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allen peter

Steps to create a servlet example in tomcat server - 0 views

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    We give you the best way that How to Make a Java Servlet Using Tomcat.And This Topic also explains you that how to set up and use a Tomcat hosting server with great examples.
Hendy Irawan

Apache Tomcat - Welcome! - 0 views

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    "Apache Tomcat is an open source software implementation of the Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages technologies. The Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages specifications are developed under the Java Community Process. Apache Tomcat is developed in an open and participatory environment and released under the Apache License version 2. Apache Tomcat is intended to be a collaboration of the best-of-breed developers from around the world. We invite you to participate in this open development project. To learn more about getting involved, click here. Apache Tomcat powers numerous large-scale, mission-critical web applications across a diverse range of industries and organizations. Some of these users and their stories are listed on the PoweredBy wiki page."
Terry Trippany

Tutorial: Implementing a Servlet Filter for JSONP callback with Spring's DelegatingFilt... - 0 views

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     Implementing a Servlet Filter for JSONP
anonymous

Organize Projects - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views

  • com.google.gwt.gears.Gears
    • anonymous
       
      Gears.gwt.xml does not define andy entry point. It can only be inherits
  • two ways to approach loading them
  • nclude each module with a separate <script> tag
  • ...118 more annotations...
  • Create a top level module XML definition
  • Compile the top level module
  • the second approach will lead to much better end-user performance
  • each module has to be downloaded separately by the end-user's browser
  • each module will contain redundant copies of GWT library
  • conflict with each other during event handling
  • Linkers are divided into three categories, PRE, POST, and PRIMARY
  • one primary linker is run for a compilation
  • everal linkers are provided by Core.gwt.xml, which is automatically inherited by User.gwt.xml.
  • monolithic JavaScript file.
  • cross-site deployment model.
  • standard iframe-based
  • <add-linker name="xs" />
  • The GWT compiler
  • packaging its output with the Linker subsystem
  • responsible for the final packaging of the JavaScript code
  • providing a pluggable bootstrap mechanism
  • re-use an existing Java API for a GWT project,
  • <super-source>
  • "re-root" a source path
  • to emulate part of the JRE not implemented by GWT
  • tells the compiler to add all subfolders of com/example/myproject/jre/
  • to the source path
  • com/google/myproject/gwt/jre/java/util/UUID.java
  • most commonly used elements in the module XML file.
  • <inherits name="
  • herits all the settings from the specified module
  • <entry-point class=
  • Entry points are all compiled into a single codebase
  • when the onModuleLoad() of your first entry point finishes, the next entry point is called immediately.
  • Any number of entry-point classes can be added
  • <source path="
  • resources get copied into the output directory during a GWT compile.
  • client subpackage is implicitly added to the source path
  • <public path="path" />
  • treated as a publicly-accessible resource.
  • resources get copied into the output directory
  • the public subpackage is implicitly added to the public
  • <servlet
  • For RPC, this element loads a servlet class
  • mounted at the specified URL path
  • path=
    • anonymous
       
      monting location
  • class="
    • anonymous
       
      Which servlet class
  • URL path should be absolute
  • @RemoteServiceRelativePath attribute
  • you must configure a WEB-INF/web.xml in your war directory to load any servlets needed.
  • n development mode,
  • <script src="
  • external JavaScrip
  • <stylesheet src="
  • Extends the set of values
  • for an existing client property
  • <replace-with-class>
  • <generate-with-class>
  • <when-property-is
  • three different types of predicates are
  • <when-type-assignable
  • <when-type-is
  • <all>
  • <any>
  • <none>
  • GWT libraries are organized into modules
  • you want to inherit at least the User module
  • contains all the core GWT functionality
  • including the EntryPoint class
  • widgets and panels
  • History feature
  • Internationalization
  • DOM programming, and more
  • Low-level HTTP
  • Use the following syntax to cause an external JavaScript file to be loaded
  • before your module entry point is called.
  • as if you had included it explicitly using the HTML <script
  • loaded before your onModuleLoad() is called.
  • all included scripts will be loaded when your application starts, in the order in which they are declared.
  • associate external CSS files with your module
  • GWT.getModuleBaseURL() + "foo.css" in client code
  • module's public path
  • useful when
  • inheritance makes resource inclusion particularly convenient.
  • If you wish to create a reusable library that relies upon particular stylesheets or JavaScript files, you can be sure that clients
  • see the documentation for FileSet for a general overview
  • <public>
  • <super-source>
  • <source>
  • includes
  • excludes
  • defaultexcludes
  • casesensitive
  • By default, the patterns listed here are excluded.
  • defaultexcludes is true
  • <script src='myApp/myApp.nocache.js'></script>
  • <script> tags always block evaluation of the page
  • <img> tags do not block page evaluation
  • two simultaneous connections
  • The body.onload() event will only fire once all external resources are fetched, including images and frames.
  • GWT selection script
  • like a normal script tag
  • but the compiled script will be fetched asynchronously.
  • Parsing is blocked until externalScriptZero.js is done fetching and evaluating.
  • myApp/myApp.nocache.js completes
  • the compiled scrip
  • (<hashname>.cache.html
  • begins fetching in a hidden IFRAME (this is non-blocking).
  • onModuleLoad() is not called yet, as we're still waiting on externalScriptOne.js
  • body.onload() fires
  • onload='alert("w00t!")
    • anonymous
       
