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kuni katsuya

Pro JPA 2: Mastering the Java™ Persistence API > Advanced Topics > SQL Querie... - 0 views

  • queries are also known as native queries
  • SQL Queries
  • reasons why a developer using JP QL might want to integrate SQL queries into their application
  • ...32 more annotations...
  • JPA 2.0, still contains only a subset of the features supported by many database vendors
  • features not supported in JP QL.
  • performance required by an application is to replace the JP QL query with a hand-optimized SQL version. This may be a simple restructuring of the query that the persistence provider was generating, or it may be a vendor-specific version that leverages query hints and features specific to a particular database.
  • recommend avoiding SQL initially if possible and then introducing it only when necessary
  • benefits of SQL query support is that it uses the same Query interface used for JP QL queries. With some small exceptions that will be described later, all the Query interface operations discussed in previous chapters apply equally to both JP QL and SQL queries.
  • keep application code consistent because it needs to concern itself only with the EntityManager and Query interfaces.
  • An unfortunate result of adding the TypedQuery interface in JPA 2.0 is that the createNativeQuery() method was already defined in JPA 1.0 to accept a SQL string and a result class and return an untyped Query interface
  • consequence is that when the createNativeQuery() method is called with a result class argument one might mistakenly think it will produce a TypedQuery, like createQuery() and createNamedQuery() do when a result class is passed in.
  • @NamedNativeQuery
  • resultClass=Employee.class
  • The fact that the named query was defined using SQL instead of JP QL is not important to the caller
  • SQL Result Set Mapping
  • JPA provides SQL result set mappings to handle these scenarios
  • A SQL result set mapping is defined using the @SqlResultSetMapping annotation. It may be placed on an entity class and consists of a name (unique within the persistence unit) and one or more entity and column mappings.
  • entities=@EntityResult(entityClass=Employee.class)
  • @SqlResultSetMapping
  • Multiple Result Mappings
  • A query may return more than one entity at a time
  • The SQL result set mapping to return both the Employee and Address entities out of this query
  • emp_id, name, salary, manager_id, dept_id
  • address_id, id, street, city, state, zip
  • order in which the entities are listed is not important
  • ntities={@EntityResult(entityClass=Employee.class), @EntityResult(entityClass=Address.class)}
  • expected result type and therefore received an instance of TypedQuery that is bound to the expected type. By qualifying the result type in this way, the getResultList() and getSingleResult() methods return the correct types without the need for casting.
  • Defining a Class for Use in a Constructor Expression
  • public EmpMenu(String employeeName, String departmentName)
  • List<EmpMenu>
  • NEW example.EmpMenu(" + "e.name, e.department.name)
  • EmpMenu.class
  • createNamedQuery() can return a TypedQuery whereas the createNativeQuery() method returns an untyped Query
  • List<Employee>
  • createNamedQuery("orgStructureReportingTo", Employee.class)
kuni katsuya

UML 2 Class Diagram Guidelines - 0 views

  • UML 2 Class Diagram Guidelines
  • 1.        General Guidelines
  • 2.        Class Style Guidelines
  • ...49 more annotations...
  • Use Common Terminology for Names
  • Prefer Complete Singular Nouns for Class Names
  • Name Operations with a Strong Verb
  • Name Attributes With a Domain-Based Noun
    • kuni katsuya
       
      don't just use the attribute's type with first character lower cased!!! argghhh!  (eg. instead of Node node, Node parent)
  • Do Not Model Scaffolding Code
  • Include an Ellipsis ( … ) At The End of Incomplete Lists
  • Develop Consistent Method Signatures
  • Avoid Stereotypes Implied By Language Naming Conventions
  • 3.        Interfaces
  • Name Interfaces According To Language Naming Conventions
    • kuni katsuya
       
      I+ is NOT an acceptable naming convention!  this is a very dumb, thoughtless, pointless convention originated by microsoft
    • kuni katsuya
  • Do Not Model the Operations and Attributes of an Interface in Your Classes
  • Consider an Interface to Be a Contract
  • 4.        Relationship Guidelines
  • Model Relationships Horizontally
  • Depict Similar Relationships Involving A Common Class As A Tree
  • Always Indicate the Multiplicity
  • reduce clutter in the diagram
  • Avoid a Multiplicity of “*”
  • Replace Relationships By Indicating Attribute Types
    • kuni katsuya
       
      if dependency relationships were drawn between every class and the types of it's attributes, the class diagram becomes cluttered very quickly this dependency is obvious if the type is indicated for each attribute
  • Do Not Model Every Single Dependency
    • kuni katsuya
       
      generalization of #7 what you show/don't show depends on the main concepts  you're trying to convey in any specific diagram
  • Write Concise Association Names In Active Voice
  • Indicate Directionality To Clarify An Association Name
  • Name Unidirectional Associations In The Same Direction
  • Indicate Role Names When Multiple Associations Between Two Classes Exist
  • Indicate Role Names on Recursive Associations
    • kuni katsuya
       
      eg. parent, child
  • Make Associations Bi-Directional Only When Collaboration Occurs In Both Directions
  • Question Multiplicities Involving Minimums And Maximums
    • kuni katsuya
       
      this just leads to stupid programming practices like hard-coding array sizes, making code more brittle
  • 6.        Inheritance Guidelines
  • “is a”
  • “is like” relationships
  • Apply the Sentence Rule For Inheritance
  • Place Subclasses Below Superclasses
  • A Subclass Should Inherit Everything
    • kuni katsuya
       
      if a subclass sets an attribute to null, implements a method returning null or throwing a NotImplementedException, it really isn't a subclass, or the superclass needs to be decomposed
  • 7.        Aggregation and Composition Guidelines
  • object is made up of other objects
  • aggregation
  • “is part of” relationships
  • whole-part relationship between two objects
  • Composition
  • stronger form of aggregation where the whole and parts have
  • coincident lifetimes, and it is very common for the whole to manage the lifecycle of its parts
  • Apply the Sentence Rule for Aggregation
  • Depict the Whole to the Left of the Part
  • Don’t Worry About Getting the Diamonds Right
  • associations, aggregation, composition, dependencies, inheritance, and realizations
  • line on a UML class diagram
  • defines a cohesive set of behaviors
  • Indicate Visibility Only On Design Models
  • Design Class Diagrams Should Reflect Language Naming Conventions
kuni katsuya

