Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
2. What is EJB-Container?
Transaction Management
Security
Resource and life cycle management
Remote Accessibility
Concurrency control
Clustering and load-balancing
3. Enterprise Beans
What is an enterprise bean
Benefits of enterprise beans
When to use enterprise beans
Types of enterprise beans
5. Annotations
To make the development easier and execution of the programs fast and efficient sun
micro system added the features like annotation in jdk 5. The main objectives behind the
development of annotations is to make the development easier. Annotations behaves like
the meta
6. Session Beans
What is a session bean
Types of session beans
Stateless Session Bean
Stateful session bean
When to use session bean
Life Cycle of Stateless session
Life Cycle of Stateful session bean
WSDL
SOAP
Implementing Web Services
Packaging and Deploying a Web Service Session Bean
Implementing a Web Service Client
14. EJB remote interface
The program given below describes the way of creating a remote interface in EJB. The
meaning of Remote interface in terms of Ejb is the java source file which contain the
bean implementation logic.
15. Ejb message driven bean
This tutorial explains you the process which are involved in making a message driven
bean using EJB.
Application Server
An application server is an application program that accepts connections in order to service
requests, by sending back responses. An application server can run remotely (connected to
client through a computer network) or can exist on the same computer where the client application
is running. Examples include file server, database server, backup server, print server, mail server,
web server, FTP server, application server, VPN server, DHCP server, DNS server, WINS server,
logon server, security server, domain controller, backup domain controller, proxy server,
firewall, etc.
Application server are developed to support the quick development of the enterprise applications.
They provide security and state maintenance with the data base and persistence.
An application server may be a part of a three tier architecture model. A three tier architecture
includes the Client Tier, Middle Tier and the EIS (Enterprise Information System
) Tier. It may consists of Presentation Tier (as the GUI interface), Middle Tier as the collection
of business logic application and the EIS (Enterprise Information System). The view tier is
nothing but the web based graphical user interface to interact with the clients, Middle tier is the
combination of web containers and the EJB containers. EIS contains persistence and the database
management systems to support the applications. JEE Platform requires database to store the
business data. This database is accessible by means of JDBC, JDO or the SQLJ APIs. We can
also access the database through enterprise beans, web components and the application client
components.
EJB Container or EJB Server
An EJB container is nothing but the program that runs on the server and implements the EJB
specifications. EJB container provides special type of the environment suitable for running the
enterprise components. Enterprise beans are used in distributed applications that typically
contains the business logic. The container performs the various tasks few of them are illustrated
below:
Transaction Management: EJB container allows you for transaction management that enables
the transaction services, a low level implementation of transaction management and
coordination. Container uses the Java Transaction APIs to expose the transaction services. JTA, a
high level interface is used to control transactions.
Security: JSE mainly focuses on how to become the environment more secure. Enterprise beans
add this feature to provide transparent security
so that access to the beans can be made secure just by applying the security attributes rather than
coding against the security API.
Resource and Life Cycle Management: EJB container manages the resources like database
connections, threads and socket on behalf of enterprise beans. Container creates, destroys,
registers the objects and also activates and passivates them. The container is also capable of
reusing them whenever required.
Remote Accessibility: A client on the remote machine containing JVM can invoke an enterprise
bean running on the host machine. To support the remote accessibility the container uses the
remote procedure call technology. When the software is developed by using the OOPs concept
then Remote procedure call (RPC) may be referred to as Remote Method Invocation (RMI).
Concurrency Control: Concurrency control is necessary to know the basics of collisions and
type of collisions that can occur. If you are not interested to occur them then you can bypass
them later they will cause to create problems. So try to detect and resolve them. To do so the EJB
Container supports for various types of concurrency controls. First we will concentrate on
collision and then techniques to resolve these collisions.
Collision: A collision can occur when two or more transactions tries to change the entities within
a system of records. There are three types through which two
or more activities may interfere:
• Dirty read
• Non Repeatable read
• Phantom read
Control mechanism: Mainly two mechanism are used to control the concurrency.
• Optimistic Locking
• Pessimistic Locking
Clustering and load-balancing: Clustering is the process of combining the multiple peripherals,
computers and other resources into a single unit. A clustered system then works as load balanced
system. In a distributed system when a request is send to the server, an algorithm running on the
server decides which server has less load and sends the request to that server. EJB container
encapsulates these features to provide smooth and efficient service.
Enterprise Beans
Enterprise beans are the Java EE server side components that run inside the ejb container and
encapsulates the business logic of an enterprise application. Enterprise applications are the
software applications
developed intended to use at large scale. These applications involves large number of data
accessing concurrently by many users. Enterprise beans are used to perform various types of task
like interacting with the client, maintaining session for the clients retrieving and holding data
from the database and communicating with the server.
Benefits of enterprise beans: Enterprise beans are widely used for developing large and
distributed applications. EJB container provides the system-level services (like transaction
management and security authorization) to the enterprise beans. These services simplifies the
development process of large and distributed applications and the developer just have to
concentrate on solving the problem occurred in it.
The client developer can focus only on the representation style of the client as all the business
logic of the application is contained in the enterprise beans. The client developer does not bother
about the code that implements business logic or the logic to access the databases. This means
that the clients are thinner. It benefits the client to be thin because the client runs on the small
devices.
Developing new applications from the existing beans is much easier because the enterprise beans
are portable components. That means applications developed by using the enterprise components
can run on any complaint J2EE server.
When to use the enterprise beans: Some of the points are illustrated below that signifies the
use of enterprise beans.
• Applications developed by using the enterprise beans deal with a variety of clients,
simply by writing few lines of code, so that the client can locate the enterprise beans. The
client locating the enterprise bean may be various, numerous and thin.
• Enterprise beans support transaction to ensure the integrity of the database. Transaction is
the mechanism of managing the concurrent access of shared objects.
• Managing the fast growing number of users requires distributed application components
across multiple machines means that the application must be scalable.
Types of enterprise beans: EJB 3.0 defines two types of enterprise beans. These are:
1. Session bean: These types of beans directly interact with the client and contains business
logic of the business application.
2. Message driven bean: It works like a listener or a consumer for a particular messaging
service such as Java Message API or JPA for short.
Now we will discuss all the above aspects of EJB3.0 that makes the EJB programming model
simple and more efficient.
Elimination of Home and Remote Interfaces: Deprecation of home and remote interfaces
simplifies the development. The new session beans contain all the business methods inside the
business interface. The bean provider designates the business interface as local business interface
or the remote business interface or both according to the client whether it is local or remote.
Business methods on remote interface can throw arbitrary application exceptions, while they are
not allowed to throw java.rmi.RemoteException. While in case of EJB 2.1 all the methods of
home and object interface throws the java.rmi.RemoteException. Package
javax.ejb.EJBException encapsulates exceptions such as protocols, system level problems, or
otherwise that the container returns to the client. Since EJBException is the subclass of the
java.rmi.RemoteException therefore we did not include it in throws clause of business methods.
A message driven bean does not need to include the business interface as there is no direct
interaction of the client with the message driven bean. Whenever a MDB has an unexpected
problem then the container logs the error and communicate it with the help of
javax.ejb.EJBException to the corresponding resource adapter rather than the client.
For example, the container notifies the message driven bean instance that it is about to destroy,
simply by invoking ejbDestroy() method on the corresponding class of the message driven bean.
Bean class can close the JDBC database connection within the ejbDestroy() method to free up the
resources. Similarly the container that is going to associate a client in case of stateful notifies the
bean instance by calling the ejbCreate() method on the bean class and the bean class instantiates
the bean instance. Consider the situation, when the bean does not receive the notification from
the container about its life cycle's methods then the bean has to implement the component
interfaces regardless whether it is needed or not. In case of session bean, the bean class does not
need to implement the javax.ejb.SessionBean or javax.ejb.MessageDrivenBean in case of
message driven bean.
Now the next question that arises is that how a bean class get notified by the container if it is
interested? The solution is that there are two ways to do so, the first one is, the bean provider can
implement a separate bean class that consists of all the callback notification methods that inform
the container to treat it as a listener class. The second way is that, a bean provider can implement
the notification method inside the bean class and designate this method to handle the
corresponding events In both the cases bean class uses annotations. Annotations are the
additional key features of EJB 3.0 specifications. To know about the annotation just click on the
link annotations.
Simplified Access to Environment: Almost all the EJBs are required to access the environment
to gain access to external resources, enterprise beans and other entries like properties. To get
hold of these entries EJB mainly relies on JNDI API. EJB 3.0 also includes the features like
lookup method on the EJBContest and dependency injection to access the bean's dependencies.
Dependency Injection: Dependency injection is the mechanism through which the container
injects the requested environmental entry to make available to the bean instance before any bean
instance is invoked on that particular instance. Then the container injects these entries into bean
variables or methods. It is bean provider's duty to tell the container that which method or
variables should be injected at runtime. The bean provider can do this by using the deployment
descriptor or annotations. Bean methods used for dependency injection should follow the java
naming convention for properties in that they should follow the setXXX() convention.
Consider the situations like dependency injection fails due to some reasons, the container can not
make available the environmental entries due to which the bean is functioning properly, in such
situations the container discards the bean instances and creates new instances.
EJB Context: Bean must know about its environment at runtime such as security principle,
transaction context in which its method is invoked and so on. javax.ejb.EJBContext API works
like a window for the bean to the outside world through which it is interacting to the container.
EJBContext is further categorized into SessionContext and MessageDrivenContext for the
session beans and message driven beans respectively. Bean instances may use the dependency
injection to access EJBContext instance. Another way through which a JNDI accesses the
environment variables is the lookup() method of the EJBContext interface. Bean must use the
JNDI API to access the environmental dependencies.
Enhanced Lifecycle Methods and Callback Listener Classes: EJB 3.0 does not enforce to
implement all unnecessary callback methods but can designate any other method to receive the
notification for life cycle events. We can also use the callback listener class instead of callback
methods defined in the same bean class.
Simple JNDI lookup of EJB: Lookup of the EJB has been simplified so that the client can
directly invoke methods on EJB rather than creating the bean instance simply by invoking create
method on EJB.
Annotations
Sun Microsystem added the features like annotation to make the development easier and more
efficient in jdk 5. The main objective to develop the annotations is to make the development
easier. Annotations behaves like the meta. The literal meaning of meta data is data about data.
Java also signifies this meaning. Annotations are like meta data, means you are free to add your
code and can also apply them to variables, parameters, fields type declarations, methods and
constructors. Metadata is also used to create the documentation to perform rudimentary compile
time checking and even for tracking down the dependencies in code. XDoclet contains all these
features and is widely used. Annotations provide a means of indicating about methods, classes,
dependencies, incompleteness and also about the references on other methods and classes
respectively. Quoting from Sun's official site, "It (annotation-based development) lets us avoid
writing boilerplate code under many circumstances by enabling tools to generate it from
annotations in the source code. This leads to a declarative programming style where the
programmer says what should be done and tools emit the code to do it."
Annotation is the way of associating the program elements with the meta tags so that the compiler
can extract program behavior to support the annotated elements to generate interdependent code
when necessary.
Fundamentals of annotations
While going through the annotations you should consider two things. The first one is the
"annotation" itself and second one is the "annotations types". An annotation is the meta tag,
used to give some life to the code you are using. While annotation type is used to define
annotations so that you can use them while creating your own custom annotations.
An annotation type definition appends an "at" @ sign at the start of the interface keyword with
the annotation name. On the other hand, an annotation includes the "at" @ sign followed by the
annotation type. You can also add the data within the parenthesis after the annotation name. Lets
illustrate the concept more clearly by using some examples.
• Marker: Like the marker interface, marker annotations does not contain any elements
except the name itself. The example given below clarifies the concept of marker
interface.
Example:
Usage:
@Example
public void anymethod() {
------------
}
• Single-value: This type of elements provide only single value. It means that these can be
represented with the data and value pair or we can use the shortcut syntax (just by using
the value only within the parenthesis).
Example:
String showSomething();
Usage:
--------
• Multi-value or Full-value: These types of annotations can have multiple data members.
Therefore use full value annotations to pass the values to all the data members.
