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Enterprise Architect - Product Demonstrations - 0 views

  • Part 2 Subversion Setting up a Subversion repository for use with Enterprise Architect models.
  • Part 4 Configure & Connect Configuring Enterprise Architect and connecting to your Version Control system.
  • Part 5 Controlled Packages Working with version controlled UML packages in Enterprise Architect.
  • ...19 more annotations...
  • Eclipse A tour of MDG Integration for Eclipse.
  • Baseline Diagram Comparison Conduct a visual diagram comparison between your current diagram and a previous baseline .
  • Personal Information Window See how the Personal Information Window in Enterprise Architect can help you organize your daily tasks and workflow.
  • Working Sets As you perform work on your model, you open various windows, diagrams and views. Working Sets allow you to return to these same views in a later work session.
  • Business Rules A car rental system is used to illustrate how to generate executable business rules using Enterprise Architect.
  • Menu Customization Quickly and easily suppress individual menu items or entire categories of commands to create custom menu layouts.
  • Floating and Dockable Windows Save the position and layout of Floating and Dockable Windows using a Working Set in the Personal Information Window.
  • Build and Debug a Java Application Set up Enterprise Architect to build and debug a Java Application, using a VEA sample project.
  • Sequence Diagrams Learn how to create a simple Sequence diagram. The video also illustrates how to bring your Sequence diagram to life using model simulation.
  • HTML Report Generation This brief introduction illustrates how to automatically generate a HTML Report using Enterprise Architect.
  • Basic Use Case Demonstration A guide to constructing a Use Case model in under 30 seconds, including use cases, notes and issues.
  • Traceability within Enterprise Architect This video examines Traceability and discusses how to use Enterprise Architect to conduct an Impact Analysis.
  • Requirements Reporting A brief overview of requirements reporting in Enterprise Architect. Topics include document generation in web and RTF formats, report customization and virtual documents, including Model and Master documents.
  • Requirements Traceability An examination of requirements traceability in Enterprise Architect. Topics include traceability views, tracing to external artifacts, conducting an impact analysis, viewing the Relationship Matrix and using Enterprise Architect's Auditing capabilities.
  • Requirements Modeling A brief overview of requirements modeling in Enterprise Architect. Topics include requirements capture and definition, custom properties, tabular editing, auto-naming and screen prototypes.
  • Installing EA An introductory walk through and discussion of Enterprise Architect in the Software Development Lifecycle.
  • Enterprise Architect 7.5 Overview An overview of Enterprise Architect features released with version 7.5.
  • Introduction to Enterprise Architect An introductory walk through and discussion of Enterprise Architect in the Software Development Lifecycle.
  • Brief Overview The 10 minute guide to Enterprise Architect, from Requirements Management and Business Process Modeling to MDA and Code Engineering.
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Article Series: Migrating Spring Applications to Java EE 6 - Part 3 | How to JBoss - 0 views

  • Stateless Session Bean is transactional by default
  • In this article we will discuss migrating the DAO layer, AOP and JMX
  • Migrating JDBC templates
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • In general, JDBC Templates are a poor solution. They don’t have enough abstraction to work on different databases because you use plain SQL in queries. There is also no real ORM mapping which results in quite a lot of boilerplate code
  • SimpleJdbcTemplate(ds)
  • @InterceptorBinding
  •  
    Stateless Session Bean is transactional by default.
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Import Binary Module [Enterprise Architect User Guide] - 0 views

  • Import Binary Module
  • To import a binary module, right-click on the target package in the Project Browser and select the Code Engineering | Import Binary Module context menu option
    • kuni katsuya
       
      note: the file dialog that opens after selecting 'import binary module' opens with filtering for .net binaries, so .jars won't be visible. change filter to .jar and happy happy
    • kuni katsuya
       