Java Persistence/Inheritance - Wikibooks, open books for an open world - 0 views

  • Inheritance
  • hardest part of persisting inheritance is choosing how to represent the inheritance in the database
  • There are three inheritance strategies defined from the InheritanceType enum,
  • ...101 more annotations...
  • SINGLE_TABLE
  • TABLE_PER_CLASS
  • JOINED
  • Single table inheritance is the default
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • @Inheritance
  • mapped superclass is
  • not a persistent class
  • but allow common mappings to be define for its subclasses
  • Single Table Inheritance
    • kuni katsuya
       
      implemented as a sparse table. ie. all attributes from all entities end up as columns in the 'super' table
  • single table is used to store all of the instances of the entire inheritance hierarchy
  • table will have a column for
  • every attribute
  • every class
  • in the hierarchy
  • discriminator column
  • is used to determine which class the particular row belongs to
  • abstract
  • Project
  • extends Project
  • extends Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("S")
  • @DiscriminatorValue("L")
  • @DiscriminatorColumn(name="PROJ_TYPE")
  • @Inheritance
  • @Table(name="PROJECT")
  • single table inheritance
  • Joined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • mirrors the object model in the data model
  • table is defined for each class in the inheritance hierarchy to store only the local attributes of that class
  • Each table in the hierarchy must also store the object's id (primary key), which is
  • only defined in the root class
  • share the same id attribute
  • joined inheritance
  • @Inheritance(strategy=
  • InheritanceType.JOINED
  • @DiscriminatorColumn(name="PROJ_TYPE")
  • @Table(name="PROJECT")
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("L")
  • @Table(name=
  • "LARGEPROJECT"
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @DiscriminatorValue("S")
  • @Table(name=
  • "SMALLPROJECT"
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • Table Per Class Inheritance
  • Advanced
  • table is defined for
  • each concrete class
  • in the inheritance hierarchy to store
  • all the attributes
  • of that class and
  • all of its superclasses
  • table per class inheritance
  • @Inheritance(strategy=
  • InheritanceType.TABLE_PER_CLASS
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @Table(name="LARGEPROJECT")
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @Table(name="SMALLPROJECT")
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • similar to table per class inheritance, but does not allow querying, persisting, or relationships to the superclass
  • mapped superclass
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • abstract
  • Project
  • @Column(name="NAME")
  • @Table(name="LARGEPROJECT")
  • LargeProject
  • Project
  • @AttributeOverride
  • "PROJECT_NAME"
  • "name"
  • @Table("SMALLPROJECT")
  • SmallProject
  • Project
  • cannot have a relationship to a mapped superclass
  • Joined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • oined, Multiple Table Inheritance
  • abstract
  • abstract c
  • extends Project
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • Mapped Superclasses
  • apped Superclasses
  • allows inheritance to be used in the object model, when it does not exist in the data model
  • @MappedSuperclass
  • MappedSuperclass
  • abstract
  • abstract
  • extends Project
  • extends Project
kuni katsuya

Interface naming in Java - Stack Overflow - 0 views

  • interfaces define
  • capabilities
    • kuni katsuya
       
      this is one sensible interface naming option, if the interface encapsulates a cohesive set of behaviors and yes, compared to blindly following the meaningless I+ convention, it requires some thought, but thinking of an appropriate name also forces you to (re)consider the interface's primary responsibility and how it fits into the overall design imho, a class diagram for a domain model should be almost fluently readable english
  • not types
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • Comparable
  • Runnable
  • Serializable
  • Sometimes an Adjective doesn't make sense, but I'd still generally be using interfaces to model behavior, actions, capabilities, properties, etc,... not types.
  • Also, If you were really only going to make one User and call it User then what's the point of also having an IUser interface?
    • kuni katsuya
       
      another anti-pattern... blindly create an interface for every class, even if there's only one implementation!! arrgghhhh! consider introducing an interface when there are 2-3 well-distinguished, concrete implementations required
  • if you are going to have a few different types of users that need to implement a common interface, what does appending an "I" to the interface save you in choosing names of the implementations?
  • prefer not to use a prefix on interfaces:
  • hurts readability.
  • interfaces names should be as short and pleasant as possible
  • Implementing classes should be uglier to discourage their use.
    • kuni katsuya
       
      but they don't *have* to be ugly, like BlahImpl for specialized implementations, use descriptive adjective-noun combos
  • Code using an instance of some type should never, ever care if that type is an interface or a class
  • exposing such a detail in the name of the type is pointless and harmful to understanding
  • several reasons Java does not generally use the IUser convention.
  • should not have to know whether the client is using an interface or an implementation class
  • Java naming convention prefers longer names with actual meanings to Hungarian-style prefixes
  • Interface naming in Java [closed]
  •  
    "have interfaces define"
kuni katsuya

TH03-EP01-US001 - Media Management, Media Upload, Media Item Fields (Groomed BE21, FE8)... - 0 views

  • Media Management,
  • upload a new media item
  • syndication and encoding - not part of this user story
  • ...26 more annotations...
  • definition
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ie. attach the following metadata to the uploaded media item
  • Owner
  • Rights of owner
    • kuni katsuya
       
      dependent on implementation of licensing/rights management system which is tbd, so these will be best guess stubs for now
  • Rights expiry date
    • kuni katsuya
       
      dependent on implementation of licensing/rights management system which is tbd, so these will be best guess stubs for now
  • Syndication
    • kuni katsuya
       
      dumbed down, feature parity implementation is just a list of idss allowed distribution (i believe) use existing legacy infrastructure? ultimate syndication system will depend on: - licensing - explicit list of syndication channels (much like legacy) - rule-based routing
  • Caption
  • Category
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ota category assumed
  • Seasonality display rules
    • kuni katsuya
       
      this is one (simple) example of rule-based syndication: rule type: temporal (which could include: time range, recurrence, end time, etc) rule: syndicate while startDate>=now() and endDate<=now()
  • Short description
  • Long description
  • Search keywords
  • Associated with
    • kuni katsuya
       
      huh?
  • in the media library
  • can be viewed by users
    • kuni katsuya
       
      not only new ecm users, but legacy viewers as well ie. content uploaded via ecm must be available for display in legacy viewers, at least until legacy system is replaced and shutdown for good
  • Uploaded by
  • Date uploaded
  • Date modified
  • Last modified by
  • Status
    • kuni katsuya
       