Example:
String showSomething();
int num;
String name;
Usage:
// code here
Rules defining the Annotation type: Here are some rules that one should follow while defining
and using annotations types
• Start the annotation declaration starting with the symbol "at" @ following the interface
keyword that should follow the annotation name.
• Method declaration should not throw any exception.
• Method declaration should not contain any parameter.
• Method using annotations should return a value, one of the types given below:
• String
• primitive
• enum
• Class
• array of the above types
• Simple annotations: These types of annotations are used to annotate the code only. We
can not use these types of annotations for creating the custom annotation type.
• Meta annotations: Also known as annotations of annotations are used to annotate the
annotation-type declaration.
• Override
• Depricated
• Suppresswarnings
JDK 5 (also known as Tiger) does not include many built-in annotations but it facilitates to core
java to support annotation features. Now will discuss in brief each of the above simple
annotation types along with examples.
Override annotation: The override annotation ensures that the annotated method is used to
override the method in the super class. If the method containing this type of annotation does not
override the method in the super class then the compiler will generate a compile time error.
Lets take an example and demonstrate what will happen if the annotated method does not
override the method in the super class.
Example 1:
Suppose there is spell mistake in the method name such as the name is changed from toString to
toStrimg. Then on compiling the code will generate the message like this:
Deprecated annotation: These types of annotations ensure that the compiler warns you when
you use the deprecated element of the program. The example given below illustrates this
concept.
Example: Lets first create the class containing the deprecated method.
The method showSomething() in the above example is declared as the deprecated method. That
means we can't further use this method any more. On compiling the class Depricated_method
does not generate any error. While compiling the class Test_Deprication generates the message
like this:
The Suppresswarning annotation: These types of annotations ensure that the compiler will
shield the warning message in the annotated elements and also in all of its sub-elements. Lets
take an example:
Suppose you annotate a class to suppress a warning and one of its method to suppress another
warning, then both the warning will be suppressed at the method level only. Lets demonstrate it
by an example:
Note: Applying annotation at most deeply nested elements is a good idea. It is better to apply
annotations at the method level rather than the class to annotate a particular method.
Meta-Annotations (Annotation Types): There are four types ofm Meta annotations (or
annotations of annotations) defined by the JDK 5. These are as follows:
• Target
• Retention
• Documented
• Inherited
Target annotation: Target annotation specifies the elements of a class to which annotation is to
be applied. Here is the listing of the elements of the enumerated types as its value:
Example:
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
public @interface Test_Element {
public String doTestElement();
}
The @Target(ElementType.METHOD) specifies that this type of annotation can be applied only
at method level. Compiling and running the above program will work properly. Lets try to apply
this type of annotation to annotate an element:
"Test_Annotations.java":
D:R_AND_DTest_Annotationsrctestmyannotation
Test_Annotations.java:16:
annotation type not applicable to this kind of declaration at line
16, column 0
@Test_Target(doTestElement="Hi ! How r you")
^
Error in javac compilation
Retention annotation: These types of annotation specify where and how long annotation with
this types are to be retained. There are three type of Retention annotations are of three types.
Lets demonstrate that how this type of annotations are applied by taking an example using
RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME.
Example:
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface Retention_Demo {
String doRetentionDemo();
}
Documented annotation: This type of annotation should be documented by the javadoc tool.
javadoc does not include the annotation by default. Include the annotation type information by
using @Documented in the generated document. In this type of annotation all the processing is
done by javadoc-like tool.
Example:
@Documented
public @interface Documented_Demo {
String doTestDocumentedDemo();
}
Inherited Annotation: This annotation is little bit complex. It inherits the annotated class
automatically. If you specify @Inherited tag before defining a class then apply the annotation at
your class and finally extend the class then the child class inherits the properties of the parent
class automatically. Lets demonstrate the benefits of using the @Inherited tag by an example:
Example:
Lets first, define the annotation:
@Inherited
public @interface ParentObjectDemo {
boolean isInherited() default true;
String showSomething() default "Show anything?";
}
@ParentObjectDemo
public Class ChildObjectDemo {
}
The above example shows that you do not need to define the interface methods inside the
implemented class. The @Inherited tag automatically inherits the methods for you. Suppose you
define the implementing class in the old-fashioned-java-style then let us see the effect of doing
this:
Have you seen the difference? You have to implement all the methods of the parent interface.
You will have to implement the equals(), toString(), and the hashCode() methods of the Object
class and also the annotation type method of the java.lang.annotation.Annotation class. You will
also have to include all these methods in your class regardless of whether you are implementing
all these methods or not.
Session Beans
What is a Session bean
A session bean is the enterprise bean that directly interact with the user and contains the
business logic of the enterprise application. A session bean represents a single client accessing the
enterprise application deployed on the server by invoking its method. An application may contain
multiple sessions depending upon the number of users accessing to the application. A session
bean makes an interactive session only for a single client and shields that client from
complexities just by executing the business task on server side.
For example, whenever a client wants to perform any of these actions such as making a
reservation or validating a credit card, a session bean should be used. The session bean decides
what data is to be modified. Typically, the session bean uses an entity bean to access or modify
data. They implement business logic, business rules, algorithms, and work flows. Session beans
are relatively short-lived components. The EJB container may destroy a session bean if its client
times out.
A session bean can neither be shared nor can persist (means its value can not be saved to the
database) its value. A session bean can have only one client. As long as the client terminates,
session bean associated with this client is also terminated and the data associated with this bean
is also destroyed.
The above figure shows how Session Bean interacts with the clients as well as with the Entity
Beans.
For example, consider a customer using a debit card at an ATM machine. The ATM
could perform various operations like checking an account balance, transferring funds, or
making a withdrawal. These operations could be performed one by one, by the same
customer. So the bean needs to keep track its state for each of these operations to the
same client.
Thus Stateful session beans has the extra overhead for the server to maintain the state
than the stateless session bean.
The user interface calls methods of session beans if the user wants to use the functionality of the
session bean. Session beans can call to other session beans and entity beans.
• When there is only one client is accessing the beans instance at a given time.
• When the bean is not persistent that means the bean is going to exist no longer.
• The bean is implementing the web services.
• What the bean wants to holds information about the client across method invocation.
• When the bean works as the mediator between the client and the other component of the
application.
• When the bean have to manage the work flow of several other enterprise beans.
• If the bean does not contain the data for a specific client.
• If there is only one method invocation among all the clients to perform the generic task.
The container calls the annotated @PreDestroy method while ending the life cycle of the
session bean. After this, the bean is ready for garbage collection.
While ending the life cycle of the bean, the client calls the annotated @Remove method after this
the container calls the annotated @PreDestroy method which results in the bean to be ready for
the garbage collection
There are following steps that you have to follow to develop a example JEE application.
The enterprise bean in our example is a stateless session bean called CalculatorBean. The
source code for CalculatorBean is in “net/roseindia/ejb3/stateless” directory.
(i) Coding the bean’s Remote business interface and Enterprise bean class.
The business interface defines the business methods that a client can call remotely. The business
methods are implemented in the enterprise bean class. The source code for the
CalculatorRemote business interface is given below.
package net.roseindia.ejb3.stateless;
import java.math.*;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import java.lang.annotation.*;
@Remote
public interface CalculatorRemote {
public float add(float x, float y);
public float subtract(float x, float y);
public float multiply(float x, float y);
public float division(float x, float y);
}
Note that, the @Remote annotation decorating the interface definition. This lets the container
know that CalculatorBean will be accessed by remote clients.
The enterprise bean class for this example is called CalculatorBean. This class implements the
four business methods (add, subtract, multiply, division) that are defined in the
CalculatorRemote business interface. The source code for the CalculatorBean class is given
below.
package net.roseindia.ejb3.stateless;
import java.math.*;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Stateless(name="CalculatorBean")
@Remote(CalculatorRemote.class)
public class CalculatorBean implements CalculatorRemote{
public float add(float x, float y){
return x + y;
}
Now you are ready to compile the remote business interface (CalculatorRemote.java), the
enterprise bean class (CalculatorBean.java) and the application client (CalculatorClient.java),
then package the compiled classes into an enterprise bean JAR.
The web client is contained in the JSP page "WebClient.jsp". A JSP page is a text-based
document that contains JSP elements, which construct dynamic content, and static template data,
expressed in any text-based format such as HTML, WML, and XML.
<html>
<head>
<title>Calculator</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="pink">
<h1>Calculator</h1>
<hr>
<form action="WebClient.jsp"
method="POST">
<p>Enter first value:
<input type="text" name="num1"
size="25"></p>
<br>
<p>Enter second value:
<input type="text" name="num2"
size="25"></p>
<br>
<b>Seclect your choice:</b><br>
<input type="radio" name="group1" value
="add">Addition<br>
<input type="radio" name="group1" value
="sub">Subtraction<br>
<input type="radio" name="group1" value
="multi">Multiplication<br>
<input type="radio" name="group1" value
="div">Division<br>
<p>
<input type="submit"
value="Submit">
<input type="reset"
value="Reset"></p>
</form>
</body>
</html>
The following statements given below in “WebClient.jsp” are used for locating the business
interface, creating an enterprise bean instance, and invoking a business method.
The classes needed by the client are declared using a JSP page directive (enclosed within the <%@
%> characters). Because locating the business interface and creating the enterprise bean are
performed only once, this code appears in a JSP declaration (enclosed within the <%! %>
characters) that contains the initialization method, jspInit, of the JSP page. A scriptlet (enclosed
within the <% %> characters) retrieves the parameters from the request and converts it to a Float
object. Finally, a JSP scriptlet invokes the enterprise bean’s business methods, and JSP
expressions (enclosed within the <%= %> characters) insert the results into the stream of data
returned to the client.
The full source code for the WebClient program is given below.
<%!
private CalculatorRemote calculator = null;
float result=0;
System.out.println(s3);
if(s3.equals("add"))
result=calculator.add(num1.floatValue(),num2.floatValue());
else if(s3.equals("sub"))
result=calculator.subtract(num1.floatValue(),num2.floatValue());
else if(s3.equals("multi"))
result=calculator.multiply(num1.floatValue(),num2.floatValue());
else
result=calculator.division(num1.floatValue(),num2.floatValue());
%>
<p>
<b>The result is:</b> <%= result %>
<p>
<%
}
}// end of try
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace ();
//result = "Not valid";
}
%>
Note: The Application Server automatically compiles web clients that are JSP pages. If the web
client were a servlet, you would have to compile it.
The source code for the “index.jsp” is given below that will actual call the client-design form.
<%@page language="java" %>
<html>
<head>
<title>Ejb3 Stateless Tutorial</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFCC">
<p align="center"><font size="6"
color="#800000"><b>Welcome to <br>
Ejb3-Jboss
4.2.0 Tutorial</b></font>
Click <a href="ejb3/form.jsp">Calculator Example</a> to
execute Calculator<br></p>
</body>
</html>
To deploy the created example application we are going to use Jboss 4.2.0 Application Server
about which you have read in the previous section of this Javajazzup issue. So you first need to
download the following tools to deploy this application.
