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J2SE/J2EE

J2SE/J2EE. J2SE – Java 2, Standard Edition “core” java – the base classes on which everything else is built Base tools and utilities J2EE – Java 2, Enterprise Edition APIs and technologies for delivering multi-tier “enterprise” applications Web Applications Web Services. J2SE.

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J2SE/J2EE

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  1. J2SE/J2EE • J2SE – Java 2, Standard Edition • “core” java – the base classes on which everything else is built • Base tools and utilities • J2EE – Java 2, Enterprise Edition • APIs and technologies for delivering multi-tier “enterprise” applications • Web Applications • Web Services

  2. J2SE • Tools and Utilities • javac.exe – java compiler • java.exe – the java VM • Javadoc.exe – Javadoc tool

  3. J2SE APIs • Java Foundation Classes (JFC/Swing) • API/Framework for building GUIs • Used to be VERY SLOW • Used for “fat clients” and applets • JDBC – Java Database Connectivity • Connect to databases • Query/Update capability • Connection pooling • Each DB vendor provides their own driver • Must conform to the JBDC API

  4. J2SE APIs • Java Platform Debugger Architecture (JDPA) • Standardized API for debugging • This gives all IDEs easy debugging capabilities • Vendors used to build their own debugging functionality • Remote Method Invocation (RMI) • Allows a class in one VM to call a method on another class in another VM • Allows distributed applications • Break up an application into parts (across different machines)

  5. Obj2 (stub) J2SE - RMI VM1 VM2 RMI directory Obj1 Obj2

  6. J2SE - RMI • Marshalling • “Flattening” an object • Turning it into a “stream” or “string” • Can be passed over the wire • Unmarshalling • Turning a marshalled stream back into an object • RMI is java-to-java only

  7. J2SE – Javadoc • Javadoc is a tool that takes your source code and generates HTML documentation from it • Uses special tags that you put into the comments of your source code • Configure your IDE or code editor tool to generate template documentation

  8. html html html javadoc.exe MyClass.java J2SE - Javadoc • Javadoc example • http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4.2/docs/api/ • Source code with javadoc in it: • http://java.sun.com/blueprints/code/jps131/src/index.html

  9. J2SE - JNDI • Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI) • Standard API for accessing naming and directory services • LDAP • CORBA • RMI • For any directory/naming service, a provider can be built that follows the JNDI API. • This allows any java application the ability to “look up” something independent of implementation • A framework that allows vendors to add their own “provider” so their directory can be accessed via the JNDI API (for example) • NDS • NIS

  10. J2SE – Java Mail • Java Mail API • API for accessing e-mail functionality • POP • IMAP • Send/receive with attachments

  11. J2EE APIs - JMS • Java Messaging Service API (JMS) • Standard API for accessing message-based systems • Asynchronous messaging between components or other systems • “Loosely Coupled” • Sender and Receiver do not “know” about each other • Messages sent to a destination • Messages picked up from a destination • Unlike RMI, which is tightly coupled • Similar to e-mail, but for software, not humans

  12. J2EE APIs - Servlets A special java object that runs on a server An extension of a web server. It allows a web server to perform specialized processing. Similar to CGI programs Servlet API is a framework You add your own servlet classes by subclassing the HttpServlet superclass Your servlet must have certain public methods to work properly Servlets run in a “Servlet Engine” Usually used for short/quick on-line processing.

  13. J2EE APIs - Servlets Servlet Engine S S S Web Server Browser DB

  14. Servlet Engine This is a vendor-provided program that manages the servlets you write a.k.a. – “Servlet Container” Loading/Unloading servlets Managing multiple requests from web server(s) Administration utilities “Plugs-into” various web servers Some web servers come with their own servlet engine

  15. J2EE APIs - Servlets A servlet is usually executed from a request coming from a user’s browser. (e.g., you hit the Submit button on a form) A servlet handles multiple requests concurrently. It is up to the servlet engine to ensure this.

  16. J2EE APIs – Java Server Pages (JSPs) • Run and behave just like servlets with the following differences: • Servlets are written as normal java classes • JSPs are written as HTML/Web pages • Servlet engine converts them into servlets behind the scenes

  17. Servlets vs. JSPs

  18. More thoughts on JSPs • You can build an entire system using JSPs only! • Good candidate for very small systems • Read-only • No transactions • 2 – 3 pages at most • In your JSP, embed all your database calls (JDBC) to display the information • If the system gets bigger, consider moving functionality into other objects • Make them components so they can be used again • Database calls • Screen navigation • Authorization logic

  19. Tag Libraries • Normally, a JSP file has lots of HTML with java code interspersed throughout • Tag Libraries (taglibs), allow us to encapsulate java logic into an HTML-like tag • If you have a sufficiently robust tag library, web page developers can build all of your screens for you. You don’t need java programmers! • Java programmers still build and maintain the tag libraries

  20. Tag Libraries – JSTL • Java Standard Tag Libraries • Standard taglibs: • Core processing • Including/excluding page parts • Looping • Manipulating URLs • Session tracking • XML Processing • SQL Processing • Accessing java objects • Standard way to build your own taglibs

  21. J2EE - EJB • Enterprise Java Beans – EJB • A “Component Based Architecture” • You can build business objects as components and the EJB framework gives you: • Built-in transactional support • Automatic commit/rollback • Security • Access on a per-method basis • DB Access • No need to write SQL • Distributed Objects • Allows you to distribute parts of your application across VMs or different machines • Distributed transactions all within one unit of work

  22. J2EE - EJB • Probably use EJBs when: • Business Reasons • Your system is truly transactional • All changes need to happen or not at all • High-volume updates • Multi-user access to the same objects • Multi-user access to the same data rows in a DB • Technical Reasons • Many many tables that must be updated • You want to provide a transaction as a service • Available to other applications

  23. J2EE - EJB • Probably don’t use EJBs (may be overkill) when: • Application is “read-only” • Viewing account info on-line, no updates • Application is not transactional in nature • Application is “single user” • User alone has access to his data

  24. J2EE - EJB • 2 Types of EJBs • Entity Beans • Concrete business objects whose data is transaction dependent • Used across transactions • Can be shared by multiple users • Rows in a database table • Examples • Account • Payment • Charge • Session Beans • Associated with a User Login • Controls a transaction where multiple Entity Beans participate • The main entry point for a business transaction

  25. Account • Num Address • 123 55 Main St. • 987 33 Grand Ave. AcctActivity numtypeamount 123 pur 12.00 • PurchaseOrder • numqtyitemamount • 123 4 BB 8.00 • 123 1 WI 4.00 Inventory itemqty BB 10 WI 17 ShippingItem itemqtyacctNumwhenstatus BB 4 123 today pending WI 1 123 today pending EJB example (database view)

  26. Update inventory listing Find inventory listing Create shipping item Create activity item InventoryItem (entity bean) Account (entity bean) AccountActivity (entity bean) ShippingItem (entity bean) Is available? yes Remove from inventory Purchase (purchase info) find PurchasingManager (session bean) InventoryManager (session bean) ShippingManager (session bean) AccountManager (session bean) Charge account Ship to EJB example – EJB view

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