      TO DO: for new domain model, should define explicit content life cycle with state diagram
  • File type
  • Media type
  • Dimensions
  • Aspect ratio
    • kuni katsuya
       
      aspect ratio doesn't need to be stored in db as metadata, since it can be calculated cheaply based on the dimensions
  • File size
    • kuni katsuya
       
      units: bytes
  • File name
    • kuni katsuya
       
      is this the original name of the file that was uploaded? if not, and it supposed to be the medlib file name, imho, should not be exposed. the medlib file name should be immaterial to the ecm user and generally, vfml should treat them as opaque to allow future changes without customer dependencies the only time an ecm user should care about a 'file name' is when they're uploading or downloading. but... once the file is uploaded, who cares what the original file name was? it will be recorded, but should be inconsequential to anything since it would never, ever be referred to again on download, (save as...) the original file name *could* be used, but any file name is just as good, since the downloader would also be given the option to rename the file
  • Media units consumed
    • kuni katsuya
       
      calculated/cached value pull from legacy system in future sprints, could start to build phased shell of the marketing xxx system 1. getMediaUnits()
    • kuni katsuya
       
      TODO: confirm with david and/or henry.wu where/how to obtain 'media units consumed' for a media item
kuni katsuya

Advanced Searching - JIRA 5.1 - Atlassian Documentation - Confluence - 0 views

  • It is safer to search by Custom Field ID than by Custom Field nameIt is possible for a Custom Field to have the same name as a built-in JIRA system field, in which case JIRA will search on the system field (not your custom field). It is also possible for your JIRA administrator to change the name of a Custom Field, which could break any saved filters which rely on that name. Custom Field IDs, however, are unique and cannot be changed.
  • Custom Field
  • It is safer to search by filter ID than by filter nameIt is possible for a filter name to be changed, which could break a saved filter that invokes another filter by name. Filter IDs, however, are unique and cannot be changed.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • Alias: ?cf[CustomFieldID]
  • An Advanced Searching statement in your typed query will override an ORDER BY statement in the saved filter.
  • Original Estimate
kuni katsuya

Data Source Configuration in AS 7 | JBoss AS 7 | JBoss Community - 0 views

  • Data Source Configuration in AS 7
  • Using @DataSourceDefinition to configure a DataSource
  • This annotation requires that a data source implementation class (generally from a JDBC driver JAR) be present on the class path (either by including it in your application, or deploying it as a top-level JAR and referring to it via MANIFEST.MF's Class-Path attribute) and be named explicitly.
  • ...21 more annotations...
  • this annotation bypasses the management layer and as such it is recommended only for development and testing purposes
  • Defining a Managed DataSource
  • Installing a JDBC driver as a deployment
  • Installing the JDBC Driver
  • deployment or as a core module
  • managed by the application server (and thus take advantage of the management and connection pooling facilities it provides), you must perform two tasks.&nbsp; First, you must make the JDBC driver available to the application server; then you can configure the data source itself.&nbsp; Once you have performed these tasks you can use the data source via standard JNDI injection.
  • recommended way to install a JDBC driver into the application server is to simply deploy it as a regular JAR deployment.&nbsp; The reason for this is that when you run your application server in domain mode, deployments are automatically propagated to all servers to which the deployment applies; thus distribution of the driver JAR is one less thing for administrators to worry about.
  • Note on MySQL driver and JDBC Type 4 compliance: while the MySQL driver (at least up to 5.1.18) is designed to be a Type 4 driver, its jdbcCompliant() method always return false. The reason is that the driver does not pass SQL 92 full compliance tests, says MySQL. Thus, you will need to install the MySQL JDBC driver as a module (see below).
  • Installing a JDBC driver as a module
  • &lt;module xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0" name="com.mysql"&gt;&nbsp; &lt;resources&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;resource-root path="mysql-connector-java-5.1.15.jar"/&gt;&nbsp; &lt;/resources&gt;&nbsp; &lt;dependencies&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;module name="javax.api"/&gt;&nbsp; &lt;/dependencies&gt;&lt;/module&gt;
  • jboss-7.0.0.&lt;release&gt;/modules/com/mysql/main
  • define your module with a module.xml file, and the actual jar file that contains your database driver
  • content of the module.xml file
  • Under the root directory of the application server, is a directory called modules
  • module name, which in this example is com.mysql
  • where the implementation is, which is the resource-root tag with the path element
  • define any dependencies you might have.&nbsp; In this case, as the case with all JDBC data sources, we would be dependent on the Java JDBC API's, which in this case in defined in another module called javax.api, which you can find under modules/javax/api/main as you would expect.
  • Defining the DataSource itself
  • &nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;datasource jndi-name="java:jboss/datasources/MySqlDS" pool-name="MySqlDS"&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;connection-url&gt;jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/EJB3&lt;/connection-url&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;driver&gt;com.mysql&lt;/driver&gt;
  • &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;drivers&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;driver name="com.mysql" module="com.mysql"&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;xa-datasource-class&gt;com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlXADataSource&lt;/xa-datasource-class&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;/driver&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; &lt;/drivers&gt;
  • jboss-7.0.0.&lt;release&gt;/domain/configuration/domain.xml or&nbsp;jboss-7.0.0.&lt;release&gt;/standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
kuni katsuya

MySQL :: MySQL 5.1 Reference Manual :: 5.1.7 Server SQL Modes - 0 views

  • Modes define what SQL syntax MySQL should support and what kind of data validation checks it should perform
  • Server SQL Modes
  • When working with InnoDB tables using the InnoDB Plugin, consider also the innodb_strict_mode configuration option. It enables additional error checks for InnoDB tables, as listed in InnoDB Strict Mode
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Setting the SESSION variable affects only the current client. Any client can change its own session sql_mode value at any time
  • To avoid this, it is best to use single-row statements because these can be aborted without changing the table
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ie. the cheezy and hugely time consuming workaround for avoiding the partial update failure issue with slaves (ie. master-slave data skew)
  • STRICT_TRANS_TABLES
  • Strict mode does not affect whether foreign key constraints are checked
  • POSTGRESQL
  • ORACLE
  • TRADITIONAL
kuni katsuya