• apache-ant-1.7.0
• JBoss 4.2.0
(i) Make a directory structure. You can Click here to extract the readymade directory
structure according to this tutorial.
build.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<project name="Jboss Tutorials" default="all" basedir=".">
<target name="init">
<!-- Define -->
<property name="dirs.base" value="${basedir}"/>
<property name="classdir" value="$
{dirs.base}/build/classes"/>
<property name="src" value="${dirs.base}/src"/>
<property name="web" value="${dirs.base}/web"/>
<property name="deploymentdescription" value="$
{dirs.base}/deploymentdescriptors"/>
<property name="warFile" value="example.war"/>
<property name="earFile" value="example.ear"/>
<property name="jarFile" value="example.jar"/>
<property name="earDir" value="$
{dirs.base}/build/ear"/>
<property name="warDir" value="${dirs.base}/build/war"/>
<property name="jarDir" value="${dirs.base}/build/jar"/>
<mkdir dir="${warDir}/WEB-INF"/>
<mkdir dir="${warDir}/WEB-INF/classes"/>
<!-- Create Meta-inf and classes directories -->
<mkdir dir="${earDir}/META-INF"/>
<mkdir dir="${jarDir}/META-INF"/>
<mkdir dir="${classdir}"/>
</target>
<target name="all"
depends="init,build,buildWar,buildJar,buildEar"/>
<!-- Compile Java Files and store in /build/src directory -->
<target name="build" >
<javac srcdir="${src}" destdir="${classdir}" debug="true"
includes="**/*.java" >
<classpath refid="library.classpath"/>
</javac>
</target>
<!-- Create the web archive File -->
<copy todir="${warDir}">
<fileset dir="${web}" includes="**/*.*" />
</copy>
<copy todir="${jarDir}/META-INF">
<fileset dir="${deploymentdescription}/jar/"
includes="ejb-jar.xml,weblogic-cmp-rdbms-jar.xml,weblogic-
ejb-jar.xml" />
</copy>
</target>
<!-- Create the ear File -->
<copy todir="C:/jboss-4.2.0.GA/server/default/deploy/">
<fileset dir="../" includes="${earFile}" />
</copy>
</target>
</project>
Application.xml
<application xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" version="5"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee
http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/application_5.xsd">
<display-name>Stateless Session Bean Example</display-name>
<module>
<web>
<web-uri>example.war</web-uri>
<context-root>/example</context-root>
</web>
</module>
<module>
<ejb>example.jar</ejb>
</module>
</application>
web.xml
<web-app >
</web-app>
Put this file in the Stateless\code\deploymentdescriptors\web directory.
Put all .jsp files in the Stateless\code\web directory.
Put all .java files in the Stateless\code\src directory.
(iii) Start command prompt, and go to the Stateless\code directory. Then type the command
as:
C:\Stateless\code>ant build.xml
The Ant tool will deploy the example.ear file to the jboss-4.2.0.GA\server\default\deploy
directory.
Open the web browser and type the following URL to run the application:
http://localhost:8080/example
here are following steps that you have to follow to develop a account JEE application.
The enterprise bean in our example is a statelful session bean called AccountBean.
The account session bean represents an account information in an online customer account. The
bean’s customer can deposit to or withdraw the amount from his account. To manage account,
you need the following code:
The Account business interface is a plain Java interface that defines all the business methods
implemented in the bean class. If the bean class implements a single interface, that interface is
assumed to the business interface. The business interface is a local interface unless it is annotated
with the javax.ejb.Remote annotation.
The bean class may also implement more than one interface. If the bean class implements more
than one interface, the business interfaces must be specified by decorating the bean class with
@Local or @Remote.
The source code for the Account business interface is given below.
package ejbExample.stateful;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface Account {
The session bean class for this example is called AccountBean. This class implements the two
business methods (deposit and withdraw). The AccountBean class must meet these
requirements:
package ejbExample.stateful;
import javax.ejb.Stateful;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import javax.ejb.Remove;
import javax.ejb.*;
@Stateful(name="AccountBean")
@Remote(AccountRemote.class)
public class AccountBean implements AccountRemote {
float balance = 0;
Business methods annotated with javax.ejb.Remove in the stateful session bean class can be
invoked by enterprise bean client to remove the bean instance. The container will remove the
enterprise bean after a @Remove method completes, either normally or abnormally. Thus, we
can retain the bean's state invoked by the client until we call the annotated @Remove method.
In AccountBean , the remove method is a @Remove method shown as:
@Remove
public void
remove() {
balance =
0;
}
Methods in the bean class may be declared as a life-cycle callback method by annotating the
method with the following annotations:
• javax.annotation.PostConstruct
• javax.annotation.PreDestroy
• javax.ejb.PostActivate
• javax.ejb.PrePassivate
Life-cycle callback methods must return void and have no parameters. Lets understands these
callback annotated methods shown in the table given below:
In this part of Enterprise Session Beans, you will learn how to develop, deploy, and run a simple
Java EE application named account using stateful session bean. The purpose of account is to
performs two transaction operations (deposit and withdraw) for the customer.
The account application consists of an enterprise bean, which performs the transactions, and two
types of clients: an application client and a web client.
here are following steps that you have to follow to develop a account JEE application.
The enterprise bean in our example is a statelful session bean called AccountBean.
The account session bean represents an account information in an online customer account. The
bean’s customer can deposit to or withdraw the amount from his account. To manage account,
you need the following code:
The Account business interface is a plain Java interface that defines all the business methods
implemented in the bean class. If the bean class implements a single interface, that interface is
assumed to the business interface. The business interface is a local interface unless it is
annotated with the javax.ejb.Remote annotation.
The bean class may also implement more than one interface. If the bean class implements more
than one interface, the business interfaces must be specified by decorating the bean class with
@Local or @Remote.
The source code for the Account business interface is given below.
package ejbExample.stateful;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface Account {
The session bean class for this example is called AccountBean. This class implements the two
business methods (deposit and withdraw). The AccountBean class must meet these
requirements:
package ejbExample.stateful;
import javax.ejb.Stateful;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import javax.ejb.Remove;
import javax.ejb.*;
@Stateful(name="AccountBean")
@Remote(AccountRemote.class)
public class AccountBean implements AccountRemote {
float balance = 0;
Business methods annotated with javax.ejb.Remove in the stateful session bean class can be
invoked by enterprise bean client to remove the bean instance. The container will remove the
enterprise bean after a @Remove method completes, either normally or abnormally. Thus, we
can retain the bean's state invoked by the client until we call the annotated @Remove method.
@Remove
public void
remove() {
balance =
0;
}
Methods in the bean class may be declared as a life-cycle callback method by annotating the
method with the following annotations:
• javax.annotation.PostConstruct
• javax.annotation.PreDestroy
• javax.ejb.PostActivate
• javax.ejb.PrePassivate
Life-cycle callback methods must return void and have no parameters. Lets understands these
callback annotated methods shown in the table given below:
Method Description
The application client source code is in the WebClient.jsp file That illustrates the basic tasks
performed by the client of an enterprise bean:
• Creating an enterprise bean instance
• Invoking a business method
The full source code for the WebClient.jsp program is given below.
<%!
public AccountRemote account = null;
float bal=0;
try {
String s1 = request.getParameter("amt");
String s2 = request.getParameter("group1");
if ( s1 != null) {
Float amt = new Float(s1);
if(s2.equals("dep"))
bal=account.deposit(amt.floatValue());
else if(s2.equals("with"))
bal=account.withdraw(amt.floatValue());
else
%>
<p>Please select your choice</p>
<%
}
else
%>
<%
}// end of try
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace ();
}
%>
<html>
<head>
<title>Bank Account</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1><p align="center"><font size="6"
color="#800000">Bank Transaction Request
Form</h1>
<hr><br>
<table bgcolor="#FFFFCC" align="center">
<form action="WebClient.jsp" method="POST">
<tr><td></tr></td>
<tr><td>Enter the amount in rupees:
<input type="text" name="amt"
size="10"></tr></td>
<br>
<tr><td><b>Select your choice:</b></tr></td>
<tr><td><input type="radio" name="group1"
value ="dep">Deposit</tr></td>
<tr><td><input type="radio" name="group1"
value ="with">Withdraw<br></tr></td>
<tr><td>
<input type="submit" value="Transmit">
<input type="reset" value="Reset"></tr></td>
<tr><td></tr></td>
</form>
</table>
</body>
</html>
The source code for the “index.jsp” is given below that will actual call the client-design form.
<head>
<title>Ejb3 Stateful Tutorial</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFCC">
Motivations for messaging: EJB components are used to develop the applications for the
distributed computing network
. Distributed computing network uses the RMI-IIOP protocol to communicate with each other.
This protocol is used to call the EJB components. RMI-IIOP accepts challenges in several areas
like:
completes its processing and returns the result to the client. After that the server enables
to the client to continue its processing.
• Decoupling: An RMI-IIOP server must have the knowledge about the server that it want
to use. The client can address them directly through object references. It is not possible to
remove a server from the server without directly impacting the clients because the client
and server are closely coupled with each other.
• Reliability: Data may be lost or the client can't perform any operation if the server or the
network crashes.
• Support for multiple senders and receivers: You can use messaging server instead of
remote method invocation (RMI) but the messaging service uses the middleman between
the client and the server. This middleman simply receives the messages from one or more
senders and sends these messages to one or more consumers. It is not required to get the
response instantly from the receiver. The receiver may sends back response back to the
sender after completing all the processing. This is known as asynchronous programming.
There are four previous concerns that the messaging addresses with RMI-IIOP as follows:
Non blocking request processing: There is no need to block the messaging request while
executing another request. For example suppose you are purchasing a book from Amazon.com
having a single click functionality. you are enable to continue browsing the site without waiting
to check the authorization of your credit card. Until and unless there is something wrong
Amazon.com sends you a confirmation email. These types of systems are developed by using the
messaging technique.
Decoupling: In case of message-oriented-middleware, it is not necessary for the sender to have
the knowledge about the message receiver. It only interacts with the messaging system while
sending messages. Thus the message senders are decoupled from consumers.
Message-oriented-middleware is the term that can be given to any system that supports the
messaging system. There are a number of products based on MOM architecture. BEA
Tuxedo/Q, Sun Java System Messaging Server, IBM WebSphere MQ, Tibco Rendezevous,
Microsoft MSMQ, FioranoMQ and Sonic Software SonicMQ are the examples of MOM based
architecture.
Java Message Services (JMS): JMS API is an enterprise tool developed by Sun Microsystems
used to develop the enterprise applications. JMS API supports to a framework that allows the
development of portable and message based applications. JMS communicates in synchronous or
in asynchronous mode by using point-to-point and the publish-subscribe models respectively.
JMS has become vendor specific and many vendors such as IBM, Oracle, Hewlett-Packard, BEA
Systems and Macromedia are providing the JMS implementation.
JMS API: JMS APIs play an important role as comparing the RMI-IIOP protocol. You need to
aware with different interfaces, low level topology issues like structure, messaging format,
networking protocol and server location.
1. Locate the JMS provider's ConnectionFactory instance: First establish the
connection by using a ConnectionFactory instance to get access the JMS provider of the
MOM product you are using. An administrator typically creates and configures the
ConnectionFactory for the JMS client's use.
2. Create a JMS connection: A JMS connection manages the low level network
communications similar to JDBC connection. Use ConnectionFactory to get a
connection. For large deployment this connection may be load balance across a group of
machines.
3. Create a JMS session: A JMS session object is used to send and receive the messages
and works as the ConnectionFactory for message producers and message consumers. It
also allows the encapsulation of messages in transactions. We use Connection to get the
session object.
4. Locate the JMS Destination: A JMS destination is an object to which we are sending or
from which we are receiving the messages. Locating the right destination is similar to
tuning the channel in the right direction to get the clear picture while watching the
television or answering the correct phone to get the desired message.
5. Create a JMS producer or a JMS consumer: If you are interested to send a message
then you need an object to pass your message. This object is known as the JMS producer.
If you want to receive a message you need to call a JMS object. This object is known as
the Consumer object. To get hold an object Session and Destination are used.
6. Send or Receive a message: There may be different types of messages like text, streams,
maps, bytes, objects and so on. To send a messages first instantiate it and then send it by
using the Producer object. If you are intended to receive a message then first receive the
message with the help of Consumer object and then crack it to see what it contains.
All the points described above are applicable to both point-to-point as well as publish/subscribe.
Here we are going to discuss JMS by taking the queuing system. Queuing system includes the
following parts:
• JMS Server: The JMS server maintains the message queue to receive emails.
• JMS Queue: In case of point-to-point messaging system, a queue is used to hold the
messages from clients. Messages holding this queue are of MapMessages type that stores
the information about the email as name/value pair.
• Email Message Client: A client of this messaging system creates the JMS message to
put it on the JMS Queue. This message contains the information about the message to be
sent out.
• Email Message Driven Bean: It is the message driven bean that is responsible to take
the JMS MapMessage to mail it out.
JMS Architecture: Talk first about JMS while talking about the message driven beans. There
are a lot of messaging systems exist in the market. Messaging systems provide a mechanism to
exchange data and events asynchronously. JMS API defines a standard way to access any
messaging system such as JDBC that enables the user to talk to SQL Server, Oracle and Sybase
simply by using the same API. The additional benefits of JMS API are loose coupling between
the generated request and the code that services the request.