      eg. to import jdk classes, import C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_05\jre\lib\rt.jar
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Java Archive (.jar)
  • Do not import private members checkbox excludes private members from libraries from being imported into the model
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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.  First, you must make the JDBC driver available to the application server; then you can configure the data source itself.  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.  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
  • <module xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.0" name="com.mysql">  <resources>    <resource-root path="mysql-connector-java-5.1.15.jar"/>  </resources>  <dependencies>    <module name="javax.api"/>  </dependencies></module>
  • jboss-7.0.0.<release>/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.  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
  •    <datasource jndi-name="java:jboss/datasources/MySqlDS" pool-name="MySqlDS">      <connection-url>jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/EJB3</connection-url>         <driver>com.mysql</driver>
  •     <drivers>      <driver name="com.mysql" module="com.mysql">        <xa-datasource-class>com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlXADataSource</xa-datasource-class>      </driver>    </drivers>
  • jboss-7.0.0.<release>/domain/configuration/domain.xml or jboss-7.0.0.<release>/standalone/configuration/standalone.xml
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Enterprise JavaBeans 3.1 with Contexts and Dependency Injection: The Perfect Synergy - 0 views

  • stateless EJB 3.1 bean as boundary (Facade)
  • injected managed beans (controls)
  • @Inject
  • ...22 more annotations...
  • @Inject
  • CDI managed beans. The @EJB annotation is removed and @Inject is used instead
  • Annotating the boundary (Cart) with the @Named annotation makes the Cart immediately visible for expression language (EL) expressions in JSP and JSF
  • @Named annotation takes the simple name of the annotated class, puts the first character in lowercase, and exposes it directly to the JSF pages (or JSP). The Cart bean can be accessed directly, without any backed or managed beans, by the JSF pages: <h:commandButton value="Check out!" action="#{cart.checkout}" />
  • If there is a need for abstraction, the class can be turned into an interface (or abstract class)
  • local implementation (with CDI events
  • @Inject Event<String> event;
  • event.fire("Order proceeded!");
  • remote implementation:
  • javax.enterprise.event.Event belongs to the CDI-implementation
  • class Event can be considered to be a lightweight alternative to the java.beans.PropertyChangeSupport class
  • @Inject Event<String> event;
  • event.fire("Order proceeded!");
  • event can be received by any managed bean and also by EJB beans
  • provide a method with a single @Observes annotated parameter
  • @Observes String event
  • there is no real event, just the payload:
  • The during attribute in the @Observes annotation allows you to select in which transactional phase the event gets delivered. The default setting is IN_PROGRESS, which causes an immediate event delivery regardless of the transaction outcome. The AFTER_SUCCESS configuration causes the delivery to occur only after successful transaction completion
  • Although CDI events work only inside a single process (in the default case, CDI is extensible), they are perfectly suitable for decoupling packages from modules
  • The method checkout() starts a transaction that gets "reused" by the OrderSystem and CustomerNotification session beans
  • ordering.placeOrder(); notifier.sendNotification();
    • kuni katsuya
       
      both run within same transaction
  • EJB beans cannot be directly exposed to JSF or JSP without a little help from CDI
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Part 3 of dependency injection in Java EE 6 - 1 views

  • powerful way of formalizing the recurring bean roles that often arise as a result of application architectural patterns
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Java Persistence/Transactions - Wikibooks, open books for an open world - 0 views

  • JTA transactions are
  • implicitly defined through SessionBean usage/methods. In a SessionBean normally each SessionBean method invocation defines a JTA transaction.
  • JTA Transactions
  • ...10 more annotations...
  • In JEE managed mode, such as an EntityManager injected into a SessionBean, the EntityManager reference, represents a new persistence context for each transaction. This means objects read in one transaction become detached after the end of the transaction, and should no longer be used, or need to be merged into the next transaction. In managed mode, you never create or close an EntityManager.
  • Transactions
  • operations that are committed or rolled back as a single unit
  • JPA provides two mechanisms for transactions
  • JTA (Java Transaction API
  • EntityTransaction
  • all changes made to all persistent objects in the persistence context are part of the transaction.
  • Nested Transactions
  • do not support nested transactions
  • JPA and JTA
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Value Object vs. Data Transfer Object (VO vs. DTO) : Adam Bien's Weblog - 0 views

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