| | Copyright |
| | Preface |
| | | What's New in This Edition |
| | | Contents of This Book |
| | | Java Programming Resources |
| | | Examples Online |
| | | Conventions Used in This Book |
| | | Using Code Examples |
| | | Safari® Enabled |
| | | Comments and Questions |
| | | Acknowledgments |
| | Part I: The Java Enterprise APIs |
| | | Chapter 1. Introduction |
| | | Section 1.1. Enterprise Computing Defined |
| | | Section 1.2. Enterprise Computing Demystified |
| | | Section 1.3. Standard Java Enterprise APIs |
| | | Section 1.4. De Facto Standard Enterprise Development Tools |
| | | Section 1.5. An Enterprise Computing Scenario |
| | | Section 1.6. Other Enterprise APIs |
| | | Chapter 2. Application Assembly and Deployment |
| | | Section 2.1. J2EE Application Assembly Model |
| | | Section 2.2. Component Modules |
| | | Section 2.3. Application Assemblies |
| | | Section 2.4. Deploying J2EE Applications |
| | | Chapter 3. Java Servlets |
| | | Section 3.1. Getting a Servlet Environment |
| | | Section 3.2. Servlet Basics |
| | | Section 3.3. Web Applications |
| | | Section 3.4. Servlet Requests |
| | | Section 3.5. Servlet Responses |
| | | Section 3.6. Custom Servlet Initialization |
| | | Section 3.7. Security |
| | | Section 3.8. Servlet Filters |
| | | Section 3.9. Thread Safety |
| | | Section 3.10. Cookies |
| | | Section 3.11. Session Tracking |
| | | Section 3.12. Databases and Non-HTML Content |
| | | Chapter 4. JavaServer Pages |
| | | Section 4.1. JSP Basics |
| | | Section 4.2. JSP Actions |
| | | Section 4.3. The JSP Expression Language |
| | | Section 4.4. JSP Standard Tag Library |
| | | Section 4.5. Custom Tags |
| | | Section 4.6. Wrapping Up |
| | | Chapter 5. JavaServer Faces |
| | | Section 5.1. The Sample Application |
| | | Section 5.2. Structure of a JSF Application |
| | | Section 5.3. Managed Beans |
| | | Section 5.4. The JSF Expression Language |
| | | Section 5.5. JSF Actions and Views |
| | | Section 5.6. Building Tables |
| | | Section 5.7. Validation |
| | | Section 5.8. Moving on with JSF |
| | | Chapter 6. Enterprise JavaBeans |
| | | Section 6.1. What Version Is Covered Here? |
| | | Section 6.2. EJB Component Model Overview |
| | | Section 6.3. EJB Tutorial |
| | | Section 6.4. Deploying EJBs |
| | | Section 6.5. Using Enterprise JavaBeans |
| | | Section 6.6. Session Bean Specifics |
| | | Section 6.7. Entity Beans |
| | | Section 6.8. Message-Driven Beans |
| | | Section 6.9. Transaction Management |
| | | Section 6.10. EJB 3.0 |
| | | Chapter 7. Java and XML |
| | | Section 7.1. Using XML Documents |
| | | Section 7.2. Java API for XML Processing |
| | | Section 7.3. SAX |
| | | Section 7.4. DOM |
| | | Section 7.5. XSLT |
| | | Chapter 8. JDBC |
| | | Section 8.1. JDBC Architecture |
| | | Section 8.2. Connecting to the Database |
| | | Section 8.3. Statements |
| | | Section 8.4. Results |
| | | Section 8.5. Handling Errors |
| | | Section 8.6. Prepared Statements |
| | | Section 8.7. BLOBs and CLOBs |
| | | Section 8.8. Metadata |
| | | Section 8.9. Transactions |
| | | Section 8.10. Stored Procedures |
| | | Section 8.11. Escape Sequences |
| | | Section 8.12. RowSets |
| | | Chapter 9. JNDI |
| | | Section 9.1. JNDI Architecture |
| | | Section 9.2. A Simple Example |
| | | Section 9.3. Introducing the Context |