      is the last line executed
  • put the GWT selection script as early as possible
  • because it won't block any other script requests
  • <img> tags are not guaranteed to be done loading when onModuleLoad() is called
  • <script> tags are guaranteed to be done loading when onModuleLoad() is called
  • multiple EntryPoints
  • will all be called in sequence as soon as that module (and the outer document) is ready
  • multiple GWT modules within the same page
  • each module's EntryPoint will be called as soon as both that module and the outer document is ready
  • EntryPoints are not guaranteed to fire at the same time
  • or in the same order
  • in which their selection scripts were specified in the host page
Javin Paul

URL Encoding vs URL Rewriting in JSP and Servlet - 0 views

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    URL Rewriting and UrL Encoding are two similar but yet different terms and concept. URL Encoding is used to encode special character while URL Rewriting is used for Session management. this is a popular JSP interview questions .
Hendy Irawan

Why doesn't (JPA, JMS, JTA, EJB, JSF, CDI) work? JEE is "Too Complicated" | OcpSoft - 0 views

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    "Stop using Tomcat and wondering why JEE "doesn't work." You're doing yourself a big disservice. Start thinking about JBoss AS 6, or GlassFish v3 - Yes, I know, it's a "Full JEE Container," - it's "Heavy," but with JEE6, that's not a bad thing: It all "Just works" and it works really well. Trust me, the reason people have thought Java EE sucks, is because they try to do this stuff on Tomcat, and say "Why doesn't (JPA, JMS, JTA, EJB, JSF, CDI) work?" Well… that's because Tomcat only gives you Servlet - the Request/Response lifecycle. So people install all these things manually, or try to, and then say, "Wow, Java EE is really hard to use, shit, I'm gonna use Spring or Grails instead.""
anonymous

