| 1. Special Edition Using Enterprise JavaBeans 2.0 |
| 2. Table of Contents |
| 3. Copyright | Copyright Copyright 2002 by Que Corporation Trademarks Warning and Disclaimer Credits Dedication |
| 4. About the Authors | About the Authors |
| 5. Acknowledgments | Acknowledgments |
| 6. Tell Us What You Think | Tell Us What You Think |
| 7. Introduction | Introduction |
| 8. This Book Is for You | This Book Is for You |
| 9. How This Book Is Organized | How This Book Is Organized |
| 10. Conventions Used in This Book | Conventions Used in This Book |
| 11. Part I: Developing Enterprise JavaBeans |
| 12. Chapter 1. Introduction to Enterprise Applications | Chapter 1. Introduction to Enterprise Applications |
| 13. The Enterprise JavaBeans Architecture | The Enterprise JavaBeans Architecture |
| 14. Component-Based Distributed Computing | Component-Based Distributed Computing |
| 15. N-Tiered Architectures | N-Tiered Architectures |
| 16. Why Use EJB? | Why Use EJB? |
| 17. Chapter 2. Setting the StageAn Example Auction Site | Chapter 2. Setting the StageAn Example Auction Site |
| 18. The Auction Example | The Auction Example |
| 19. Overview of an English Auction | Overview of an English Auction |
| 20. Choosing the Use Cases to Implement | Choosing the Use Cases to Implement |
| 21. Defining the Object Model | Defining the Object Model |
| 22. What s Next? | What s Next? |
| 23. Chapter 3. EJB Concepts | Chapter 3. EJB Concepts |
| 24. Grasping the Concepts Early | Grasping the Concepts Early |
| 25. What Is an Enterprise Bean? | What Is an Enterprise Bean? |
| 26. EJB Roles and Their Responsibilities | EJB Roles and Their Responsibilities |
| 27. Local Versus Remote EJB Clients | Local Versus Remote EJB Clients |
| 28. Using RMI to Communicate with Enterprise JavaBeans | Using RMI to Communicate with Enterprise JavaBeans |
| 29. Accessing an EJB Through Its Component Interface | Accessing an EJB Through Its Component Interface |
| 30. Locating Enterprise Beans Using the Home Interface | Locating Enterprise Beans Using the Home Interface |
| 31. Deciding Whether to Use a Local or Remote Client | Deciding Whether to Use a Local or Remote Client |
| 32. Creation and Removal of EJBs | Creation and Removal of EJBs |
| 33. Passivation and Activation | Passivation and Activation |
| 34. Object Pooling | Object Pooling |
| 35. Handles | Handles |
| 36. The EJBMetaData Class | The EJBMetaData Class |
| 37. EJB Server and Container Implementations | EJB Server and Container Implementations |
| 38. Chapter 4. Java Naming and Directory Interface | Chapter 4. Java Naming and Directory Interface |
| 39. Why Applications Need Naming and Directory Services | Why Applications Need Naming and Directory Services |
| 40. Overview of the JNDI Architecture | Overview of the JNDI Architecture |
| 41. Selecting and Configuring a JNDI Provider | Selecting and Configuring a JNDI Provider |
| 42. The JNDI Environment Properties | The JNDI Environment Properties |
| 43. Setting the JNDI Environment Properties | Setting the JNDI Environment Properties |
| 44. The Context and InitialContext Objects | The Context and InitialContext Objects |
| 45. Getting the Environment for a | Getting the Environment for a Context Object |
| 46. Using the lookup Method to Locate JNDI Resources | Using the lookup Method to Locate JNDI Resources |
| 47. Locating EJB Objects | Locating EJB Objects |
| 48. Accessing an EJB s Environment | Accessing an EJB s Environment |
| 49. Establishing Security Through the InitialContext | Establishing Security Through the InitialContext |
| 50. JNDI and Clustering | JNDI and Clustering |
|
|
Authors: Cavaness Ch. Keeton B. ISBN: 0789725673 Current page: 1 from 223 This Ebooks free are presented on flylib.comOur library present to you materials from book Special Edition Using Enterprise JavaBeans 2.0. Warning! The page Table of content from this book is informational only! Do not print out this page! Do NOT SUBMIT this page as part of your website or work without confirmation from the authors. You can read the contents of the book, but we strongly recommend that you purchase. or example, you can Buy this book on Amazon.com |