Here are some of the basics of the messaging server that one should know to more clearly
understand the concept of JMS APIs:
• Messaging Domains
• JMS Messages
Messaging Domains: A messaging system includes several models of operation. JMS API
provides separate domains corresponding to different models. JMS provider is free to implement
one or more domains. Point-to-Point and Publish/Subscribe are the two most commonly used
domains. These two domains concludes the following concepts.
• Producer: The client, responsible for sending the message to the destination is known as
the producer.
• Consumer: The client, responsible for receiving the message is known as the consumer.
• Destination: Destination is the object used by the client to specify the target that uses it
to send the message to or to receive the message from.
Point-to-Point (PTP): An application that uses the point-to-point technique for messaging has
the following characteristics.
Publish/Subscribe (pub/sub): An application that uses the pub/sub technique must include the
following characteristics.
An email newsletter application may use the pub/sub model, where an interested candidate may
become the subscriber to receive a new published message.
Integrating JMS with EJB: Integration of JMS with EJB is the excellent idea because of it the
EJB components gets benefit from the value proposed by messaging like multinary
communications and non blocking clients. The idea behind the introduction of new type of bean
is to consume messages in an EJB application.
Use a Java Object that receives the JMS messages to call an EJB client: Instead of
developing the whole new bean the java community proposed an idea of object to receive a
message and to call the appropriate EJB component such as the session bean or the entity bean.
But the problems that come with this approach are:
• You have to implement the multithreading concept just to increase the message
consumption so that you can listen the messages in multiple threads. However developing
the multithreaded application is not a tuff task for the developer.
• Register yourself as a listener by writing the special code for JMS messages.
• Hard code the JMS destination name in your java object that access the destination
information required for extra effort to access the destination information from the dish
like property files.
• JMS message listener receives services from the EJB container just like a plain java
object such as clustering, pooling, transaction, automatic life cycle management and
many more. You need to hard code this yourself that is a tuff task and error prone.
• Your java object is wrapped by other EJB components therefore it requires some way to
start up. If the class is running inside the container then you are required to use a server
specific startup class for the activation of the java object when the EJB server starts. This
is not portable as the EJB container does not define an standard way to activate the given
logic.
Reuse an existing type of EJB component somehow to receive JMS messages: Session beans
or entity beans may receive messages but the problem with this approach is:
• Life-cycle-management: The container doesn't know the way of creating a bean when a
JMS message arrives.
• Threading: EJB does not allow multithreading when a message arrives to the bean that is
processing other request. If a bean is processing a request it does not take the new
message arrive to the bean.
Message driven bean: Message driven beans are the special type of components that can receive
the JMS as well as other type of messages. Message driven bean can also be used to receive the
messages other than JMS. When a message is reached at the destination then the EJB container
invokes the message driven bean. A message driven bean is decoupled with the client that sends
the message. A client is not allowed to access the message driven bean through a business
interface. The client can interact with the message driven bean only through the messaging
system. To interact with the message driven bean use the message provider specific API such as
JMS.
Session beans allow you to send JMS messages and to receive them synchronously, but not
asynchronously. To receive messages asynchronously, a Message-driven bean is used. Message
driven beans are the light weight components used for communication via messages (e.g., email
or IM messages). In message driven beans, the messaging service is in asynchronous mode
because the user is not intended to get the instant result.
Message-driven beans can implement any messaging type. Most commonly, they implement the
Java Message Service (JMS) technology.
The given diagram shows the working process of a Message driven bean.
In Message driven beans (MDB), the client components don't locate message-driven beans and
invoke methods directly. Instead, The JMS clients send messages to message queues managed by
the JMS server (e.g., an email inbox can be a message queue) for which the
javax.jms.MessageListener interface is implemented. The message queue is monitored by a
special kind of EJB(s) - Message Driven Beans (MDBs) That processes the incoming messages
and perform the services requested by the message. The MDBs are the end-point for JMS service
request messages. You assign a message-driven bean’s destination during deployment by using
Application Server resources.
JMS:
The Java Message Service (JMS) is an API for Java messaging clients. JMS provides two
programming models: point-to-point and publish-and-subscribe.
In the point-to-point model, one sender puts a message on a queue that is delivered to only one
receiver. The publish-and-subscribe model adds a broadcast mode in which any number of
senders can add messages to a topic, and any number of recievers receive all messages posted to
topics. JMS queues and topics are bound in the JNDI environment and made available to J2EE
applications.
Example:
Our application assumes the point-to-point model, and requires setting up a queue with a
QueueConnectionFactory in JMS. This section shows, how to implement an MDB with EJB
3.0 describing the source code of a simple message-driven bean application.
package mdb;
import javax.jms.*;
import javax.naming.*;
import java.text.*;
import javax.annotation.*;
@Resource(mappedName="jms/Queue")
class MessageConn{
private static Queue queue = null;
QueueConnectionFactory factory = null;
QueueConnection connection = null;
QueueSender sender = null;
QueueSession session = null;
public MessageConn(){
try {
//client creates the connection, session, and message sender:
connection = factory.createQueueConnection();
session = connection.createQueueSession(false, QueueSession.AUTO_ACKNOW
LEDGE);
sender = session.createSender(queue);
//create and set a message to send
TextMessage msg = session.createTextMessage();
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) {
msg.setText("This is my sent message " + (i + 1));
//finally client sends messages asynchronously to the queue
sender.send(msg);
}
System.out.println("Sending message");
session.close ();
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace ();
}
}
}
After you get the QueueConnectionFactory object, you use its createQueueConnection to
construct a QueueConnection object, like this:
connection = factory.createQueueConnection( );
Then, you use the createQueueSession method of the QueueConnection interface to create a
QueueSession object, as in the following code:
Note that you pass false as the first argument to the createQueueSession method to indicate that
you are not creating a transactional session object.
Next, you can call the createSender method of the QueueSession interface, passing a Queue
object. The return value of this method is a message producer, which is a QueueSender:
sender = session.createSender(queue);
Then you create a TextMessage object based on the message received by passing the text for the
TextMessage to the createTextMessage method of the QueueSession object and then set the text
to the object of TextMessage
Now, you are ready to send the new message. You do this by calling the send method of the
QueueSender object, as you see here:
sender.send(msg);
The JMS resource is mapped to the JNDI name of the destination from which the bean receives
messages. The New Message-Driven Bean wizard has already created the JMS resources for us.
The EJB 3.0 API enables us to look up objects in the JNDI namespace from within the bean class
so that we do not need to configure deployment descriptors to specify the JMS resources. The
EJB 3.0 specifications allow us to use annotations to introduce resources directly into a class.
The MDB's connection process can be seen in the figure shown below:
avax.annotation.Resource(@Resource):
The @Resource method specifies a dependence on an external resource, such as a JDBC data
source or a JMS destination or connection factory.
If you specify the annotation on a field or method, the EJB container injects an instance of the
requested resource into the bean when the bean is initialized. If you apply the annotation to a
class, the annotation declares a resource that the bean will look up at runtime.
The mappedName attribute of the annotation Resource specifies the global JNDI name of the
dependent resource. Forexample:
@Resource(mappedName ="jms/Queue")
Specifies that the JNDI name of the dependent resources is jms/Queue and deployed in the JEE
Server JNDI tree.
For Web-client:
• In EJB 3.0, the MDB bean class is annotated with the @MessageDriven annotation that
specifies, which message queue monitors the MDB (i.e., jms/Queue). If the queue does
not exist, the EJB container automatically creates it at deploy time. There is no XML
configuration file needed!
For the Application Server, the @MessageDriven annotation typically contains a
mappedName attribute that specifies the JNDI name of the destination from which the
bean will consume messages.
• The class must be defined as public and must contain a public constructor with no
arguments. It must not define the finalize method.
• It is recommended, but not required, that a message-driven bean class should implement
the MessageListener interface for the message type it supports. This interface defines
only one method onMessage( ). When the EJB container arrives a message, it calls the
onMessage( ) method of the message-driven bean to process the message. The
onMessage( ) method contains the business logic and handles the processing of the
message in accordance with the application’s business logic. It can call helper methods,
or invoke a session bean to process the information in the message or to store it in a
database.
A message is delivered to a message-driven bean within a transaction context, so all
operations within the onMessage method are part of a single transaction. If message
processing is rolled back, the message will be redelivered.
package mdb;
import javax.ejb.*;
import javax.ejb.MessageDriven;
import javax.jms.Message;
import javax.jms.MessageListener;
import javax.jms.ObjectMessage;
import java.text.*;
import javax.naming.*;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
@MessageDriven(mappedName="jms/Queue")
try {
tmsg = (TextMessage) msg;
logger.info("MESSAGE BEAN: Message received: "
+ tmsg.getText( ));
System.out.println ("The onMessage() is called");
} catch (JMSException e) {
e.printStackTrace( );
mdc.setRollbackOnly( );
}
catch (Throwable th) {
th.printStackTrace();
}
}
public void ejbRemove( )throws EJBException{
loger.fine("ejbRemove()");
}
}
Logger:
When writing log messages from EJBs within JRun, you have the following options:
• Nonportable Use JRun-specific methods and services. These methods write to the JRun
server's event log.
• Portable Use one of the System.out.println methods. These methods write to the console
(if used when starting JRun).
An EJB can acquire a logger instance from the container and use the logger's info( ) method to
display the messages for the client-end, as shown in the following code examples:
To create and package the application using Ant, use the default target for the build.xml file:
ant
This target packages the application client and the message-driven bean, then creates a file
named message.ear in the dist directory.
You simply avoid having to create deployment descriptor files for the message-driven bean and
application client by using resource injection and annotations. You need to use deployment
descriptors only if you want to override the values specified in the annotated source files.
To deploy the application and run the client using Ant, use the following command:
ant run
In the server log file, the following lines should be displayed, wrapped in logging information:
Decoupling: It decouples the application components from the infrastructure of the EJB
framework that lets you construct an application from loosely coupled components. There are no
longer need to write the tedious JNDI framework-specific lookup code. You can design and
implement the business logic. Once that's working, and then you can deal with persistence and
transactions.
Easier testing: You can test or run your business logic outside of the application server in a few
seconds.
Flexible: A Java POJO code can be implemented with any type of enterprise bean such as
Message Driven Bean and Entity Bean. The POJO technology can be used with any type of
Enterprise Java Beans(e.g Session Bean, Message Driven Bean or Entity Bean).
Message-driven POJOs offer the functionality like MDB to make a simple JavaBeans for the
developers. Similar to a MDB in EJB, it acts as a receiver for JMS messages.
Writing a message-driven POJO is not much different than writing a message-driven EJB. The
major difference between both is that, an message-driven POJO (MDP) must implement the
javax.jms.MessageListener interface. Like an MDB, you don't have to implement
javax.ejb.MessageDrivenBean and the EJB lifecycle methods defined by the interface.
The EJB 3.0 uses annotations to build completely POJO-based messaging applications.
In EJB 3.0’s container application server, there is an easier way to implement message driven
RPCs. You can use POJOs as message end-points (message driven POJO). The RPC caller
retrieves an automatically generated stub of the POJO and makes regular calls against the POJO
methods. The message driven POJO works much like a session bean of EJB3, except that all
calls are tunneled via a message queue.
The implementation of the message driven POJO is tagged with the @Consumer annotation.
You can specify the message queue property in the annotation attribute. If a message queue is
un-defined, the EJB container will create one for you at server start-up.
package mdb.pojo;
import javax.jms.JMSException;
import javax.jms.Message;
import javax.jms.MessageListener;
import javax.jms.TextMessage;
@Consumer(activationConfig =
{
@ActivationConfigProperty(propertyName="destinationType",
propertyValue="javax.jms.Queue"),
@ActivationConfigProperty(propertyName="destination",
propertyValue="queue/mdpojo")
})
Note that, here we didn’t use @MessageDriven annotation to map the JNDI name.
