The state of Java middleware, Part II: Enterprise JavaBeans - JavaWorld - April
1999
The state of Java middleware, Part II: Enterprise JavaBeans - JavaWorld - April
1999 |
Create forward-compatible beans in EJB,
Part 1 - JavaWorld December
1999
Create forward-compatible beans in EJB,
Part 1 - JavaWorld December
1999 |
Create forward-compatible beans in EJB,
Part 2 - JavaWorld January
2000
Create forward-compatible beans in EJB,
Part 2 - JavaWorld January
2000 |
Read all about EJB 2.0 - JavaWorld June
2000
Read all about EJB 2.0 - JavaWorld June
2000 |
Programming restrictions on EJB - JavaWorld August 2000
Programming restrictions on EJB - JavaWorld August 2000 |
XML document
processing in Java using XPath and XSLT - JavaWorld September 2000
XML document
processing in Java using XPath and XSLT - JavaWorld September 2000 |
Performance books put to the test - JavaWorld March 2001
Performance books put to the test - JavaWorld March 2001 |
Master Java with these introductory books - JavaWorld May 2001
Master Java with these introductory books - JavaWorld May 2001 |
The art of EJB deployment - JavaWorld August 2001
The art of EJB deployment - JavaWorld August 2001 |
Integrate security infrastructures with JBossSX
Integrate security infrastructures with JBossSX |
To EJB, or not to
EJB?
To EJB, or not to
EJB? |
Container-managed relations for the
21st century
Container-managed relations for the
21st century |
Best tools for
mobile application development
Best tools for
mobile application development |
Interesting
...
Interesting
... |
Turn EJB components into Web services
Summary
Web services have become the de facto standard for communication among applications. J2EE 1.4 allows stateless Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) components to be exposed as Web services via a JAX-RPC (Java API for XML Remote Procedure Call) endpoint, al |
Developing Your First Enterprise Beans, Part 1
One of the most important features of EJB is that enterprise beans have the ability to work with containers from different vendors. However, that doesn't mean that selecting a server and installing your enterprise beans on that server are trivial processe |
A lightweight nonintrusive EJB testing framework
A lightweight nonintrusive EJB testing framework
Summary
This article presents a simple, easy-to-deploy framework that enables fine-grained tests to be run on the container, making it possible to develop and maintain Enterprise JavaBeans components usin |
Device Driver Tutorial for the Solaris OS
Make your hardware work with the Solaris OS on x86 or SPARC architectures. If you are a beginning Solaris kernel programmer, start with this new tutorial on docs.sun.com. |
Application Servers Available in Market. Web Servers. J2EE server.
Application Servers Available in Market. Web Servers. J2EE server.
Application Servers Available in Market
Before we go into the grater details of the EJB let's look at some of the EJB Application Servers available in the market. Application |
Introduction To Enterprise Java Bean(EJB). WebLogic 6.0 Tutorial.
Introduction To Enterprise Java Bean(EJB). WebLogic 6.0 Tutorial.
Welcome to EJB Section
(Learn to Develop World Class Applications with Enterprise Java Beans)
(Online WebLogic 6.0 Tutorial)
Introduction To Enterprise Java Bean(EJB)
Enterprise |
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