The 4 Most Important Skills for a Software Developer | Javalobby - 0 views

  • The 4 Most Important Skills for a Software Developer
  • Skill 1: Solving Problems
  • It is amazing how bad most developers are at solving problems.
  • ...17 more annotations...
  • problem solving is the base skill of software development.
  • Skill 2: Teaching Yourself
  • There is probably no more important skill in life than learning to learn.
  • especially important in software development, because no field I know of changes more rapidly than software development.
  • need the ability to quickly acquire the knowledge you need for the task at hand.
  • learn how to teach yourself
  • Skill 3: Naming
  • Software development is all about describing the metaphysical
  • Every time you are writing code you are naming things
  • can accurately predict a developer’s skill level by looking at how they have named methods, variables and classes in code they have written
  • A developer who lacks the ability to give good names to concepts and data in their code is like a mute translator
  • focus on giving good names to things
  • most visible thing about your code
  • if I read it and can understand it, I am going to assume you know what you are doing.
  • Skill 4: Dealing with People
  • humans are not logical creatures
  • we are emotional ones
kuni katsuya

Preemptive commit comments | Arialdo Martini - 0 views

  • Tell me what the software does
    • kuni katsuya
       
      tell me how the software should *behave*, not how the behavior was *implemented* ie. describe the changes in this commit from the behavioral perspective rather than implementation details
  • What is the project behavior, in this snapshot?
  • What did the programmers, in order to produce this snapshot?
  • ...43 more annotations...
  • committing comments describing the
  • behavior of the software,
  • rather than the
  • implementation or a description of what we did
  • commits’ comments started to look like BDD’s methods name: a description of a behavior.
  • principles
  • Talk about the feature, not about yourself
  • Don’t refer to the past
  • I know it’s now
  • list of benefits
  • More focus while developing
  • Commit review is much easier
  • Less cognitive load
  • You learn commenting much more precisely
  • commit comment becomes a
  • declaration of intent
  • like a BDD method name
  • No more “Just a fix“, “Improvements” or “I made this, this, this and also this” comments.
    • kuni katsuya
       
      BDD/TDD or any methodology aside, these are the worst commit comments as they are as useless as empty commit comments
  • Each preemptive comment triggers a micro design session
  • A preemptive comment sets a micro goal
    • kuni katsuya
       
      which also aligns well with the 'micro goal' or incremental deliverables approaches of most agile methodologies 
  • helps to focus a goal to be reached
  • Without preemptive comments, I often went on coding, always asking myself: “Should I commit now? Have I reached a stable state which I could consider a good commit?“
  • define micro-goals through preemptive comments
  • macro-goal through the feature branch name
  • A preemptive comment creates a little timebox
    • kuni katsuya
       
      similar to the timeboxing strategy of a short sprints, for instance
  • Writing comments preemptively puts the agreement between the pair members to a test
    • kuni katsuya
       
      more relevant to methodologies using pair programming
  • commit history gains a very balanced granularity
  • feature branch becomes a collection of evolutionary commits each of which has usually a 1:1 binding with tests
  • very easy to find which commit introduced a bug, since each commit is related to a single new goal/feature
  • Preemptive commit&nbsp;comments
  • Rule #2: write what the software
  • I started taking a lot of care of the words I was using in comments, commits, test names and classes/variables/methods’ names
  • be supposed to do,
  • not what you did
  • should
  • Introducing BDD
  • began with the simple attempt to replace the world
  • “should“
  • “test”
  • with the world
  • Rule #1: write commit comments before coding
  • use the same criteria for my commits’ comments as well.
  • (not what you did)
kuni katsuya

Java Interfaces/Implementation naming convention - Stack Overflow - 0 views

  • Putting I in front is just crappy hungarian style notation tautology that adds nothing but more stuff to type to your code.
  • An Interface in Java is a Type
  • And the Impl suffix is just more noise as well
  • ...5 more annotations...
  • Everything that implements Truck is a Type of Truck.
  • The name of the interface should describe the abstract concept the interface represents. Any implementation class should have some sort of specific traits that can be used to give it a more specific name.
  • no justification to have an interface at all.
  • If there is only one implementation class
  • Java Interfaces/Implementation naming convention
  •  
    "Putting I in front is just crappy hungarian style notation tautology that adds nothing but more stuff to type to your code"
kuni katsuya

Chapter 2. Mapping Entities - 0 views

  • Composite identifier
  • You can define a composite primary key through several syntaxes:
  • @EmbeddedId
  • ...66 more annotations...
  • map multiple properties as @Id properties
  • annotated the property as
  • map multiple properties as @Id properties and declare an external class to be the identifier type
  • declared on the entity via the @IdClass annotation
  • The identifier type must contain the same properties as the identifier properties of the entity: each property name must be the same, its type must be the same as well if the entity property is of a
  • basic type
  • last case is far from obvious
  • recommend you not to use it (for simplicity sake)
  • @EmbeddedId property
  • @EmbeddedId
  • @Embeddable
  • @EmbeddedId
  • @Embeddable
  • @Embeddable
  • @EmbeddedId
  • Multiple @Id properties
  • arguably more natural, approach
  • place @Id on multiple properties of my entity
  • only supported by Hibernate
  • does not require an extra embeddable component.
  • @IdClass
  • @IdClass on an entity points to the class (component) representing the identifier of the class
  • WarningThis approach is inherited from the EJB 2 days and we recommend against its use. But, after all it's your application and Hibernate supports it.
  • Mapping entity associations/relationships
  • One-to-one
  • three cases for one-to-one associations:
  • associated entities share the same primary keys values
  • foreign key is held by one of the entities (note that this FK column in the database should be constrained unique to simulate one-to-one multiplicity)
  • association table is used to store the link between the 2 entities (a unique constraint has to be defined on each fk to ensure the one to one multiplicity)
  • @PrimaryKeyJoinColumn
  • shared primary keys:
  • explicit foreign key column:
  • @JoinColumn(name="passport_fk")
  • foreign key column named passport_fk in the Customer table
  • may be bidirectional
  • owner is responsible for the association column(s) update
  • In a bidirectional relationship, one of the sides (and only one) has to be the owner
  • To declare a side as
  • not responsible for the relationship
  • the attribute
  • mappedBy
  • is used
  • mappedBy
  • &nbsp;Indexed collections (List, Map)
  • Lists can be mapped in two different ways:
  • as ordered lists
  • as indexed lists
  • @OrderBy("number")
  • List&lt;Order&gt;
  • List&lt;Order&gt;
  • List&lt;Order&gt;&nbsp;
  • To use one of the target entity property as a key of the map, use
  • @MapKey(name="myProperty")
  • &nbsp;@MapKey(name"number")
  • Map&lt;String,Order&gt;
  • String&nbsp;number
    • kuni katsuya
       
      map key used in Customer.orders
  • @MapKeyJoinColumn/@MapKeyJoinColumns
  • if the map key type is another entity
  • @ManyToAny
  • 2.4.5.2.&nbsp;@Any
  • @Any annotation defines a polymorphic association to classes from multiple tables
  • this is most certainly not meant as the usual way of mapping (polymorphic) associations.
  • @ManyToAny allows polymorphic associations to classes from multiple tables
  • first column holds the type of the associated entity
  • remaining columns hold the identifier
  • not meant as the usual way of mapping (polymorphic) associations
kuni katsuya