The Client:
To use the message driven POJO on the client side, client looks up a stub object of the
@Producer interface from the JNDI. The auto-generated stub-object not only implements the
@Producer interface but also a component interface named ProducerObject. Using the
ProducerObject.getProducerManager() method, you can get a ProducerManager object,
which is used to make JMS connections. After a JMS connection is established, you can call any
method in the @Producer stub object and the method is actually invoked over the pre-defined
message queue. The following code snippet shows how the message driven POJO client works.
package mdb.pojo;
import javax.jms.*;
import javax.naming.*;
import java.text.*;
class MessagePojoConn{
public MessagePojoConn(){
ProducerManager manager = null;
MessageListener msglst=null;
try {
// lookup a stub object of the MessageListener interface from t
he JNDI
InitialContext ctx = new InitialContext();
msglst = (MessageListener) ctx.lookup(MessageListener.class.get
Name());
ProducerObject po = (ProducerObject)msglst;
ProducerManager manager = po.getProducerManager();
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace ();
}
manager.connect(); // internally create a JMS connection
try{
msglst.onMessage("Hello Message Driven POJO");
}
finally{
manager.close(); // clean up the JMS connection
}
}
}
Description of Code:
When the EJB3 container deploys the @Consumer, it looks for all of its implemented interfaces
and registers each one of them in JNDI under. The client code above looks up the
MessageListener interface in JNDI. Each producer implements the ProducerObject. The client
typecasts the MessageListener to the ProducerObject. It then gets a ProducerManager that
manages the JMS connection for this proxy. To start being able to send messages to the Queue,
the client calls Connect( ) method on the manager. It then can successfully call methods on the
"msglst" object. This method called onMessage( ) is converted into a JMS message and
published to the Queue of the Consumer. The consumer will receive the message and invoke its
onMessage method.
There are a variety of ways to send a JMS message such as using JmsTemplate or Spring. Let’s
see the configuration of the message listener containers that ships with Spring.
<bean id="jmsContainer"
class="org.springframework.jms.listener.DefaultMessageListenerContainer">
<property name="connectionFactory" ref="connectionFactory"/>
<property name="destination" ref="destination"/>
<property name="messageListener" ref="messageListener" />
</bean>
Java Persistence API ensures the management of persistence and object/relational mapping.
These are helpful while using the JPA in the development of applications using the platform for
Java EE 5. It provides O-R mapping facility to manage relational data in java application. The
Java Persistence API contains the following areas:
Features of JPA:
Java Persistence API is a lightweight framework based on POJO for object-relational mapping.
Java language metadata annotations and/or XML deployment descriptor is used for the mapping
between Java objects and a relational database
. It allows the SQL-like query language that works for both static as well as dynamic queries. It
also allows the use of the pluggable persistence API. Java Persistence APIs are mainly depends
on metadata annotations. API includes:
Advantages of JPA:
Java Persistence API is build upon the best ideas from the persistence technologies like TopLink,
JDO and Hibernate. Java Persistence API is compatible with Java SE environment as well as
Java EE and allows developers to take advantages of the standard persistence API.
Persistency of data is not so easy for most of the enterprise applications because for this they
require access to the relational database like Oracle 10g. It is your responsibility to update and
retrieve the database by writing the code using SQL and JDBC. While several object-relational
(O-R) frameworks such as JBoss
Hibernate and OracleTopLink make persistence challenges simpler and became popular. They let
the java developer free from writing JDBC code and to concentrate only on the business logic. In
EJB 2.x, container manage persistence (CMP) try to solve the persistence challenges but not
successful completely.
Persistence tier of the application can be developed in several ways but Java platform does not
follow any standard that can be used by both Java EE and Java SE environment. But the Java
Persistence API (JPA) part of EJB 3.0 spec (JSR-220) makes the persistence API standard for the
Java platform. O/R mapping vendors like Hibernate and TopLink as well as JDO vendors and
other leading application server vendors are receiving the JSR-220.
Here we are describing EJB3 JPA by using the simple domain object model by an example.
Domain Model:
While developing an enterprise application, first design the domain object model required to
persist the data in the database. Domain model represents the persistence objects or entities in the
database. An entity represents a row in the data. An entity may be a person, place or a thing
about which you want to store the data in the database. A rich domain model includes the
characteristics of all the object oriented behavior like inheritance, polymorphism and many
more.
While developing an enterprise application, first design the domain object model to persist the
data in the database then design the database schema with the help of database designer.
The figure illustrated below shows the bi-directional one-to-many relationship between the
Employee and Department. The Contractor and the fulltime entities are inherited from the entity
Employee.
The Basics of EJB3 JPA and O-R Mapping Framework: Each of the O-R mapping
framework such as Oracle TopLink provides three facilities:
1. It defines a declarative way known as O-R mapping metadata to perform O-R mapping.
Most of the framework use XML to store the O-R mapping metadata.
2. An API is required to manipulate like to perform CRUD (CRUD stands for create, read,
update, and delete) operations. The API allows you to persist, remove, update or retrieve
the object from the database. O-R framework performs operations using the API and the
O-R mapping metadata on your behalf.
3. Use of a query language for retrieving objects from the database is the proper way since
improper SQL statements may result in slow down the performance of the operation
performing on the database. A query language allows to retrieve the entities from the
database and spares you from writing the SQL SELECT statements.
EJB 3 provides a standard way to use the persistence by providing a standard O-R mapping
mechanism, a way to extend EJB-QL to retrieve entities and an EntityManager API to perform
CRUD operations.
EJB3 Java Persistence API (JPA) standardizes the use of persistence for the Java platform by
providing a standard mechanism for O-R mapping, an EntityManager API to perform CRUD
operations, and a way to extend EJB-QL to retrieve entities. I'll discuss these three aspects of
JPA later.
Metadata Annotation in Action: Metadata annotations are first time introduced in Java SE 5.0.
To make the development easy all the components of Java EE including EJB3 uses the metadata
annotations. In EJB3 JPA annotation defines the objects, O-R mappings, and the relationships
among them. JPA also have another option to use XML descriptor, But use of the metadata
annotations make the development simpler and more efficient.
Entities:
An entity can be considered as a light weight persistence domain object. An entity defines a table
in a relational database and each instance of an entity corresponds to a row in that table. An
entity refers to a logical collection of data that can be stored or retrieved as a whole. For
example, in a banking application, Customer and BankAccount can be treated as entities.
Customer name, customer address etc can be logically grouped together for representing a
Customer entity. Similarly account number, total balance etc may be logically grouped under
BankAccount entity.
Persistence fields or persistent properties defines the persistent state of an entity. To map the
entities and their relationship to the data in the relational database these entities use the object-
relational mapping.
Requirements of Entity Classes: There are some requirements that an entity must follow:
• The class must contain either a public or a protect no argument constructor, while it can
contain other constructors.
• The class as well as methods and persistence instance variables must not be declared as
final.
• Use the annotation javax.persistence.Entity to annotate the class.
• Declare the persistence instance variables as protected, private or package-private so that
they can directly accessed only by the entity class's methods.
• Entity class may extend the entity as well as non-entity classes or vice-versa.
• The class must implement the serializable interface if an entity instance is passed by
value.
Persistence Fields and Properties in Entity Classes: There are two ways to access the
persistent state of an entity either by instance variables or by using the JavaBeans-style
properties. The fields or the properties must follow the Java language types:
Entity uses the persistent fields while mapping annotations. Annotations are applied to the
entity's instance variable. On the other hand entity uses the persistence properties while mapping
annotations. Annotations are applied to the entity's getter methods for JavaBeans-style
properties. We can not apply mapping annotations to both fields as well as properties
simultaneously in a single entity.
Persistence Fields: Persistence accesses the entity class instance variables directly at runtime, if
the entity class uses persistence fields. It is necessary to apply the object/relational mapping
annotation on the instance variables.
Persistent Properties: Entity must follow the method conventions of JavaBeans components
while using the persistent properties. JavaBeans-style properties use getter and setter methods
that are used after the entity class's instance variable names. There is a getter and a setter method
for each persistence property. In case of a boolean property you may use isProperty instead of
getProperty. Lets take an example to clarify this:
Suppose an entity of type customer uses persistent property that has a private instance variable
named firstName, the class defines two methods named getFirstName and setFirstName to
retrieve and set the values of the instance variable. Use the following method signature for a
single-valued persistent property.
• Type getProperty()
• void setProperty(Type type)
Multi-valued (Collection-valued) persistent fields and properties must use the supported Java
collection interfaces without worrying whether the entity uses the persistence fields or properties.
The collection interfaces may be used at the following places:
• java.util.Collection
• java.util.Set
• java.util.Map
• java.util.List
If the entity class uses persistent fields then the method signatures of the collection types must be
one of these collection types. Suppose an entity of type customer includes a persistent property
that uses a set of phone numbers then it should have the following methods:
Set<PhoneNumber> getPhoneNumber() {}
void setPhoneNumbers(Set<PhoneNumber>) {}
The O-R mapping annotations must be applied to the getter methods. Note here that mapping
annotations can not be applied to the fields or properties marked transient or annotated transient.
Each entity contains a unique identity contained in the object. E.g. A customer entity has an
identity that might be identified by the customer number. A primary key allows a client to be a
particular entity instance. Every unique entity must be associated with a primary key. To prove
its uniqueness every entity may have either a simple or a composite primary key.
To denote the primary key property or field Simple primary key use javax.persistence.Id
annotations.
Composite primary keys must be composed of either a single persistent property or field or a set
of single persistent properties or fields. Composite primary keys uses javax.persistence.IdClass
and javax.persistence.EmbededId.
The primary key, or the fields of the composite primary key (like property or field) must follow
one of the following Java language types.
Primary Key Classes: A primary class must follow the certain rules:
One-to-one: When each entity instance is mapped to a single instance of another entity, then the
mapping is known as one- to-one
mapping. One-to-one relationships use the javax.persistence.OneToOne annotation on the
corresponding persistent field or property.
For Example: A reference variable in java contains the address of a single object so that there
exists only one-to-one mapping between the object of the reference variable.
One-to-many: When an entity instance is related to many instances of other entities, then the
relation is known as one-to-many. These types of relationships use the
javax.persistence.OneToMany annotation on the corresponding field or property.
For Example: A sales order may contain the order of multiple items so there is a one-to-many
relationship between the sales order and the items.
Many-to-many: When the multiple instances of an entity have the mapping to the multiple
instances of the other entity then the mapping is said to many-to-many mapping. Many-to-many
mapping relationships use the javax.persistence.ManyToMany annotation corresponding to the
field or property.
For Example: A college student have the admission in several courses while each course may
have many students. Therefore there is many-to-many relationship between the students and the
courses.
Example: In the example given above, the List_Item contains the relationship field that refers to
the other entity named as Product, while the Product doesn't have any knowledge about the
List_Item that refers to it.
Example: Suppose the Order in the above example have the knowledge about the List_Item
instance it has and also suppose that the List_Item have the knowledge about what the Order it
belongs to, then the relationship between them is said to be the bi-directional relation.
Rules: There are some rules that each bi-directional relationship must follow:
• You must use its owing side simply using the mappedBy element of the @OneToOne,
@OneToMany, or @ManyToMany annotation of the inverse side of a bi-directional
relationship. mappedBy element is used to designate the field or property in an entity.
• In a one-to-one bi-directional relationship, owing side is the side that contains the
corresponding foreign key.
• In a many-to-one bi-directional relationships the many side is always the owing side of
the relationship and must not define the mappedBy element.
• In case of many-to-many bi-directional relationships either side may be the owing side.
Java Persistence query language navigates queries across relationships. The direction of the
relationship can be determined by checking the navigation of a query from one entity to another.
Example: In case of the unidirectional relationship, in the above example a query can navigate
from List_Item to Product, but can not navigate from Product to List_Item.
In case of the above Order and List_Item, a query can navigate in both the direction because both
the entities have the bi-directional relationship.
Entities having the relationships are dependent on other entities in the relationship. Lets take the
above example to clarify this: While deleting the order, the list item is also deleted since it is the
part of the order, this is known as cascade delete relationship. Use the element
cascade=REMOVE element to delete the cascade relationships specified for @OneToOne and
OneToMany relationship.
Entity Inheritance: Entities also supports the various features like inheritance, polymorphic
queries, and polymorphic associations. Moreover they can also be the non-entity classes, while
the non-entity classes can also extend the entity classes. These entity classes can be of the type
either concrete or abstract.