| | | Section 9.4. Looking Up Objects in a Context |
| | | Section 9.5. The NamingShell Application |
| | | Section 9.6. Listing the Children of a Context |
| | | Section 9.7. Creating and Destroying Contexts |
| | | Section 9.8. Binding Objects |
| | | Section 9.9. Accessing Directory Services |
| | | Section 9.10. Modifying Directory Entries |
| | | Section 9.11. Creating Directory Entries |
| | | Section 9.12. Searching a Directory |
| | | Section 9.13. Event Notification |
| | | Chapter 10. J2EE Security |
| | | Section 10.1. Basic Security Concepts |
| | | Section 10.2. A Look at Java and J2EE Security Standards |
| | | Section 10.3. Declarative Security Versus Programmatic Security |
| | | Section 10.4. Web Component Security |
| | | Section 10.5. EJB Component Security |
| | | Section 10.6. Other J2EE Security Topics |
| | | Section 10.7. Limitations of J2EE Security |
| | | Chapter 11. Java Message Service |
| | | Section 11.1. JMS in the J2EE Environment |
| | | Section 11.2. Elements of Messaging with JMS |
| | | Section 11.3. The Anatomy of Messages |
| | | Section 11.4. Point-to-Point Messaging |
| | | Section 11.5. Publish-Subscribe Messaging |
| | | Section 11.6. Unified Messaging |
| | | Section 11.7. Transactional Messaging |
| | | Chapter 12. Web Services with JAX-RPC and SAAJ |
| | | Section 12.1. What's Covered Here? |
| | | Section 12.2. Brief Introduction to Web Services |
| | | Section 12.3. Java Web Services |
| | | Section 12.4. Writing Web Service Clients |
| | | Section 12.5. Writing Web Services |
| | | Section 12.6. Deploying Web Services |
| | | Chapter 13. Remote Method Invocation |
| | | Section 13.1. What's Covered Here? |
| | | Section 13.2. Introduction to RMI |
| | | Section 13.3. Defining Remote Objects |
| | | Section 13.4. Creating the Stubs and Skeletons |
| | | Section 13.5. Accessing Remote Objects as a Client |
| | | Section 13.6. Dynamic Classloading |
| | | Section 13.7. Remote Object Activation |
| | | Section 13.8. RMI and Native Method Calls |
| | | Section 13.9. RMI Over IIOP |
| | | Chapter 14. Java IDL (CORBA) |
| | | Section 14.1. A Note on Evolving Standards |
| | | Section 14.2. The CORBA Architecture |
| | | Section 14.3. Creating CORBA Objects |
| | | Section 14.4. Putting It in the Public Eye |
| | | Section 14.5. Finding and Using Remote Objects |
| | | Section 14.6. What If I Don't Have the Interface? |
| | | Chapter 15. JavaMail |
| | | Section 15.1. Email and JavaMail |
| | | Section 15.2. Creating and Sending Messages |
| | | Section 15.3. Retrieving Messages |
| | | Section 15.4. Multipart Messages |
| | | Chapter 16. Transactions |
| | | Section 16.1. Transaction Overview |
| | | Section 16.2. Programmatic Transactions Versus Declarative Transactions |
| | | Section 16.3. Optimistic Concurrency |
| | | Section 16.4. EJB Transaction Management |
| | | Section 16.5. Some Common Programming Scenarios |
| | | Section 16.6. Transaction Best Practices |
| | Part II: Open Source Enterprise Tools |
| | | Chapter 17. Ant |
| | | Section 17.1. What Version Is Covered Here? |
| | | Section 17.2. Ant Overview |
| | | Section 17.3. Ant Fundamentals |
| | | Section 17.4. Core Tasks |
| | | Section 17.5. Enterprise Tasks |
| | | Section 17.6. Creating Portable Build Processes |
| | | Chapter 18. JUnit and Cactus |
| | | Section 18.1. What's Covered Here? |