MySQL :: MySQL 5.1 Reference Manual :: 21.3.5.1 Driver/Datasource Class Names, URL Synt... - 0 views

  • The name of the class that implements java.sql.Driver in MySQL Connector/J is com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
  • JDBC URL Format The JDBC URL format for MySQL Connector/J is as follows, with items in square brackets ([, ]) being optional: jdbc:mysql://[host][,failoverhost...][:port]/[database] » [?propertyName1][=propertyValue1][&amp;propertyName2][=propertyValue2]... If the host name is not specified, it defaults to 127.0.0.1. If the port is not specified, it defaults to 3306, the default port number for MySQL servers. jdbc:mysql://[host:port],[host:port].../[database] » [?propertyName1][=propertyValue1][&amp;propertyName2][=propertyValue2]... Here is a sample connection URL: jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/sakila?profileSQL=true
  • Initial Database for Connection If the database is not specified, the connection is made with no default database
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • fully specify table names using the database name (that is, SELECT dbname.tablename.colname FROM dbname.tablename...) in your SQL
  • work with multiple databases
    • kuni katsuya
       
      including cross database joins
kuni katsuya

Stephen Colebourne's blog: Javadoc coding standards - 0 views

  • Javadoc coding standards
  • explain some of the rationale for some of my choices
  • this is more about the formatting of Javadoc, than the content of Javadoc
  • ...63 more annotations...
  • Each of the guidelines below consists of a short description of the rule and an explanation
  • Write Javadoc to be read as source code
  • Making Javadoc readable as source code
  • Public and protected
  • All public and protected methods should be fully defined with Javadoc
  • Package and private methods do not have to be, but may
  • benefit from it.
    • kuni katsuya
       
      think of it as internal design documentation when you revisit this code 8 months from now: - based on nothing but your well-chosen ;) package/class/method/variable names, will you recall all of your current design intentions and rationale? likely not - when you hand-off this code to another software engineer, how easy will it be to mostly rtfm? will you have to waste time preparing design/implementation notes specifically for the hand-off? if this is the case because the code is unreadable and not self-guiding and there's not already at least high level design notes in a wiki, you're doing it wrong!
  • If a method is overridden in a subclass, Javadoc should only be present if it says something distinct to the original definition of the method
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ie. don't just copy-paste the javadoc from the superclass. that's mindless and pointless monkey work
  • Use the standard style for the Javadoc comment
  • Do not use '**/' at the end of the Javadoc
  • Use simple HTML tags, not valid XHTML
  • XHTML adds many extra tags that make the Javadoc harder to read as source code
  • Use a single &lt;p&gt; tag between paragraphs
  • Place a single &lt;p&gt; tag on the blank line between paragraphs:
    • kuni katsuya
       
      this at least makes the paragraph breaks wysiwygísh and somewhat easier to read
  • Use a single &lt;li&gt; tag for items in a list
  • place a single &lt;li&gt; tag at the start of the line and no closing tag
  • Define a punchy first sentence
  • it has the responsibility of summing up the method or class to readers scanning the class or package
  • the first sentence should be
  • clear and punchy, and generally short
  • use the third person form at the start
  • Avoid the second person form, such as "Get the foo"
  • Use "this" to refer to an instance of the class
  • When referring to an instance of the class being documented, use "this" to reference it.
  • Aim for short single line sentences
  • Wherever possible, make Javadoc sentences fit on a single line
  • favouring between 80 and 120 characters
  • Use @link and @code wisely
  • @link feature creates a visible hyperlink in generated Javadoc to the target
  • @code feature provides a section of fixed-width font, ideal for references to methods and class names
  • Only use @link on the first reference to a specific class or method
  • Use @code for subsequent references.
  • This avoids excessive hyperlinks cluttering up the Javadoc
  • Never use @link in the first sentence
  • Always use @code in the first sentence if necessary
  • Adding a hyperlink in that first sentence makes the higher level documentation more confusing
  • Do not use @code for null, true or false
  • Adding @code for every occurrence is a burden to both the reader and writer of the Javadoc and adds no real value.
  • Use @param, @return and @throws
  • @param entries should be specified in the same order as the parameters
  • @return should be after the @param entries
  • followed by @throws.
  • Use @param for generics
  • correct approach is an @param tag with the parameter name of &lt;T&gt; where T is the type parameter name.
  • Use one blank line before @param
  • This aids readability in source code.
  • Treat @param and @return as a phrase
  • They should start with a lower case letter, typically using the word "the". They should not end with a dot. This aids readability in source code and when generated.
  • treated as phrases rather than complete sentences
  • Treat @throws as an if clause
  • phrase describing the condition
  • Define null-handling for all parameters and return types
    • kuni katsuya
       
      ideally, if the method in question has any specified/required pre and/or post conditions, they should be noted in the javadoc, not *just* null handling also, there are cleaner ways to design around this type of old school null handling hackage
  • methods should define their null-tolerance in the @param or @return
  • standard forms expressing this
  • "not null"
  • "may be null"
  • "null treated as xxx"
    • kuni katsuya
       
      DO NOT DO THIS this is just bad design
  • "null returns xxx"
    • kuni katsuya
       
      this might also stink of poor design ymmv
  • In general the behaviour of the passed in null should be defined
  • Specifications require implementation notes
  • Avoid @author
  • source control system is in a much better position to record authors
  • This wastes everyone's time and decreases the overall value of the documentation. When you have nothing useful to say, say nothing!
    • kuni katsuya
       
      likewise with javadoc on things like default constructors /**  * Creates an instance of SomeClass  */ public SomeClass() {} is equally useless and unnecessarily clutters up the source code
kuni katsuya

How do I migrate my application from AS5 or AS6 to AS7 - JBoss AS 7.0 - Project Documen... - 0 views

