

62. The Deployment descriptor


So now lets complete our EJB by writing the deployment descriptor.
THERE ARE MANY TOOLS WHICH CREATES THE DESCRIPTOR FOR US

As a Bean provider we need to specify the Middleware needs through this descriptor.
<!DOCTYPE ejb-jar PUBLIC -//Sun Microsystems, Inc. // DTD Enterprise JavaBeans 2.0 // EN http://java.sun.com.dtd/ejb-jar_2_0.dtd> XML Standard requirement <ejb-jar> <enterprise-beans> <session> The nickname for this particular Bean <ejb-name> Hello </ejb-name> <home>examples.HelloHome</home> The fully qualified name of the Home Interface <remote>examples.Hello</remote> The fully qualified name of the Remote Interface <local-home>examples.HelloLocalHome</local-home> The fully qualified name of the Local HomeInterface <local>examples.HelloLocal</local> The fully qualified name of the Local Interface <ejb-class>examples.HelloBean</ejb-class> The fully qualified name of the EJB Class <session-type>Stateless</session-type> Whether the session bean is stateful or stateless <transaction-type>Container</transaction-type> </session> </enterprise-beans> </ejb-jar>
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

63. The Client


So now lets code our Client to access our simple stateless session bean. package examples; Rules of Java says package declaration should be at the beginning and ends with a semi colon import javax.naming.Context; importing the necessary files import javax.naming.InitialContext; import java.util.Properties; As there is static key word this main method executes first before any other method in that class public class HelloClient { public static void main(String [] args) throws Exception{ Properties props = System.getProperties(); Assigning props variable with properties information for JNDI initialization Context ctx = new InitialContext(props); Obtaining the JNDI initial context is the starting point for connection to a JNDI tree By passing environment properties we will choose our JNDI driver,network a reference to the Home Object obj = ctx.lookup(HelloHome); Get location of the server etc. Object- the factory for Hello EJB Objects. HelloHome home = (HelloHome) javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject.narrow( obj, HelloHome.class); Use the factory to create the Hello EJB Object. We are then calling the hello() method Hello hello = home.create(); We are casting HelloHome here, as Home Objects are RMI-IIOP objects and so we On the EJB Object. The EJB object will delegate the call to the Bean,receive the Need to use a special RMI-IIOP cast. Results and return it to us . We then print it on the screen. System.out.println(hello.hello()); hello.remove();}} Once we are done with the EJB Object, we can remove it.
NOTE : To call Local Interface you need not cast with the PortableRemoteObject. So the block in red will be changed to Object obj = ctx.lookup(java:comp/env/HelloLocalHome); ( to get a ref to LocalHome Object) HelloLocalHome home = (HelloLocalHome)obj;

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

64. EJB Jar File


The folder structure within the Ejb-jar file is META-INF/MANIFEST.MF META-INF/ejb-jar.xml examples/HelloBean.class examples/HelloLocalHome.class examples/HelloLocal.class examples/Hello.class

Properties File

Remote/Local Interface

HomeLocalHome Interface

Enterprise Bean Class

Jar Creator

Jar file

Deployment Descriptor

Jar Manifest

DEPLOYED

Or manually run C:\>Jar cf HelloWorld.jar *


Jar file is a .ZIP compression format . META-MF file is a listing file automatically created by the Jar utility. Please read the Deployment instructions provided by the Application server as it is Vendor specific Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

65. EJB Application Assembler


.JAR Jar file

Deployment Descriptor

.WAR

JAR ARC HIEVE (.jar) EJB-JAR.XML REMOTE HOME EJB

Deployment Tool WEB ARCHIEVE (.war) WEB.XML Enterprise Archive (.EAR Files) (Application.XML) JSP Servlets HTML

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EXAMPLE 2 STATEFUL BEAN

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Stateful Session Remote Interface


package declaration should be in the beginning package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb; import java.util.*; import javax.ejb.EJBObject; import java.rmi.RemoteException; import samples.ejb.stateful.simple.tools.BookException;

Importing the required classes

Remote Cart is extending EJBObject means Cart has all the behaviour of it public interface Cart extends EJBObject Our bean class CartBean methods are mirrored here { public void addBook(String title) throws RemoteException;

