Synopses & Reviews
Beginning Database-Driven Application Development in Java? EE: Using GlassFish? focuses on the open source GlassFish persistence engine. This book shows Java programmers how to develop applications utilizing relational database technologies with examples using Oracle and MySQL and the GlassFish application development framework and deployment platform all based on Java EE.The book explains in detail how you can organize your Java EE solution into a multilayer architecture, placing most emphasis on how to implement the persistence and database tiers of an application. Through many examples, this book shows how you can efficiently use the Java Persistence features available in the Java EE platform. Find out how you can greatly simplify the task of building the persistence layer of your Java EE application by moving some application logic into the underlying database, utilizing database views, stored programs, and triggers. The book also explains how to deploy Java EE applications to GlassFish, a free, open source Java EE 5?compliant application server. What you?ll learn Use the GlassFish persistence layer in conjunction with GlassFish Java EE application server. Organize the database and persistence tiers of a Java EE application and utilize MySQL or Oracle database applications when building the database tier. Work with EJB 3 JPA object/relational mapping features, plug JPA into Java EE transactional environment, and implement persistence with the EJB 3 EntityManager. Integrate and use JSF (web?tier) using GlassFish JSF Framework (Scales) and other JSF tools/frameworks. Deploy applications to GlassFish Application Server. Who this book is for
The book is appropriate for Java developers who want to learn how to develop Java EE applications interacting with a relational database via the Java Persistence API (JPA) and then deploy them to the open source GlassFish Application Server.
Synopsis
This book lets Java developers build Java EE applications interacting with a relational database via the Java Persistence API (JPA) and an open source implementation in Toplink. Then, the developer is able to deploy using the GlassFish Application Server.
Synopsis
A noted software developer focuses on the open source TopLink persistence engine as a likely replacement for Hibernate long term. TopLink resides under the emerging official agile lightweight GlassFish application development framework and deployment platform project based on Java EE.
Synopsis
Written by Oracle and Java expert Yuli Vasiliev, Beginning GlassFish Toplink is likely the first book that covers the open source lightweight GlassFish TopLink persistence engine (like Hibernate). Also, it is expected to be the first beginning level book on the next key open source agile Java persistence tool to possibly replace Hibernate.
Both GlassFish and TopLink are open source projects heavily backed by Sun and Oracle. TopLink. GlassFish is the broader umbrella project that contains TopLink as a subproject persistence framework, an emerging JSF framework and GlassFish Java EE application server, primarily. GlassFish is essentially a platform that takes Java EE and makes it practical and easy to use, similar to JBoss Seam and app server.
This book lets Java developers build Java EE applications interacting with a relational database via the Java Persistence API (JPA) and an open source implementation in Toplink. Then, the developer is able to deploy using the GlassFish Application Server.