  • Configure changes for applications that use Hibernate and JPA
  • Update your Hibernate 3.x application to use Hibernate 4
  • Changes for Hibernate 3.3 applications
  • ...16 more annotations...
  • Changes for Hibernate 3.5 applications
  • if your application uses Hibernate 3 classes that are not available in Hibernate 4, for example, some of the validator or search classes, you may see ClassNotFoundExceptions when you deploy your application. If you encounter this problem, you can try one of two approaches: You may be able to resolve the issue by copying the specific Hibernate 3 JARs containing those classes into the application "/lib" directory or by adding them to the classpath using some other method. In some cases this may result in ClassCastExceptions or other class loading issues due to the mixed use of the Hibernate versions, so you will need to use the second approach. You need to tell the server to use only the Hibernate 3 libraries and you will need to add exclusions for the Hibernate 4 libraries. Details on how to do this are described here: JPA Reference Guide.
  • In previous versions of the application server, the JCA data source configuration was defined in a file with a suffix of *-ds.xml. This file was then deployed in the server's deploy directory. The JDBC driver was copied to the server lib/ directory or packaged in the application's WEB-INF/lib/ directory. In AS7, this has all changed. You will no longer package the JDBC driver with the application or in the server/lib directory. The *-ds.xml file is now obsolete and the datasource configuration information is now defined in the standalone/configuration/standalone.xml or in the domain/configuration/domain.xml file. A JDBC 4-compliant driver can be installed as a deployment or as a core module. A driver that is JDBC 4-compliant contains a META-INF/services/java.sql.Driver file that specifies the driver class name. A driver that is not JDBC 4-compliant requires additional steps, as noted below.
  • DataSource Configuration
  • domain mode, the configuration file is the domain/configuration/domain.xml
  • standalone mode, you will configure the datasource in the standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
  • MySQL datasource element:
  • &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;connection-url&gt;jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/YourApplicationURL&lt;/connection-url&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;driver-class&gt; com.mysql.jdbc.Driver &lt;/driver-class&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;driver&gt; mysql-connector-java-5.1.15.jar &lt;/driver&gt;
  • &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;security&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;user-name&gt; USERID &lt;/user-name&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;password&gt; PASSWORD&lt;/password&gt;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;/security&gt;
  • example of the driver element for driver that is not JDBC 4-compliant. The driver-class must be specified since it there is no META-INF/services/java.sql.Driver file that specifies the driver class name.
  • &nbsp;&lt;driver-class&gt;com.mysql.jdbc.Driver&lt;/driver-class&gt;
  • JDBC driver can be installed into the container in one of two ways: either as a deployment or as a core module
  • Install the JDBC driver
  • Install the JDBC driver as a deployment
  • In AS7 standalone mode, you simply copy the JDBC 4-compliant JAR into the AS7_HOME/standalone/deployments directory
  • example of a MySQL JDBC driver installed as a deployment: &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; AS7_HOME/standalone/deployments/mysql-connector-java-5.1.15.jar
kuni katsuya

Authorization | Apache Shiro - 0 views

  • PermissionResolver
  • use the PermissionResolver to convert the string into a Permission instance, and perform the check that way
  • All Shiro Realm implementations default to an internal
  • ...26 more annotations...
  • WildcardPermissionResolver
  • which assumes Shiro's
  • WildcardPermission
  • String format.
  • Authorization Sequence
  • what happens inside Shiro whenever an authorization call is made.
  • invokes any of the Subject hasRole*, checkRole*, isPermitted*, or checkPermission*
  • securityManager implements the org.apache.shiro.authz.Authorizer interface
  • delegates to the application's SecurityManager by calling the securityManager's nearly identical respective hasRole*, checkRole*, isPermitted*, or checkPermission* method variants
  • relays/delegates to its internal org.apache.shiro.authz.Authorizer instance by calling the authorizer's respective hasRole*, checkRole*, isPermitted*, or checkPermission* method
  • Realm's own respective hasRole*, checkRole*, isPermitted*, or checkPermission* method is called
  • Authorization Sequence
  • Authorization Sequence
  • Authorization Sequence
  • Implicit Roles:
    • kuni katsuya
       
      BAD! do not use. prefer explicit (see below)
  • implies a set of behaviors (i.e. permissions) based on a role name only
  • Excplict Roles
  • named collection of actual permission statements
  • your realm is what will tell Shiro whether or not roles or permissions exist
  • Each Realm interaction functions as follows:
  • key difference with a RolePermissionResolver however is that the input String is a role name, and not a permission string.
  • Configuring a global RolePermissionResolver
  • RolePermissionResolver has the ability to represent Permission instances needed by a Realm to perform permission checks.
  • translate a role name into a concrete set of Permission instances
  • globalRolePermissionResolver = com.foo.bar.authz.MyPermissionResolver ... securityManager.authorizer.rolePermissionResolver = $globalRolePermissionResolver
  • shiro.ini
kuni katsuya

Chapter 10. Integration with CDI - 0 views

  • Chapter&nbsp;10.&nbsp;Integration with CDI
  • GraniteDS provides out-of-the-box integration with CDI via the Tide API
  • GraniteDS also integrates with container security for authentication and role-based authorization
  • ...37 more annotations...
  • always have to include this library in either WEB-INF/lib
  • support for CDI is included in the library granite-cdi.jar
  • 10.1.&nbsp;Configuration with Servlet 3 On Servlet 3 compliant containers, GraniteDS can use the new APIs to automatically register its own servlets and filters and thus does not need any particular configuration in web.xml. This automatic setup is triggered when GraniteDS finds a class annotated with @FlexFilter in one of the application archives:
  • @FlexFilter(configProvider=CDIConfigProvider.class) public&nbsp;class&nbsp;GraniteConfig&nbsp;{ }&nbsp;&nbsp;
  • list of annotation names that enable remote access to CDI beans
  • ConfigProvider
  • override these values by setting them in the annotation properties
  • tide=true, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;type="cdi", &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;factoryClass=CDIServiceFactory.class, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;tideInterfaces={Identity.class}
  • @FlexFilter declaration will setup an AMF processor for the specified url pattern
  • tideAnnotations
  • defines suitable default values
  • @TideEnabled
  • @RemoteDestination
  • always declared by default
  • tideInterfaces
  • tideRoles
  • exceptionConverters
  • amf3MessageInterceptor
  • 10.3.2.&nbsp;Typesafe Remoting with Dependency Injection
  • It is possible to benefit from even more type safety by using the annotation [Inject] instead of In. When using this annotation, the full class name is used to find the target bean in the CDI context instead of the bean name.
  • Security
  • integration between the client RemoteObject credentials and the server-side container security
  • client-side component named
  • identity
  • API to define runtime authorization checks on the Flex UI
  • login()
  • logout()
  • login(username, password, loginResult, loginFault)
  • logout()
  • bindable property
  • represents the current authentication state
  • loggedIn
  • identity.loggedIn&nbsp;
  • integrated with server-side role-based security
  • identity.hasRole('admin')
  • clear the security cache manually with
  • identity.clearSecurityCache()
kuni katsuya