Abstract Entities: An abstract class can be defined as entity simply by declaring the class with
the @Entity. The difference between the abstract and the concrete entities is that the concrete
entities can be instantiated while the abstract entities can not.
Concrete entities are queried same as the abstract entities. Suppose a query makes the target to an
abstract entity then the query operates on all the concrete subclasses of the abstract entity.
@Entity
@Roll_no
protected Integer
StudentRoll_no;
............
@Entity
@Entity
Mapped Superclasses: We can inherit the entities from their superclasses containing the
persistence state and the mapping information but are not entities. The super class does not need
to decorate with the @Entity annotation, and does not map as an entity by the Java Persistence
provider. These superclasses are used in most of the cases when the multiple entity classes have
the common state and mapping information.
Mapping superclasses are declared simply by specifying the class with the
javax.persistence.MappedSuperclass annotation.
@MappedSuperclass
@Roll_no
protected Integer
StudentRoll_no;
............
@Entity
..................
@Entity
.............
We can not query the mapped superclasses and can also neither be used in Query operations nor
EntityManager. But use the entity subclasses of the mapped superclasses to perform the Query
operations or EntityManager. Entity relationship can not target to the mapped superclasses.
Mapped superclass can be either of concrete or abstract type and also don't have any
corresponding table in the underlying database. Entities inherited from the mapped superclasses
define the table-mapping. For instance the above code snippet contains the underlying table
FULLTIMESTUDENT and PARTTIMESTUDENT but did not have any STUDENT table.
Non-Entity Superclasses: As discussed above that the entities may have non-entity superclasses
and these superclasses can either be abstract or concrete. The state of the non-empty superclasses
and any state inherited from these superclasses are not persistent. Non-entity superclasses can be
used either in Query operations or in EntityManager. While the non-entity superclasses ignore
any mapping or relationship annotations.
Entity Inheritance Mapping Strategies: There is a way to configure the mapping between the
underlying datastore and the inherited entities simply by decorating the parent class in the
hierarchy with the javax.persistence.Inheritance annotation. Entities uses three types of
mapping strategies to map the entity data to the underlying database.
You can configure the strategy simply by setting the "strategy" element of @Inheritance to one
of the options defined in the javax.persistence.InheritanceType enumerated type:
public enum InheritanceType{
SINGLE_TABLE, JOINED, TABLE_PER_CLASS
};
Single Table per Class Hierarchy Strategy: This strategy corresponds to the default
InheritanceType.SINGLE_TABLE, a single table in the database is mapped to all the classes in
the hierarchy. This table includes a column containing a value to identify the subclass that
belongs to the row represented by the instance. This column is known as discriminator column
and can be specified by the javax.persistence.DiscriminatorColumn annotation at the root in the
class hierarchy of the entity. The javax.persistence.DiscriminatorType enumerated type is used to
set the type of the discriminator column in the database simply by setting the
discriminatorTypeelement of @DiscriminatorColumn to one of the defined types.
DiscriminatorTypeis defined as:
While @DiscriminatorColumn in not specified at the root of the entity hierarchy and the
discriminator column is required then the persistence provider assumes the coulumn type as
DiscriminatorTypeSTRING and column name as DTYPE by default.
Java Persistence API is a lightweight framework based on POJO for object-relational mapping.
Java language metadata annotations and/or XML deployment descriptor is used for the mapping
between Java objects and a relational database.
Entity:
An entity can be considered as a lightweight persistence domain object. An entity defines a table
in a relational database and each instance of an entity corresponds to a row in that table. An entity
refers to a logical collection of data that can be stored or retrieved as a whole. For example, in a
banking application, Customer and BankAccount can be treated as entities. Customer name,
customer address etc can be logically grouped together for representing a Customer entity.
Similarly account number, total balance etc may be logically grouped under BankAccount
entity.
Entity beans:
Entity beans are enterprises beans, which represent persistent data stored in a storage medium,
such as relational database an entity bean persists across multiple session and can be accessed by
multiple clients. An entity bean acts as an intermediary between a client and a database. For
example, consider a bank entity bean that is used for accessing account details from a database.
When a client wants to perform a transaction, the information regarding their specific account is
loaded into an entity bean instance from the database. Operations are performed on the data
present in the instance and updated in the bank’s database at regular intervals.
The EJB 3.0 entity beans are used to model and access relational database tables. It is a
completely POJO-based persistence framework with annotations that specify how the object
should be stored in the database. The EJB 3.0 container does the mapping from the objects to
relational database tables automatically and transparently. The Java developer no longer needs to
worry about the details of the database table schema, database connection management, and
specific database access APIs.
Entity beans do not need to implement home interfaces and business interfaces. They are
optional.
In EJB 3.0, a primary key is used with @Id annotation. Depending upon the application
requirement, Id annotation can be used with different primary key generation strategies defined
by GeneratorType enum. The GeneratorTypes are TABLE, SEQUENCE, IDENTITY, AUTO,
and NONE.
Every bound persistent POJO class is an entity bean and is declared using the @Entity
annotation (at the class level):
@Entity
public class Book implements Serializable {
Long empid;
@Id
@GeneratedValue
public Long getId()
{ return id; }
public void setId(Long id)
{ this.id = id; }
}
@Entity declares the class as an entity bean (i.e. a persistent POJO class), which tells the EJB3
container that this class needs to be mapped to a relational database table. @Id declares the
identifier property of this entity bean. @GeneratedValue annotation indicates that the server
automatically generates the primary key value.
The class Book is mapped to the Book table, using the column id as its primary key column.
@Table is set at the class level; it allows you to define the table, catalog, and schema names for
your entity bean mapping. If no @Table is defined the default values are used, that is the
unqualified class name of the entity.
@Entity
@Table(name="book")
@SequenceGenerator(name = "book_sequence", sequenceName =
"book_id_seq") public class Book implements Serializable {
The @Table defines the table name. Each instance of the entity bean represents a row of data in
the table. Each column in the table corresponds to a data attribute in the entity bean. The
@SequenceGenerator defines a sequence generator. A sequence is a database feature. It returns
the next Integer or Long value each time it is called.
Managing Entities:
The entity manager manages entities. The entity manager is represented by
javax.persistence.EntityManager instances. Each EntityManager instance is associated with a
persistence context. A persistence context defines the scope under which particular entity
instances are created, persisted, and removed. It is a set of managed entity instances that exist in
a particular data store. The EntityManager interface defines the methods that are used to interact
with the persistence context.
@PersistenceContext
EntityManager em;
You manage entity instances by invoking operations on the entity by means of an EntityManager
instance. Entity instances are in one of four states: new, managed, detached, or removed.
New entity instances have no persistent identity and are not yet associated with a persistence
context.
Managed entity instances have a persistent identity and are associated with a persistence
context.
Detached entity instances have a persistent identify and are not currently associated with a
persistence context.
Removed entity instances have a persistent identity, are associated with a persistent context, and
are scheduled for removal from the data store.
A Domain model of JPA represents the persistence objects or entities in the database.
There are following steps that you have to follow to develop a ‘book’ JEE application.
In the Book catalog example, we define a Book entity bean class. The bean has three properties
(title, author and price) to model a Book product. The id property is used to uniquely identify the
Book bean instance by the EJB3 container. The id value is automatically generated when the
bean is saved to the database.
package entity.library;
import javax.persistence.Entity;
import javax.persistence.GeneratedValue;
import javax.persistence.GenerationType;
import javax.persistence.Id;
import javax.persistence.Table;
import java.util.Collection;
import javax.persistence.*;
import java.io.Serializable;
@Entity
@Table(name="bookbank")
public class BookBank implements Serializable {
long id;
String title;
String author;
double price;
public BookBank() {
super();
}
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
The @Table annotation is used to specify the table name to be used by this Entity bean.
The @Id annotation is used to mark the id field as the primary key of the entity bean.
II. SQL Schema for the Book table mapped from the Book bean:
CREATE
TABLE
BOOKBANK (
ID int(11) NOT
NULL
auto_increment,
TITLE
varchar(50) NOT
NULL,
AUTHOR
varchar(50) NOT
NULL,
PRICE
decimal(12,2)
NOT NULL,
PRIMARY
KEY (ID)
);
To implement a session bean, we first determine the interface it exposes. In the Book catalog
application, this is a simple Java interface declaring all business
methods.
package entity.library;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import java.util.Collection;
@Remote
public interface BookCatalogInterface {
public void addBook(String title, String author, double price);
public Collection <BookBank> getAllBooks();
}
In order to use the entity beans in the session bean, you need a special utility class called the
EntityManager. The EntityManager acts as a generic DAO (Data Access Object) for all entity
beans in the JAR. It translates operations on entity beans to SQL statements to the database. To
obtain an EntityManager, the container creates one object and injects it into the session bean.
The addBook() and getAllBooks() methods in the BookCatalogBean class show the
EntityManager in action. The EntityManager.persist() method takes a new entity bean POJO
and writes it to the database.
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.Collection;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
import java.io.Serializable;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote(BookCatalogInterface.class)
@Stateless
public class BookCatalogBean implements Serializable, BookCatalogInterface {
@PersistenceContext(unitName="EntityBean")
EntityManager em;
protected BookBank book;
protected Collection <BookBank> bookList;
The EntityManager API creates persistent entity instances and allows queries to be run on
entities.
context.lookup(BookCatalogBean.class.getName());
<%!
private BookCatalogInterface bci = null;
String s1,s2,s3;
Collection list;
try {
s1 = request.getParameter("t1");
s2 = request.getParameter("aut");
s3 = request.getParameter("price");
<%
}
list=bci.getAllBooks();
for (Iterator iter = list.iterator(); iter.hasNext();){
BookBank element = (BookBank)iter.next();
%>
<br>
<p>Book ID: <b><%= element.getId() %></b></p>
<p>Title: <b><%= element.getTitle() %></b></p>
<p>Author: <b><%= element.getAuthor() %></b></p>
<p>Price: <b><%= element.getPrice() %></b></p>
<%
}
}// end of try
catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace ();
}
%>
The source code for the “index.jsp” is given below that will actual call the client-design form.
<%@page language="java" %>
<html>
<head>
<title>Ejb3 JPA Tutorial</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFCC">
<p align="center"><font
size="6"
color="#800000"><b>Welcome
to <br>
Ejb3-Jboss 4.2.0
Tutorial</b></font>
Click <a
href="ejb3/form.jsp">Book
Catalog Example</a> to execute
Library<br></p>
</body>
</html>
The source code for the “index.jsp” is given below that will call the web client.
<html>
<head>
<title>Library</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="pink">
<h1>Library</h1>
<hr>
<form
action="WebClient.jsp"
method="POST">
<p>Enter the Title:
<input type="text"
name="t1"
size="25"></p>
<br>
<p>Enter Author name:
<input type="text"
name="aut"
size="25"></p>
<br>
<p>Enter Price:
<input type="text"
name="price"
size="25"></p>
<br>
<p>
<input type="submit"
value="Submit">
<input type="reset"
value="Reset"></p>
</form>
</body>
</html>
jboss-app.xml
The jboss-app.xml file defines a class loader for this application. It makes it simpler for EJB
3.0 to find the default EntityManager.
<jboss-app>
<loader-repository>
book:archive=book.ear
</loader-repository>
</jboss-app>
Application.xml
<display-name>JPA Example</display-name>
<module>
<web>
<web-uri>book.war</web-uri>
<context-root>/book</context-root>
</web>
</module>
<module>
<ejb>book.jar</ejb>
</module>
</application>
persistence.xml
The persistence.xml file contains one or several persistence-unit element. Each persistence-unit
defines the persistence context name, data source settings, and vendor specific properties. In this
example, we are using the HSQL database that is default provided by the Jboss AS. The
hibernate property “create-drop” will automatically create & drop a table (according to the
POJO class) each time when you deploy and run the application on server.
<persistence>
<persistence-unit name="EntityBean">
<jta-data-source>java:/DefaultDS</jta-data-source>
<properties>
<property name="hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto"
value="create-drop"/>
<property name="hibernate.dialect"
value="org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect"/> </properties>
</persistence-unit>
</persistence>
web.xml
Start command prompt, and go to the EntityBean\code directory. Then type the command
as:
C:\ EntityBean\code>ant build.xml
The Ant tool will deploy the book.ear file to the jboss-4.2.0.GA\server\default\deploy
directory.