| | | Section 18.2. Unit Testing Concepts |
| | | Section 18.3. JUnit Overview |
| | | Section 18.4. Using JUnit with Ant |
| | | Section 18.5. Testing Enterprise Components with Cactus |
| | | Chapter 19. Struts |
| | | Section 19.1. The Scope of Struts |
| | | Section 19.2. The Sample Application |
| | | Section 19.3. The Development Process with Struts |
| | | Section 19.4. The Struts Controller |
| | | Section 19.5. The Action Class |
| | | Section 19.6. Views in Struts |
| | | Section 19.7. Struts Tags |
| | | Section 19.8. Struts Plug-ins |
| | | Section 19.9. DynaActionForms and the Struts Validator |
| | | Chapter 20. Hibernate |
| | | Section 20.1. The Sample Application |
| | | Section 20.2. Principles of Hibernate |
| | | Section 20.3. Configuration and Mapping |
| | | Section 20.4. The Hibernate API |
| | | Section 20.5. HQL (Hibernate Query Language) |
| | | Section 20.6. Hibernate Services |
| | | Section 20.7. Conclusion |
| | | Chapter 21. Annotations with XDoclet and J2SE Metadata |
| | | Section 21.1. What's Covered Here? |
| | | Section 21.2. What Are Code Annotations? |
| | | Section 21.3. Annotation Tools |
| | | Section 21.4. XDoclet Tutorial |
| | | Section 21.5. J2SE Annotations Tutorial |
| | Part III: Appendixes |
| | | Appendix A. J2EE Deployment Descriptor Reference |
| | | Section A.1. Web Components (web.xml) |
| | | Section A.2. Enterprise JavaBeans (ejb-jar.xml) |
| | | Section A.3. Application Archives (application .xml) |
| | | Section A.4. Web Services (webservices.xml) |
| | | Section A.5. Web Service Java/WSDL Mappings |
| | | Appendix B. JavaServer Faces Tag Libraries |
| | | Section B.1. JSF Core Tags |
| | | Section B.2. JSF HTML Tags |
| | | Appendix C. Enterprise JavaBeans Query Language Syntax |
| | | Section C.1. Basic Structure of EJB QL Queries |
| | | Section C.2. FROM Clause |
| | | Section C.3. SELECT Clause |
| | | Section C.4. WHERE Clause |
| | | Section C.5. ORDER BY Clause |
| | | Appendix D. SQL Reference |
| | | Section D.1. Relational Databases |
| | | Section D.2. Data Types |
| | | Section D.3. Schema Manipulation Commands |
| | | Section D.4. Data Manipulation Commands |
| | | Section D.5. Functions |
| | | Section D.6. Return Codes |
| | | Appendix E. JMS Message Selector Syntax |
| | | Section E.1. Structure of a Selector |
| | | Section E.2. Identifiers |
| | | Section E.3. Literals |
| | | Section E.4. Operators |
| | | Section E.5. Expressions |
| | | Appendix F. FRMI Tools |
| | | rmic: The Java RMI Compiler |
| | | rmid: The RMI Activation Daemon |
| | | rmiregistry: The Java RMI Object Registry |
| | | serialver: The RMI Serial Version Utility |
| | | Appendix G. IDL Reference |
| | | Section G.1. IDL Keywords |
| | | Section G.2. Identifiers |
| | | Section G.3. Comments |
| | | Section G.4. Basic Data Types |
| | | Section G.5. Constants and Literals |
| | | Section G.6. Naming Scopes |
| | | Section G.7. User-Defined Data Types |
| | | Section G.8. Exceptions |
| | | Section G.9. Module Declarations |
| | | Section G.10. Interface Declarations |
| | | Section G.11. Value Type Declarations |
| | | Appendix H. HJava IDL Tools |
| | | idlj: The Java IDL Compiler |
| | | orbd: Naming Service Daemon |
| | | servertool |
| | | tnameserv: Transient Naming Service Daemon |
| | About the Authors |
| | Colophon |
| | Index |