Comparing JSF Beans, CDI Beans and EJBs | Andy Gibson - 0 views

  • differences between CDI beans and EJBs is that EJBs are : Transactional Remote or local Able to passivate stateful beans freeing up resources Able to make use of timers Can be asynchronous
  • Stateless EJBs can be thought of as thread safe single-use beans that don’t maintain any state between two web requests
  • Stateful EJBs do hold state and can be created and sit around for as long as they are needed until they are disposed of
  • ...15 more annotations...
  • Stateless beans must have a dependent scope while a stateful session bean can have any scope. By default they are transactional, but you can use the transaction attribute annotation.
  • CDI beans can be injected into EJBs and EJBs can be injected into CDI beans
  • When to use which bean How do you know when to use which bean? Simple.
  • In general, you should use CDI beans unless you need the advanced functionality available in the EJBs such as transactional functions. You can write your own interceptor to make CDI beans transactional, but for now, its simpler to use an EJB until CDI gets transactional CDI beans which is just around the corner
  • Comparing JSF Beans, CDI Beans and EJBs
  • JSF Managed Beans
  • In short, don’t use them if you are developing for Java EE 6 and using CDI. They provide a simple mechanism for dependency injection and defining backing beans for web pages, but they are far less powerful than CDI beans.
  • JSF beans cannot be mixed with other kinds of beans without some kind of manual coding.
  • CDI Beans
  • includes a complete, comprehensive managed bean facility
  • interceptors, conversation scope, Events, type safe injection, decorators, stereotypes and producer methods
  • JSF-like features, you can define the scope of the CDI bean using one of the scopes defined in the javax.enterprise.context package (namely, request, conversation, session and application scopes). If you want to use the CDI bean from a JSF page, you can give it a name using the javax.inject.Named annotation
  • Comparing JSF Beans, CDI Beans and EJBs
  • Comparing JSF Beans, CDI Beans and EJBs
  • JSF Managed Beans
kuni katsuya

3 ways to serialize Java Enums | Vineet Manohar's blog - 0 views

  • Mapping enum to database column using JPA/Hibernate You can use any of the 3 approaches discussed above. Map the enum to an integer column. The persistence implementation should automatically convert enum to ordinal() and back for you. Map the enum to a String column. The persistence implementation should automatically convert the enum value to String value via the name() function. Map the enum using a business value. You should mark the enum field as @Transient, and create another String field which you can map to a String column in your database table. Here’s an example code snippet. view plaincopy to clipboardprint?@Entity&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;class&nbsp;Product&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;@Column&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;private&nbsp;String&nbsp;colorValue;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;@Transient&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;Color&nbsp;getColor()&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return&nbsp;Color.fromValue(colorValue);&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;void&nbsp;setColor(Color&nbsp;color)&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;this.colorValue&nbsp;=&nbsp;color.toValue();&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;
  • Approach 3: Using a user defined business value – Recommended approach! This approach involves assigning a an explicit user defined value to each enum constant and defining a toValue() and fromValue() methods on the enum to do the serialization and deserialization.
  • public&nbsp;enum&nbsp;Color&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;RED("RED"),&nbsp;GREEN("GREEN"),&nbsp;BLUE("BLUE"),&nbsp;UNKNOWN("UNKNOWN");&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;private&nbsp;final&nbsp;String&nbsp;value;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Color(String&nbsp;value)&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;this.value&nbsp;=&nbsp;value;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;static&nbsp;Color&nbsp;fromValue(String&nbsp;value)&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;if&nbsp;(value&nbsp;!=&nbsp;null)&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;for&nbsp;(Color&nbsp;color&nbsp;:&nbsp;values())&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;if&nbsp;(color.value.equals(value))&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return&nbsp;color;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;//&nbsp;you&nbsp;may&nbsp;return&nbsp;a&nbsp;default&nbsp;value&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return&nbsp;getDefault();&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;//&nbsp;or&nbsp;throw&nbsp;an&nbsp;exception&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;//&nbsp;throw&nbsp;new&nbsp;IllegalArgumentException("Invalid&nbsp;color:&nbsp;"&nbsp;+&nbsp;value);&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;String&nbsp;toValue()&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return&nbsp;value;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;public&nbsp;static&nbsp;Color&nbsp;getDefault()&nbsp;{&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;return&nbsp;UNKNOWN;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;}&nbsp;&nbsp;public enum Color { RED("RED"), GREEN("GREEN"), BLUE("BLUE"), UNKNOWN("UNKNOWN"); private final String value; Color(String value) { this.value = value; } public static Color fromValue(String value) { if (value != null) { for (Color color : values()) { if (color.value.equals(value)) { return color; } } } // you may return a default value return getDefault(); // or throw an exception // throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid color: " + value); } public String toValue() { return value; } public static Color getDefault() { return UNKNOWN; } } This approach is better than approach 1 and approach 2 above. It neither depends on the order in which the enum constants are declared nor on the constant names.
kuni katsuya