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

public Vector getContents() throws RemoteException; } EJB spec says all remote interface methods need to throw remote exception There will not be any implementation in Interfaces
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Session Home Interface


package declaration should be in the beginning package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb; import java.io.Serializable; import java.rmi.RemoteException; import javax.ejb.CreateException; import javax.ejb.EJBHome;

Importing the required classes

CartHome is extending EJBHome means CartHome has all the behaviour of it public interface CartHome extends EJBHome { In a Stateful Bean you can have more than one create method taking arguments Cart create(String person) throws RemoteException, CreateException;
In our bean class CartBean these represent ejbCreate(String person) & ejbCreate(String person, String id)

Cart create(String person, String id) throws RemoteException, CreateException; } EJB spec says all Home interface methods need to throw remote & create exceptions

There will not be any implementation in Interfaces


Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Session Bean Class


package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb;

package declaration should be in the beginning

import java.util.*; import javax.ejb.*; import samples.ejb.stateful.simple.tools.BookException; import samples.ejb.stateful.simple.tools.IdVerifier; public class CartBean implements SessionBean {

Importing the required classes

CartBean Class is implementing sessionbean means this bean class is a session bean
String customerName; String customerId; Vector contents;

We defined this also method in the Cart interface. person) method This represents the remote Home create(String

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(); }

as this is the Bean class we will implement the business logic here

NOTE : AS we are implementing and not extending we need to write all the methods that are there in the Sessionbean
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Session Bean Class


public void ejbCreate(String person, String id) throws CreateException { if (person == null) { This also We defined this method the Cart remote interface represents the Home in create(String person, String throw new CreateException("Null person not allowed."); } else { customerName = person; } IdVerifier idChecker = new IdVerifier(); if (idChecker.validate(id)) { We are calling the validate(id) customerId = id; } else { throw new CreateException("Invalid id: " + id); }

id) method we defined

The new operator is instantiating the instance of a class

method from the class ID Verifier

// This block is a supporting business method written in idVerifier class


contents = new Vector(); }

We defined this method in the Cart remote interface

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

We defined this method in the Cart remote interface


public void removeBook(String title) throws BookException { boolean result = contents.removeElement(title); We defined contents as if (result == false) { throw new BookException(title + " not in cart."); } } Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

a vector

Stateful Session Bean Class


We defined this method in the Cart remote interface
public Vector getContents() { return contents; } public CartBean() {} public void ejbRemove() {} public void ejbActivate() {} public void ejbPassivate() {} public void setSessionContext(SessionContext sc) {} }

Bean class constructor We need to write these methods as we are implementing SessionBean

Rules of implement states we need to implement all methods that are there in the implemented interface
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Deployment Descriptor


<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!-Copyright 2004 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. SUN PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms. --> <ejb-jar version="2.1" xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchemainstance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/j2ee/ejb-jar_2_1.xsd"> <display-name>CartJAR</display-name> required by any XML document <enterprise-beans> <session> <display-name>CartEJB</display-name> The nickname for this particular Bean <ejb-name>CartEJB</ejb-name> <home>samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb.CartHome</home> The fully qualified name of the Home Interface <remote>samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb.Cart</remote> The fully qualified name of the Remote Interface <ejb-class>samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb.CartBean</ejb-class> The fully qualified name of the EJB Class <session-type>Stateful</session-type> Bean type is mentioned here <transaction-type>Container</transaction-type> <security-identity> <use-caller-identity/> </security-identity> </session> Closing session and ejb </enterprise-beans> THERE ARE MANY TOOLS WHICH CREATES THE DESCRIPTOR FOR US

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Deployment Descriptor


<assembly-descriptor> <container-transaction> <method> <ejb-name>CartEJB</ejb-name> <method-intf>Remote</method-intf> <method-name>getContents</method-name> </method> <trans-attribute>Required</trans-attribute> </container-transaction> <container-transaction> <method> <ejb-name>CartEJB</ejb-name> <method-intf>Remote</method-intf> <method-name>removeBook</method-name> <method-params> <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param> </method-params> </method> <trans-attribute>NotSupported</trans-attribute> </container-transaction>