Open the web browser and type the following URL to run the application:
http://localhost:8080/book
Book ID: 1
Title: EJB-JPA
Author: Nisha
Price: 300.00
Web Services
Normally a Service represents any kind of feature or some piece of functionality that a specific
kind of client can take it from. For example, a printer service, where the clients are either the
applications or the programs using the printers. Likewise, consumers of an ATM service are Bank
Customers. These are the list of real-world services goes on in our daily-life.
Web services was first time introduced in EJB2.1, while EJB3.0 made the web services
development easy and more flexible. Here we are going to describe the general concept of web
services and then explain them how the ejb supports to implement both the web services and web
services client.
Web Services Concept: Web services are the mechanism to develop a Service-Oriented-
Architecture (SOA). SOA is an architectural approach for designing large scale distributed
systems to integrate heterogeneous application on the service interfaces. Web services
technologies support to the Service-Oriented-Architecture in various ways. Some of them are
illustrated below:
• A service requestor uses the selection criteria to the query registry for finding the services
description.
• A service requestor can bind and use the service if it finds a suitable descriptor.
Web services are used in various fields such converting a temperature value from Fahrenheit to
Celsius. More realistic examples built using the web services are heterogeneous applications
such as billing application and report generator, interconnected in-house architectures. A service
interface is just like an object interface with a slight difference that the contract between the
interface and the client is more flexible and the implementation of client and the service is not
much tightly coupled as compared to EJB or other distributed platform. Looser coupling allows
the client and service implementation to run on various platforms, independently such as
Microsoft .NET is capable of using a Java EE application server to access a service running on it.
From the client's point of view, web services's life cycle is more static as compared to average
objects because web services stay around rather than pop-up and go away, even if the services
are implemented using the object technology.
Language Independent:
Let us assume that a Web-Service is running in a remote machine. Suppose an application (can
be a Web-Service also) want to gain the functionality of the Web-Service by accessing it. It is
not that both the Web-Service and the client application must be built in the same language or
technology. They can be different.
Web Services Standards: The de facto standardized set of web services can be summarized by
using an equation.
Lets take a quick look over WSDL and UDDI, but we are not going to cover these topics here
because these are less useful. The requestor does not necessarily have the registry to know the
services and its end point address. Registry not only supports a simple naming service but also
queries for the services that follow the given predicate.
WSDL: There is no need to write down the xml file. The tool you are using automatically
creates an xml file. A number of things are worth nothing while using WSDL.
Building a Web Service with JEE: The creation of the portable and interoperable distributed
components from the web services is not a trivial task. Either regular Java classes or stateless
EJBs can be easily deployed as web services. Package the Java regular classes in a web module
and EJB web services in normal ejb-jar modules.
Two options are there to deploy an application, you can use one of the two deployment options
given below:
Java Class versus Stateless EJB: It depends upon you whether you should have a regular Java
class or EJBs as your technology to build a Web Service. We can easily develop java classes
than EJBs. Java classes are pure java objects and do not have the extra baggage that the EJBs do.
One benefit of using EJB is that it supports the features such as declarative transaction and
security. EJB leaves free to the developer just to concentrate only on applying the business logic
without worrying about the infrastructure services.
Packaging Requirement: Whatever you are using either a regular Java class or EJB, in both the
conditions you need to package several artifacts into your WAR or ejb-jar accordingly, to expose
components as a Java Web Service. Web Services use the following two packaging structures
based on either regular Java classes or EJBs.
/WEB-INF/
web.xml
webservices.xml
oracle-webservices.xml
mapping-file.xml
wsdl/ it is wsdl
file
/classes/(includes endpoint
and bean classes)
/lib/
/META-INF/
ejb-jar.xml
webservices.xml
oracle-webservices.xml
mapping-file.xml
wsdl/ the wsdl file
ejb classes (includes endpoint
and bean classes)
Lets discuss each of the descriptors and the deployment-time artifacts one-by-one.
• WSDL: We are not going to discuss about the WSDL any more as we have already
discuss it in the previous section.
• Web Services Deployment Descriptor: webservices.xml is the standard deployment
descriptor that a JEE plateform requires. This descriptor specifies the description for
deployment about the set of web services into the JEE application server and also their
dependencies on the container resources and services. The mapping.xml file that contains
Java-to-WSDL mapping and the service endpoint interface for the HelloWorld web
service is also specified by this deployment descriptor.
• Endpoint interface: The Web Service endpoint implements the java.rmi.Remote
interface therefore every method of web service endpoint interface must throw the
java.rmi.RemoteException. The deployment descriptor registers to the end point for the
module (ejb-jar.xml) or web.xml. The deployment descriptor (e.g. ejb-jar.xml) should
have the following entry.
<service-endpoint>
oracle.ejb21.ws.HelloServiceInf
</service-endpoint>
Following is the code for the Web Service endpoint for a HelloWorld web service:
Before deploying your component as a web service, first you must package all these artifacts in
the ejb-jar module or in the WAR. Most of the development tools like Oracle JDeveloper
simplifies the development task of web services simply by mapping files, generating the
deployment descriptor etc. Moreover most of the application servers provide Web Services
assembly tools that fulfill the JEE web service packaging requirements.
Before understanding the components required to make up a Web Service and the associated
packaging requirements, first you must deal with the architectural issues when developing a web
service.
Approaches to Construct Services: The main thing about building a Web Service is to identify
the service along with its right granularity. Its depends upon you either you can expose an
existing component that is built as a Java class or EJB and expose it as a service or build the new
service. You can use either top-down or bottom-up approach while building a new service.
• Top-down approach: While building the services from scratch, this is the most
appropriate approach. With this approach start describing the service with WSDL instead
of jumping right into the implementation. This is the most preferable approach since
services become maintainable, more usable and interoperable due to the control over the
WSDL while deploying your web service, careful consideration of the operations and
message exposed. Several JEE vendors provide tools to make the approach easier such as
Oracle Application Server's web services assembler generates deployment descriptors,
interfaces and skeleton implementation classes which can be used to build your
application.
• Bottom-up approach: This approach is used whenever an existing Java class or EJB is
to be exposed as a Web Service. The reason behind the populalrity of this approach is
that, this approach allows to reuse the existing business logic without rewriting the
applications. While using this approach, you have to create a WSDL to describe the Web
Service along with other deployment descriptors and add a web service end-point
interface for the implementation to which you want to expose as a Web Service. Tools
provided by application servers (such as Oracle Application Server's web services
assembler tool) are used to make the life simpler by generating the descriptors such as
webservices.xml, WSDL and mapping files for Web Services components free up the
developer from manually creating these files.
Tips for developing Web Services: Here are the some points that must follow while developing
Web Services.
• Most of the conventional best practices are for JEE applications that are
relevant to Web Services. for example, avoid exposing a component involve
in the long-run transaction as a Web Service.
• Confirm design of your Web Service so that it can create minimum network
traffic.
• Do not overuse Web Services in your applications. Check the necessity to
expose your application as a Web Service.
• Compare your security requirements with the performance of your
application as security comes with the higher cost. Performance of end-to-
end security for web services are quite costly.
To build java based web services, J2EE Blueprint Application ( Java Adventure Builder)
provides a nice blueprint application.
After designing, developing and deploying, we generally create the associated components to
interact with the given service.
Invoking Web Services: Web Service can have the client of any of the following type: Dynamic
Invocation Interface (DII) or dynamic proxy, static stub.
Building a Web Service client may be complex similar to build a simple web service. But JEE
1.4 makes it simple to use the web services for JEE developers from any type of JEE component
such as EJB components or web clients.
Invoking a Web Service is similar to invoking any other resource using JNDI via the following:
• Allow your application to find Web Service just by specifying the location of
the Web Service in the vendor-specific deployment descriptor.
<service-ref-mapping
name="service/HelloWorldService">
<port-info>
<wsdl-port namespaceURI="urn:
HelloWorldService"
localpart="HelloWorldServicePort"/>
<stub-property>
<name>javax.xml.rpc.service.endpoint.address
</name>
<value>http://localhost:8888/hello/HelloWorldI
nf</value>
</stub-property>
</port-info>
</service-ref-mapping>
•
• Package type classes and end-point interface with your application before
deploying it to the server. Make the JNDI lookup to use a Web Service.
To develop a simple Java Web Service in JEE 1.4, several Web Service artifacts such as
mapping files, WSDL, proprietary web services deployment descriptor and several verbose
standard are designed in JEE 5.0. Web Services Metadata specification receives a by default
configuration approach similar to EJB 3.0 for simplifying the development process. Web
Services Metadata annotation process generates these files for you so just concentrate on the
implementation class.
Following is the Java Web Service developed using Web Services Metadata:
package oracle.jr181.demo;
import javax.jws.WebMethod;
import javax.jws.WebService;
@WebService(name =
"HelloWorldService",
targetNamespace =
"http://hello/targetNamespace"
)
public class HelloWorldService {
@WebMethod public String
sayhello(String name ) {
return "Hello” +name+ “ from
jws";
}
}
EJB 3.0 uses regular Java classes to simplify the development process. EJB-based Web Services
developed using EJB 3.0 and Web Services Metadata, are much simpler. HelloWorld EJB is the
example given below developed by using EJB 3.0 and Web Services Metadata. Don't worry
while creating WSDL, deployment descriptors, etc., since the application server generates these
artifacts during deployment.
package oracle.ejb30.ws;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import javax.jws.WebService;
@WebService
public interface HelloServiceInf
extends java.rmi.Remote{
@WebMethod java.lang.String
sayHello(java.lang.String name)
throws java.rmi.RemoteException;
}
package oracle.ejb30.ws;
import java.rmi.RemoteException;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless(name="HelloServiceEJB
")
public class HelloServiceBean
implements HelloServiceInf {
public String sayHello(String name)
{
return("Hello "+name +" from first
EJB3.0 Web Service");
}
}
The above example demonstrates the simplification of service development while simplifying by
using Web Services Metadata and EJB 3.0.
Conclusion
This articles gives you the understanding about the basics of building Web Services using the
J2EE platform. You can build and deploy your Web Services in J2EE-compliant application
servers such as Sun Java System Application Sever, Oracle Application Server 10g, etc.
@Remote:- This is the annotation which is used to declare the interface as Remote.
String getResult(); String getAddress();String getCompanyname():-These are the methods
which are to be defined inside the bean.
SessionBeanRemote.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface SessionBeanRemote {
String getResult();
String getAddress();
String getCompanyname();
}
SessionBeanBean.java:- This is the session bean in which we will declared all the methods of
the Remote interface. This bean is used for controlling the business process and filling the gaps
between the data of the entity beans. Here
SessionBeanBean.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless
public class SessionBeanBean implements SessionBeanRemote {
public String getResult() {
return "Hello World";
}
public String getAddress() {
return "Sec-3,D-16/116,Rohini";
}
public String getCompanyname() {
return "Roseindia.net Pvt.Ltd.";
}
}
Main.java:- This is the client application from which we can access all the methods of the
session bean.
@EJB:-This is the annotation that configure the EJB values for a field or a method. This
annotation is a Resource annotation and is used where it is known that the resultant is an EJB
interface.
Main.java
package ejb_remote;
import ejb.SessionBeanRemote;
import javax.ejb.EJB;
This tutorial explains you the process which are involved in making a message driven bean using
EJB. Mesaage driven bean in EJB have the following features:-
1) is a JMS listener
2) provides a single-use service
3) is relatively short lived
For developing the message driven bean we are using both the EJB module and web module.
The steps involved in creating message driven bean are as follows:-
persistence.xml
NewsEntity.java
package ejb;
import java.io.Serializable;
import javax.persistence.Entity;
import javax.persistence.GeneratedValue;
import javax.persistence.GenerationType;
import javax.persistence.Id;
@Entity
public class NewsEntity implements Serializable {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
public Long getId() {
return id;
}
This is the message driven annotation that tells the container that the component is a message-
driven bean and the JMS resource is used by the bean.
private EntityManager em:-By this we define the entity manager into the class.