Plugins - Jenkins - Jenkins Wiki - 0 views

  • Git Plugin — This plugin allows use of Git as a build SCM
  • Subversion Plugin — This plugin adds the Subversion support (via SVNKit) to Jenkins
  • Subversion Release Manager — This plugin allows you to set up a job in Hudson for building specific revisions of a project.
  • ...77 more annotations...
  • Subversion Tagging Plugin — This plugin automatically performs subversion tagging (technically speaking svn copy) on successful build.
  • ViewVC Plugin — This plugin integrates ViewVC browser interface for CVS and Subversion with Hudson.
  • Source code management
  • Build Pipeline Plugin — This plugin creates a pipeline of Hudson\Jenkins jobs and gives a view so that you can visualise it.
  • Build tools
  • JBoss Management Plugin — This plugin allows to manage a JBoss Application Server during build procedure
  • Maven 2 Project Plugin — Jenkin's Maven 2 project type
  • Phing Plugin — This plugin allows you to use Phing to build PHP projects.
  • Post build task — This plugin allows the user to execute a shell/batch task depending on the build log output. Java regular expression are allowed.
  • Promoted Builds Plugin — This plugin allows you to distinguish good builds from bad builds by introducing the notion of 'promotion'.
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • Selenium AES Plugin — This plugin is for continuous regression test by Selenium Auto Exec Server (AES).
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Unicorn Validation Plugin — This plugin uses W3C's Unified Validator, which helps improve the quality of Web pages by performing a variety of checks.
  • Build wrappers
  • Android Emulator Plugin — Lets you automatically generate, launch and interact with an Android emulator during a build, with the emulator logs being captured as artifacts.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Build Keeper Plugin — Select a policy for automatically marking builds as "keep forever" to enable long term analysis trending when discarding old builds - or use to protect logs and artifacts from certain builds
  • Build Name Setter Plugin — This plugin sets the display name of a build to something other than #1, #2, #3, ...
  • SSH plugin — You can use the SSH Plugin to run shell commands on a remote machine via ssh.
  • SeleniumRC Plugin — This plugin allows you to create Selenium server instance for each project build.
  • Vagrant Plugin — This plugin allows booting of Vagrant virtual machines, provisioning them and also executing scripts inside of them
  • Timestamper — Adds timestamps to the Console Output.
  • VirtualBox Plugin — This plugin integrates Jenkins with VirtualBox&nbsp;(version 3, 4.0 and 4.1) virtual machine.
  • Version Number Plugin — This plugin creates a new version number and stores it in the environment variable whose name you specify in the configuration.
  • VMware plugin — This plugin allows you to start a VMware Virtual Machine before a build and stop it again after the build completes.
  • AWS Cloudformation Plugin — A plugin that allows for the creation of cloud formation stacks before running the build and the deletion of them after the build is completed.
  • Desktop Notifier for Jenkins — This is useful for those who are looking for a Desktop Notifier for Jenkins builds to automatically notify you about failed builds directly from their desktops.
  • Email-ext plugin — This plugin allows you to configure every aspect of email notifications. You can customize when an email is sent, who should receive it, and what the email says.
  • Google Calendar Plugin — This plugin publishes build records over to Google Calendar
  • HTML5 Notifier Plugin — Provides W3C Web Notifications support for builds.
  • Jabber Plugin — Integrates Jenkins with the Jabber/XMPP instant messaging protocol. Note that you also need to install the instant-messaging plugin.
  • Build reports
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program.&nbsp;
  • Clover PHP Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture code coverage reports from PHPUnit. For more information on how to set up PHP projects with Jenkins have a look at the Template for Jenkins Jobs for PHP Projects.
  • Crap4J Plugin — This plugin reads the "crappy methods" report from Crap4J. Hudson will generate the trend report of crap percentage and provide detailed information about changes.
  • Dependency Analyzer Plugin — This plugin parses dependency:analyze goal from maven build logs and generates a dependency report
  • Dependency Graph View Plugin — Shows a dependency graph of the projects using graphviz. Requires a graphviz installation on the server.
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code.&nbsp;
  • Grinder Plugin — This plugin reads output result files from Grinder performance tests, and will generate reports showing test results for every build and trend reports showing performance results across builds.
  • JSUnit plugin — This plugin allows you publish JSUnit test results
  • Performance Plugin — This plugin allows you to capture reports from JMeter and JUnit . Hudson will generate graphic charts with the trend report of performance and robustness.
  • PerfPublisher Plugin — This plugin generates global and trend reports for tests results analysis. Based on an open XML tests results format, the plugin parses the generated files and publish statistics, reports and analysis on the current health of the project.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program.&nbsp;
  • Sonar plugin — Quickly benefit from Sonar, an open-source dashboard based on many analysis tools like Checkstyle, PMD and Cobertura.
  • testng-plugin — This plugin allows you to publish TestNG results.
  • Violations — This plug-in generates reports static code violation detectors such as checkstyle, pmd, cpd, findbugs, codenarc, fxcop, stylecop and simian.
  • xUnit Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to publish the test results of an execution of a testing tool in Jenkins.
  • Artifact uploaders
  • ArtifactDeployer Plugin — This plugin makes it possible to copy artifacts to remote locations.
  • Artifactory Plugin — This plugin allows deploying Maven 2, Maven 3, Ivy and Gradle artifacts and build info to the Artifactory artifacts manager.
  • Confluence Publisher Plugin — This plugin allows you to publish build artifacts as attachments to an Atlassian Confluence wiki page.
  • Deploy Plugin — This plugin takes a war/ear file and deploys that to a running remote application server at the end of a build
  • FTP-Publisher Plugin — This plugin can be used to upload project artifacts and whole directories to an ftp server.
  • HTML Publisher Plugin
  • Publish Over FTP Plugin — Publish files over FTP
  • Publish Over SSH Plugin — Publish files and/or execute commands over SSH (SCP using SFTP)
  • S3 Plugin — Upload build artifacts to Amazon S3
  • SCP plugin — This plugin uploads build artifacts to repository sites using SCP (SSH) protocol.
  • Hudson Helper for Android — Monitor your CI builds right from your Android device.
  • Hudson Mobi, the iPhone, iPod and Android client for Hudson CI — The iPhone, iPod and iPad client for Hudson CI monitoring on the road.
  • Hudson Monitor for Android — Monitor and display the status of your builds on your Android™ phone.
  • External site/tool integrations
  • Jira Issue Updater Plugin — This is a Jenkins plugin which updates issues in Atlassian Jira (by changing their status and adding a comment) as part of a Jenkins job.
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • ChuckNorris Plugin — Displays a picture of Chuck Norris (instead of Jenkins the butler) and a random Chuck Norris 'The Programmer' fact on each build page.
  • UI plugins
  • Active Directory plugin — With this plugin, you can configure Jenkins to authenticate the username and the password through Active Directory.
  • Audit Trail Plugin — Keep a log of who performed particular Jenkins operations, such as configuring jobs.
  • JClouds Plugin — This plugin uses JClouds to provide slave launching on most of the currently usable Cloud infrastructures.
  • Checkstyle Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for Checkstyle, an open source static code analysis program.&nbsp;
  • FindBugs Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for FindBugs, an open source program which uses static analysis to look for bugs in Java code.&nbsp;
  • JIRA Plugin — This plugin integrates Atlassian JIRA to Jenkins.
  • M2 Release Plugin — This plugin allows you to perform a release build using the maven-release-plugin from within Jenkins.
  • PMD Plugin — This plugin generates the trend report for PMD, an open source static code analysis program.&nbsp;
  • Meme Generator Plugin — Generate Meme images when a build fails (and returns to stable), and post them on the project page.
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