Passing Bean class methods and parameter info

Passing Bean class methods and parameter info

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Deployment Descriptor


<container-transaction> <method> <ejb-name>CartEJB</ejb-name> <method-intf>Remote</method-intf> <method-name>addBook</method-name> <method-params> <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param> </method-params> </method> <trans-attribute>Required</trans-attribute> </container-transaction> </assembly-descriptor> </ejb-jar>

Passing Bean class methods and parameter info

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Session Client


package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.ejb; import java.util.*; import javax.naming.Context; import javax.naming.InitialContext; import javax.rmi.PortableRemoteObject; public class CartClient {

package declaration should be in the beginning

Importing the required classes

Client class

public static void main(String[] args) { As static is there this main method will execute first try { The new operator is instantiating the instance of Context initial = new InitialContext(); Object objref = initial.lookup("java:comp/env/ejb/SimpleCart");

a class

Looking into JNDI


CartHome home = (CartHome)PortableRemoteObject.narrow(objref, CartHome.class); Casting with Cart shoppingCart = home.create("Duke DeEarl","123"); shoppingCart.addBook("The Martian Chronicles"); shoppingCart.addBook("2001 A Space Odyssey"); shoppingCart.addBook("The Left Hand of Darkness"); Vector bookList = new Vector(); bookList = shoppingCart.getContents();

a suitable RMI IIOP object Creating the object

adding books to the object

Invoking the bean class method through remote interface Cart

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Stateful Session Client


Enumeration enumer = bookList.elements(); while (enumer.hasMoreElements()) { String title = (String) enumer.nextElement(); System.out.println(title); }

We defined booklist as a vector After storing in the variable title we are printing it

shoppingCart.removeBook("Alice in Wonderland"); shoppingCart.remove(); Removing a particular book

System.exit(0);

using the bean class method removeBook through remote interface Cart as we defined it this way Cart shoppingCart = home.create("Duke DeEarl","123");

} catch (BookException ex) { System.err.println("Caught a BookException: " + ex.getMessage()); System.exit(0); We had written a new class BookException } catch (Exception ex) { System.err.println("Caught an unexpected exception!"); ex.printStackTrace(); System.exit(1); } } }

and using its method to catch any errors

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

Book Exception
package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.tools;

public class BookException extends Exception { /** * Default constructor. */ public BookException() { } /** * Constructor with a <code>String<code> as a parameter. * @param msg message, describing the exception. */ public BookException(String msg) { super(msg); } }

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

ID Verifier
package samples.ejb.stateful.simple.tools;
public class IdVerifier { /** * Default constructor. */ public IdVerifier() { } public boolean validate(String id) { boolean result = true; for (int i = 0; i < id.length(); i++) { if (Character.isDigit(id.charAt(i)) == false) result = false; } return result; } }

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

ALL EXAMPLES CAN BE SEEN AT


http://www.weblogic.com/docs/examples/ejb/Package-examples.ejb.html http://my.execpc.com/~gopalan/java/entity.html http://java.sun.com/developer/onlineTraining/Beans/EJBTutorial/ http://developers.sun.com/prodtech/javatools/jsstandard/reference/techart/entitybeans.html

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

66. Component Comparison


Component Distributability EJB Can implement the Remote or Local Interface ActiveX Uses Microsofts architecture for determining how clients invocation requests are sent to components. DCOM used as underlying transport mechanism CORBA ORB makes use of GIOP and other protocols to perform IPC

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

67. Component Comparison


Components provide interfaces in the form of Operations EJB exports operations through Remote Interface ActiveX exports operations in the same interface

CORBA exports methods through Interface Repository

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

68. Component Comparison


Self Container Components EJB
Containers inject code to handle transactions, database management, security, distributability and other customisable services. Containers can be provided independent of App Server and EJB providers

ActiveX
Transactions, database management, legacy integration have to be coded into the logic of the component. Security policy can be inherited from NTLM. Transactions can be aided through MTS

CORBA
CORBAServices have different APIs. CORBAServices can be complicated to code with. CORBAServices are not supported by all ORBs
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

