Skip to main content

Home/ Java Development/ Group items tagged v3

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Hendy Irawan

Running GlassFish V3 with Apache httpd | Java.net - 0 views

  •  
    " GlassFish V3 has improved the way to front GlassFish with Apache HTTP Server. Unlike the V2 way where users had to copy tomcat-ajp.jar and commons-*.jar, you can just enable mod_jk in V3 using the network-listener's attribute "jk-enabled" without copying any additional jars into its lib directory. You can also create jk-connectors under different virtual-servers (not just default virtual-server "server" in V2) using the network-listener's "jk-enabled" attribute. "
Hendy Irawan

Easy restfull JAX-RS webservices and extended WADL on Glassfish v3 (using ant.) - 0 views

  •  
    "So, we are going to look at a restful webservice that is going to generate XML. As you might know, we have the perfect JSR specification for that in the form of JAXB. The needed libraries are already available in Netbeans 6.8. And as you might have guessed, returning JAXB objects from a JAX-RS method is going to integrate naturally and take some strain from our shoulders. No need to marshal and unmarshal by ourself. "
Hendy Irawan

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

  •  
    "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.""
Hendy Irawan

Shrinkwrap - JBoss Community - 0 views

  • Shrinkwrap provides a simple mechanism to assemble archives like JARs, WARs, and EARs with a friendly, fluent API.
  •  
    Shrinkwrap provides a simple mechanism to assemble archives like JARs, WARs, and EARs with a friendly, fluent API. JavaArchive archive = ShrinkWrap.create(JavaArchive.class,"archive.jar")    .addClasses(MyClass.class,MyOtherClass.class)    .addResource("mystuff.properties"); From there you may deploy directly into any supported integration container like JBoss EmbeddedAS, GlassFish v3 Embedded, Jetty, or OpenEJB.  Or perhaps you'd like to export the archive to a file or exploded directory structure.  Maybe you'd prefer to serialize it over the network to a remote host.  The possibilities are limitless. To boot, ShrinkWrap is the supported deployment mechanism of the Arquillian project, and together we render the testing of true enterprise components amiable as a puppy.  Where Java EE brought a POJO programming model to application development, we've brought it to testing.  You handle your business logic; we'll do the rest. To foster community participation, the majority of documentation and examples are available through our Wiki. Releases are available either via our Downloads section, or through the JBoss Maven Repository, which we recommend is configured in ${userHomeDir}/.m2/settings.xml:
1 - 4 of 4
Showing 20 items per page