
Authoritative.
Strategic.

Expert One-on-One J2EE Development without EJB shows Java developers and architects how to build robust J2EE applications without having to use Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB). This practical, code-intensive guide provides best practices for using simpler and more effective methods and tools, including JavaServer pages, servlets, and lightweight frameworks.
What does this book cover?
The book begins by examining the limits of EJB technology — what it does well and not so well. Then the authors guide you through alternatives to EJB that you can use to create higher quality applications faster and at lower cost — both agile methods as well as new classes of tools that have evolved over the past few years.
They then dive into the details, showing solutions based on the lightweight framework they pioneered on SourceForge — one of the most innovative open source communities. They demonstrate how to leverage practical techniques and tools, including the popular open source Spring Framework and Hibernate. This book also guides you through productive solutions to core problems, such as transaction management, persistence, remoting, and Web tier design. You will examine how these alternatives affect testing, performance, and scalability, and discover how lightweight architectures can slash time and effort on many projects.
What will you learn from this book?
Here are some details on what you'll find in this book:
Juergen Hoeller is a Senior Systems architect and Consultant at werk3AT, a company that delivers complex web solutions and provides J2EE-based consulting in Austria.
Juergen has a masters degree in Computer Science from the University of Linz, specializing in Java, OO modeling, and software engineering. He has worked on a wide range of projects with numerous J2EE application servers, ranging from enterprise application integration to web-based data visualization.
Juergen has particular experience in developing J2EE web applications, O/R mapping, and transaction management. Juergen is co-lead of the Spring Framework and active in many community forums, including TheServerSide.
Introduction.
Chapter 1: Why “J2EE without EJB”?
Chapter 2: Goals.
Chapter 3: Architectures.
Chapter 4: The Simplicity Dividend.
Chapter 5: EJB, Five Years On.
Chapter 6: Lightweight Containers and Inversion of Control.
Chapter 7: Introducing the Spring Framework.
Chapter 8: Declarative Middleware Using AOP Concepts.
Chapter 9: Transaction Management.
Chapter 10: Persistence.
Chapter 11: Remoting.
Chapter 12: Replacing Other EJB Services.
Chapter 13: Web Tier Design.
Chapter 14: Unit Testing and Testability.
Chapter 15: Performance and Scalability.
Chapter 16: The Sample Application.
Chapter 17: Conclusion.
Last words.
Index.
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