69. Component Comparison


Components provide interfaces in the form of Properties. EJB Properties are not explicitly exported but can be mimicked through accessor operations ActiveX exports Properties in the same interface CORBA Properties not explicitly exported but can be mimicked through attributes
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

70. Component Comparison


Components provide interfaces in the form of Events. EJB Events supported through JMS with Message Driven Bean ActiveX exports Events in the same interface CORBA Events supported through Event Service but cannot be exported
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

71. Component Comparison


Component Reusability EJB Incorporating the contents of an EJB can be done in two ways: by having the new EJB use the services of an old EJB as a direct client or by writing an EJB class that inherits from an existing one These two methods of leveragability give developers maximum flexibility
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

72. Component Comparison


Component Reusability Active X Incorporating the contents of an ActiveX can be done in two ways: by having the new ActiveX use the services of an old ActiveX as a client or by Delegation

The Components being reused must be registered on the development machine


Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

73. Component Comparison


Component Reusability CORBA Every CORBA object has to have its own interface definition CORBA objects can use the services of other Objects No mechanism for inheritance or Object reuse inherently supported, though

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

74. Component Comparison


Components Shareability EJB
Application Server makes multiple instances of EJB Objects. Client contexts can be stored in different thread contexts. Different types of EJBs identify levels of shareability.

ActiveX
uses Microsoft's inprocess/out-of-process architecture for sharing multiple ActiveX components and Client components.

CORBA
ORB makes multiple instances of CORBA objects. Clients contexts are managed by ORB but can behave differently based upon vendors Implementation.
Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

75. Conclusion
We successfully completed a Tour on EJB . We looked at how an EJB is identified. How many different types of EJBs are there and what each EJB type implements. Why LocalInterfaces were introduced. We disected the EJB and went deeper into each part i.e. BEAN Class, Remote Interface, EJB Object, Local Object, Local Interface, Home Object. We looked Into the deployment descriptor and also seen all the files in EJBJar. We looked into each Beans Methods and also learned why we needed those methods. We had done 2 different Beans examples and we were directed to the Web links where all the examples are demonstrated. Once you can get an idea of all the Interfaces, methods & exceptions raised, you can attempt to try some examples to get familiar and master EJB. There are nearly 100s of Application servers but in this presentation you can see a few majorly used AppServers sample implementation web links. Just download any one of them and try out for yourself.

CONGRATULATIONS!
Now you know as much as he know of EJB If you have any comments or appreciations then please email him at Kanti1@donegal.net, Kanti.Prasad@donegal.net He likes to hear your feed back!

Copyright 2004 Kanti Prasad All rights reserved

76. References
Application Server Information , EJB Documentation & Tutorials are found here Notes on Deploying on different Application Servers. The Art of EJB Deployment http://www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-08-2001/jw-0803-ejb.html Most of EJBs related information can be seen at http://www.volantec.biz/ejb.htm http://www.theserverside.com/ Mastering Enterprise Java Beans by Ed Roman , Scott Ambler & Tyler Jewel. EJB Documentation http://java.sun.com/products/ejb/javadoc-2_0-fr/ http://my.execpc.com/~gopalan/java/java_tutorial.html Application Servers download information . Most of them are either free or have a 60 day trial version For JBOSS Open Source go to http://www.jboss.org/downloads/index http://www.kevinboone.com/jboss_tut_1.html SUNs downloads and examples
http://developers.sun.com/prodtech/javatools/jsstandard/reference/docs/s1s5/partsuppliers.html

http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/download.html ,http://java.sun.com/j2ee/1.4/docs/tutorial/doc/ http://java.sun.com/developer/onlineTraining/EJBIntro/EJBIntro.html BEA WebLogic downloads and examples http://commerce.bea.com/index.jsp , http://www.weblogic.com/docs/examples/index.html http://dev2dev.bea.com/codelibrary/code/examples_ejb20.jsp WebSphere downloads and examples http://www-306.ibm.com/software/webservers/appserv/doc/v20dcadv/doc/howto/ep001.html REDHAT Application Server and Examples http://www.redhat.com/docs/manuals/rhaps/jonas-guide/
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