Getting Started with RequestFactory - Google Web Toolkit - Google Code - 0 views

  • Entity Proxies
    • anonymous
       
      Proxy type (on the Client) vs Entity type (on the server)
  • proxy types
  • entity types
  • ...147 more annotations...
  • methods that return service stubs
  • one RequestFactory interface for your application
  • employeeRequest();
  • @Service(Employee.class)
  • extends RequestContext
  • extends RequestFactory
  • service stub
  • RequestFactory service stubs
  • must extend RequestContext
  • The methods in a service stub do not return entities directly
  • return subclasses of com.google.gwt.requestfactory.shared.Request.
  • This allows the methods on the interface to be invoked asynchronously with
  • Request.fire()
  • fire(    new Receiver()
  • onSuccess
  • callers pass an AsyncCallback that implements onSuccess()
  • takes a Receiver which must implement onSuccess()
  • Receiver is an abstract class having a default implementation of onFailure()
  • you can extend Receiver and override onFailure()
  • onViolation()
  • any constraint violations on the server
  • The Request type returned from each method
  • parameterized with the return type of the service method.
  • Methods that have no return value should return type Request<Void>
  • BigDecimal, BigInteger, Boolean, Byte, Enum, Character, Date, Double, Float, Integer, Long, Short, String, Void
  • subclass of EntityProxy
  • List<T> or Set<T>
  • primitive types are not supported
  • methods that operate on an entity itself
  • like persist() and remove()
  • return objects of type InstanceRequest rather than Reques
  • Server Implementations
  • methods defined in an
  • entity's service interface
  • implemented in the class named
  • @Service annotation
  • in these examples, is the entity class
  • service implementations do not directly implement the RequestContext interface
  • server-side implementations use the domain entity types
  • @Entity
  • EntityManager
  • createQuery
  • getResultList();
  • entityManager()
  • createEntityManager()
  • em.persist(this);
  • em.remove(attached
  • em.close();
  • defined in the service's
  • RequestContext interface
  • even though the implementation does not formally implement the interface in Java
  • name and argument list for each method
  • same on client and server
  • Client side methods
  • return Request<T>
  • only T on the server
  • EntityProxy types become the domain entity type on the server
  • Methods that return a Request object in the client interface are implemented as static methods on the entity
  • Methods that operate on a single instance of an entity, like persist() and remove(),
  • eturn an
  • InstanceRequest
  • in the client interface
  • Instance methods do not pass the instance directly, but rather via the
  • using()
  • instance methods must be implemented as non-static methods in the entity type
  • Four special methods are required on all entities
  • as they are used by the RequestFactory servlet:
  • constructor
  • findEntity
  • An entity's getId()
  • is typically auto-generated by the persistence engine (JDO, JPA, Objectify, etc.)
  • "find by ID" method has a special naming convention
  • find()
  • "find" plus the type's simple name
  • On the server
  • getVersion() method is used by RequestFactory to infer if an entity has changed
  • backing store (JDO, JPA, etc.) is responsible for updating the version each time the object is persisted,
  • RequestFactoryServlet sends an UPDATE
  • if an entity changes as
  • Second, the client maintains a version cache of recently seen entities
  • Whenever it sees an entity whose version has changed, it fires
  • UPDATE events on the event bus
  • so that listeners can update the view
  • GWT.create
  • and initialize it with your application's EventBus
  • GWT.create
  • requestFactory.initialize
  • create a new entity on the client
  • EmployeeRequest request
  • EmployeeProxy newEmployee
  • All client-side code should use the EmployeeProxy
  • not the Employee entity itself
  • unlike GWT-RPC, where the same concrete type is used on both client and server
  • RequestFactory
  • designed to be used with an ORM layer like JDO or JPA
  • on the server
  • to build data-oriented (CRUD) apps with an ORM-like interface
  • on the client
  • easy to implement a data access layer
  • structure your server-side code in a data-centric way
  • GWT-RPC, which is service-oriented
  • On the client side, RequestFactory keeps track of objects that have been modified and sends only changes
  • lightweight network payloads
  • solid foundation for automatic batching and caching of requests in the future
  • RequestFactoryServlet
  • RequestFactory uses its own servlet
  • own protocol
  • not designed for general purpose services like GWT-RPC
  • implements its
  • It is designed specifically for implementing a persistence layer on both client and server.
  • In persistence frameworks like JDO and JPA, entities are annotated with
  • client-side representation of an entity
  • known as a
  • DTO (Data Transfer Object)
  • hook used to indicate that an object can be managed by RequestFactory
  • RequestFactory
  • EntityProxy interface
  • automatically populates bean-style properties between entities on the server and the corresponding EntityProxy on the client,
  • send only changes ("deltas") to the server
  • extends EntityProxy
  • interface
  • @ProxyFor
  • reference the server-side entity being represented
  • It is not necessary to represent every property and method from the server-side entity in the EntityProxy
  • EntityProxyId returned by this method is used throughout RequestFactory-related classes
  • while getId() is shown in this example, most client code will want to refer to
  • EntityProxy.stableId() i
  • to represent any type
  • is not required to expose an ID and version
  • often used to represent embedded object types within entities
  • @Embedded
  • Address
  • Address type
  • POJO with no persistence annotations
  • Address is represented as a ValueProxy
  • extends ValueProxy
  • interface
  • extends EntityProxy
  • interface
  • AddressProxy
  • AddressProxy
  • ValueProxy can be used to pass any type to and from the server
  • RequestFactory
  • interface between your client and server code
  • RequestContext interface
  • The server-side service
  • must implement each method
anonymous

Compressed Output From Servlet - 0 views

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    res.setHeader("Content-Encoding","gzip"); OutputStream o=res.getOutputStream(); GZIPOutputStream gz=new GZIPOutputStream(o);
Hendy Irawan

Apache Commons Daemon : Java based daemons or services - 0 views

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    "Since 1994, the Java programming language evolved and became a valid tool to develop reliable and performant server applications as opposed to just applets and client applications. The major disadvantage of the Java platform is that still today the only portable way to start a Java application relies on a single point of entry: the public static void main(String[]) method. Having a single-point of entry is a valid solution for client applications, where interactively a user can command to the application to quit (which can terminate the Virtual Machine process at calling the System.exit(int) method), but in those cases where the application is not interactive (server applications) there is currently no portable way to notify the Virtual Machine of its imminent shutdown. A server application written in Java might have to perform several tasks before being able to shutdown the Virtual Machine process. For example in the case of a Servlet container, before the VM process is shut down, sessions might need to be serialized to disk, and web applications need to be destroyed. One common solution to this problem is to create (for example) a ServerSocket and wait for a particular message to be issued. When the message is received, all operations required to shut down the server applications are performed and at the end the System.exit method is called to terminate the Virtual Machine process. This method however, has several disadvantages and risks: In case of a system-wide shutdown, the Virtual Machine process may be shut down directly by the operating system without notifying the running server application. If an attacker finds out the shutdown message to send to the server and discovers a way to send this message, he can easily interrupt the server's operation, bypassing all the security restrictions implemented in the operating system. Most multi-user operating systems already have a way in which server applications are started and stopped. Under Unix based
Hendy Irawan

Atmosphere - Java.net - 0 views

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    Atmosphere is a POJO based framework using Inversion of Control (IoC) to bring push/Comet and Websocket to the masses! Finally a framework which can run on any Java based Web Server, including Tomcat, Jetty, GlassFish, Weblogic, Grizzly, JBossWeb and JBoss, Resin, etc. without having to learn how Comet or WebSocket support has been differently implemented by all those Containers. The Atmosphere Framework has both client (JQuery PlugIn) and server components. Servlet 3.0 is supported along with framework like Jersey (natively), GWT (natively), Wicket, Guice, Spring etc. and programming language like JRuby, Gr oovy and Scala. We also support massive scalability with our Cluster plugin architecture (JGroups, JMS/ActiveMQ, Redis, XMPP,i etc.)
Hendy Irawan

AtomServer 2.3.4 - - 0 views

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    "AtomServer is a generic data store implemented as a RESTful web service. It is designed as a GData-style Atom Store. It is based on the following concepts and protocols; REST. REST is a design pattern. It's not a technology like SOAP or HTTP. REST is a proven design pattern for building loosely-coupled, highly-scalable applications. There are important benefits to sticking to the REST design pattern; Simple. REST is incredibly simple to define. There are just a handful of principles and well defined semantics associated with it. Scalable. REST leads to a very scalable solution by promoting a stateless protocol and allowing state to be distributed across the web. Layered. REST allows any number of intermediaries, such as proxies, gateways, and firewalls. Ultimately REST is just a web site, albeit one that adheres to a design pattern, so one can easily layer aspects such as Security, Compression, etc. on an as needed basis. Atom. Fundamentally, Atom is an XML vocabulary for describing lists of timestamped entries. These entries can be anything, although because Atom was originally conceived to replace RSS, Atom lists are Feeds, and the items in the lists are Entries. Atom is a RESTful protocol. AtomServer stands on the shoulders of giants. It is built on top of several open source projects - most notably, Apache Abdera (a Java-based Atom Publishing framework) and Spring. AtomServer is an Atom Store. Thus, it requires a relational database to run. AtomServer currently supports; PostgresSQL, SQLServer, and HSQLDB. Using HSQLDB, AtomServer requires zero configuration and can run out-of-the-box. While this configuration is suitable for many applications, those that see significant load will likely require a database with better transactional semantics, such as PostgreSQL. AtomServer is easy to use. It deploys as a simple WAR file into any Servlet container. Or alternately, can be used out-of-the-box as a standalone server, running with
Merit Campus

Practice various ‪‎Java Tests even if you are Beginner or Expert. - 0 views

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    Merit campus provides the best online java training. Learn Java programming if you are a beginner, Intermediate or an expert. Practice tests on creation of java, servlets, JDK, JRE, JVM, JIT, Java Compiler and Evolution of Java etc.
java8s

Python Tutorial in Bhubaneswar - 0 views

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    Java8s is a leading Python tutorial in Bhubaneswar provides Java Training, Core Java Tutorial, JDBC Tutorial, Servlet Tutorial, JSP Tutorial, Spring Tutorial, Hibernate Tutorial, Python Tutorial, and SQL Tutorial in Bhubaneswar, Odisha.
anonymous

The BalusC Code: ImageServlet - 1 views

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mikhail-miguel

java.sun.com - 0 views

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