NewMessageBean.java
package ejb;
import javax.annotation.Resource;
import javax.ejb.ActivationConfigProperty;
import javax.ejb.MessageDriven;
import javax.ejb.MessageDrivenContext;
import javax.jms.JMSException;
import javax.jms.Message;
import javax.jms.MessageListener;
import javax.jms.ObjectMessage;
import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
public NewMessageBean() {
}
NewsEntityFacade.java
package ejb;
import java.util.List;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
@Stateless
public class NewsEntityFacade implements NewsEntityFacadeLocal {
@PersistenceContext
private EntityManager em;
NewsEntityFacadeLocal.java
package ejb;
import java.util.List;
import javax.ejb.Local;
@Local
public interface NewsEntityFacadeLocal {
List findAll();
ListNews.java
package web;
import ejb.NewsEntity;
import ejb.NewsEntityFacadeLocal;
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import javax.ejb.EJB;
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
package web;
import ejb.NewsEntity;
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
import javax.jms.Connection;
import javax.annotation.Resource;
import javax.jms.ConnectionFactory;
import javax.jms.JMSException;
import javax.jms.MessageProducer;
import javax.jms.ObjectMessage;
import javax.jms.Queue;
import javax.jms.Session;
import javax.servlet.*;
import javax.servlet.http.*;
@Resource(mappedName = "jms/NewMessageFactory")
private ConnectionFactory connectionFactory;
@Resource(mappedName = "jms/NewMessage")
private Queue queue;
if ((title != null) && (body != null) && (email != null) && (dob != n
ull)) {
try {
Connection connection = connectionFactory.createConnection();
Session session = connection.createSession(false, Session.AUT
O_ACKNOWLEDGE);
MessageProducer messageProducer = session.createProducer(queu
e);
e.setTitle(title);
e.setBody(body);
e.setEmail(email);
e.setDob(dob);
message.setObject(e);
messageProducer.send(message);
messageProducer.close();
connection.close();
response.sendRedirect("ListNews");
} catch (JMSException ex) {
ex.printStackTrace();
}
}
out.println("<html>");
out.println("<head>");
out.println("<title>Servlet PostMessage</title>");
out.println("</head>");
out.println("<body>");
out.println("<h1>EJB Servlet PostMessage at </h1>");
out.println("<hr></hr>");
out.println("<form>");
Bean30Remote.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface Bean30Remote {
String getMessage();
String getAddress();
String getCompanyname();
}
Bean30Bean.java:-This is the bean of type session in which we have defined the body of the
method which were declared in the
interface named SessionBeanRemote.java.@Stateless is the annotation used to declare the bean
as a session type.
Bean30Bean.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless(mappedName="Bean30")
public class Bean30Bean implements Bean30Remote {
Main.java:-This is the client application from which we can access the methods which are
defined in the bean.
InitialContext ctx = new InitialContext():-InitialContext is the class which is used to find out
the starting context for performing naming operations. Initial Context is used to lookup home
interfaces with inside an EJB. Here all the naming convention are relative to context.
Main.java
package ejbmodule30;
import ejb.Bean30Remote;
import javax.naming.InitialContext;
=================================
EJB message is:Roseindia.net
Company name is:Roseindia.net Pvt.Ltd.
Address is:Sec-3,D-16/116,Rohini
=================================
3)ejbRemove:-At this stage the bean instance is ready to move for the garbage collection.
em.merge(newsEntity):-By using this method we can merge the state of the given entity into
the current persistence context.
em.remove(em.merge(newsEntity)):-This method is used for removing the entity instance.
package ejb;
import java.util.List;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
@Stateless
public class NewsEntityFacade implements NewsEntityFacadeLocal {
@PersistenceContext
private EntityManager em;
EJB Interfaces
Interface in java means a group of related methods with empty bodies. EJB have generally 4
interfaces. These are as follows
1)Remote interface:- Remote interface are the interface that has the methods that relate to a
particular bean instance. In the Remote interface we have all get methods as given below in the
program. This is the interface where all of the business method go.javax.ejb.Remote package is
used for creating Remote interface.
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface Bean30Remote {
String getMessage();
String getAddress();
String getCompanyname();
}
2)Local Interface:-Local interface are the type of interface that are used for making local
connections to EJB.@Local annotation is used for declaring interface as Local. javax.ejb.Local
package is used for creating Local interface.
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Local;
@Local
public interface NewSessionLocal {
3)Home Interface:-Home interface is the interface that has methods that relate to all EJB of a
certain class as a whole. The methods which are defined in this Interface are create() methods
and find() methods . The create() method allows us to create beans. find() method is used in
Entity beans.
import javax.ejb.EJBHome;
import javax.ejb.CreateException;
import java.rmi.RemoteException;
4)Localhome Interface:-The local interfaces extend the following interfaces. These interfaces
are generally for use by clients
javax.ejb.EJBLocalObject - for the Object interface
javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome - for the Home interface
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.EJBLocalHome;
import javax.ejb.CreateException;
AccountStatusRemote.java :-This is the Remote Interface for the Bean. Here we have used
@Remote annotation to declare the class as a Remote Interface. The use of annotation here is
that through it we can create a java source file which contain the bean implementation logic.
String getStatus(); String getAddress(); Integer getInsert(); :-These are the method which is
to be defined in the Bean and is called in the client application.
AccountStatusRemote.java
package bean;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import java.util.*;
@Remote
public interface AccountStatusRemote {
String getStatus();
String getAddress();
Integer getInsert();
}
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"}):-This is also the annotation which means that only users
in the security role USERS can access the method declared in the Bean .
AccountStatusBean.java
package bean;
import java.sql.*;
import java.util.*;
import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless
public class AccountStatusBean implements AccountStatusRemote {
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"})
public String getStatus() {
return "Name of the company is: " + name;
}
@SuppressWarnings(value = "unchecked")
public Integer getInsert() {
Connection con = null;
String url = "jdbc:mysql://192.168.10.75:3306/";
String dbName = "komal";
String driver = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver";
int val = 0;
String userName = "root";
String password = "root";
try {
Class.forName(driver).newInstance();
con = DriverManager.getConnection
(url + dbName, userName, password);
Statement st = con.createStatement();
val = st.executeUpdate("INSERT INTO employees VALUES
('ABC','CDE','Rohini','indian')");
st.close();
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println(e);
}
return val;
}
}
Main.java:-This is the client application through which we can access the methods which are
defined in the bean.
@EJB:-This is the annotation that configure the EJB values for a field or a method. Normally
this annotation is a Resource annotation where it is known that the resultant is an EJB interface.
Main.java
package secure;
import bean.AccountStatusRemote;
import javax.ejb.EJB;
import java.util.*;
@EJB
private static AccountStatusRemote accountStatusBean;
}
}
em.merge(newsEntity):-This method merge the state of the given entity into the current
persistence context.
em.find(ejb.NewsEntity.class, id):-This methods find the entity instance by the primary key.
Here primary key is id.
package ejb;
import java.util.List;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
@Stateless
public class NewsEntityFacade implements NewsEntityFacadeLocal {
@PersistenceContext
private EntityManager em;
is started. All of the entity objects live in container during its creation to removal. We can deploy
more than one entity beans in a container. When the entity bean is deployed in the container the
work of the container is to provide a home interface for the entity bean. This home interface
allows a client in removing, creating and finding entity objects. It also helps in executing home
interface business methods that are not specific to a particular entity bean object. JNDI(Java
Naming and Directory Interface) is the standard interface by which the client can look up the
entity bean's home interface.
. In the given example we are going to show you, how to create your first hello world example in
EJB and testing it.
You can also create a hello world example to test your EJB environment setup. This simple
application will required three different files to print the message.
3. Main.java:-This is the client application from which we can access the methods which are
defined in the bean.@EJB is the annotation
used for configuring the EJB values for a field and method.
SessionBeanRemote.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
@Remote
public interface SessionBeanRemote {
String getResult();
String getAddress();
String getCompanyname();
}
SessionBeanBean.java
package ejb;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless
public class SessionBeanBean implements SessionBeanRemote,SessionBeanLocal {
Main.java
package enterpriseappee5;
import ejb.SessionBeanRemote;
import javax.ejb.EJB;
@EJB
private static SessionBeanRemote sessionBeanBean;
MANIFEST.MF:-This is the file which provides meta-information for the JAR. This file is a
standard component of a JAR file. It is used to extend the class path that is being used by the
EJB module.
NewsApp-ejb.jar:-This is the jar file which is used for compressing, packaging, and delivering
several files together. The use of the JAR file in EJB is to package all the interfaces and classes
that are associated with beans into one file. This file contain the following files :-
NewsApp-war.war:-This is the file in which we deploy the ejb remote interfaces and the stub
classes .This file includes the EJB client classes
NewsApp-ejb:-This is the EJB module where we have stored beans and interfaces.
NewsApp-war:-This is the web module for our project. Here we have created the servlet and JSP
pages.
AccountStatusRemote.java :-This is the Remote Interface for the Bean. Here we have used
@Remote annotation to declare the class as a Remote Interface. The use of annotation here is
that through it we can create a java source file which contain the bean implementation logic.
String getStatus(); String getAddress(); String getUpdate();:-These are the method which is
to be defined in the Bean and is called in the client application
AccountStatusRemote.java
package bean;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import java.util.*;
@Remote
public interface AccountStatusRemote {
String getStatus();
String getAddress();
String getUpdate();
}
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"}):-This is also the annotation which means that only users
in the security role USERS can access the method declared in the Bean .
Main.java:-This is the client application through which we can access the methods which are
defined in the bean.
@EJB:-This is the annotation that configure the EJB values for a field or a method. Normally
this annotation is a Resource annotation where it is known that the resultant is an EJB interface.
AccountStatusBean.java
package bean;
import java.sql.*;
import java.util.*;
import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless
public class AccountStatusBean implements AccountStatusRemote {
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"})
public String getStatus() {
return "Name of the company is: " + name;
}
@SuppressWarnings(value = "unchecked")
} catch (Exception e) {
}
return updateString ;
}
}
AccountStatusRemote.java :-This is the Remote Interface for the Bean. Here we have used
@Remote annotation to declare the class as a Remote Interface. The use of annotation here is
that through it we can create a java source file which contain the bean implementation logic.
String getStatus(); String getAddress(); List getData();:-These are the method which is to be
defined in the Bean and is called in the client application.
AccountStatusRemote.java
package bean;
import javax.ejb.Remote;
import java.util.*;
@Remote
public interface AccountStatusRemote {
String getStatus();
String getAddress();
List getData();
}
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"}):-This is also the annotation which means that only users
in the security role USERS can access the method declared in the Bean .This is to be declared in
the the sun-application.xml file.
<security-role-mapping>
<role-name>USERS</role-
name>
<group-
name>bank_users</group-
name>
</security-role-mapping>
AccountStatusBean.java
package bean;
import java.sql.*;
import java.util.*;
import javax.annotation.security.RolesAllowed;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
@Stateless
public class AccountStatusBean implements AccountStatusRemote {
@RolesAllowed(value = {"USERS"})
public String getStatus() {
return "Name of the company is: " + name;
}
@SuppressWarnings(value = "unchecked")
public List getData() {
Connection con = null;
String url = "jdbc:mysql://192.168.10.75:3306/";
String dbName = "komal";
String driver = "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver";
HashMap row;
while (rs.next()) {
row = new HashMap();
row.put("First_Name", rs.getString(1));
row.put("Last_Name", rs.getString(2));
row.put("Address",rs.getString(3));
row.put("Nationality",rs.getString(4));
list.add(row);
}
st.close();
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return list;
}
}
Main.java:-This is the client application through which we can access the methods which are
defined in the bean.
@EJB:-This is the annotation that configure the EJB values for a field or a method. Normally
this annotation is a Resource annotation where it is known that the resultant is an EJB interface.
Main.java
package secure;
import bean.AccountStatusRemote;
import javax.ejb.EJB;
import java.util.*;
@EJB
private static AccountStatusRemote accountStatusBean;
+ "\t\t" + "Nationality");
System.out.println("=============================================; "
);
for (int i = 0; i < list.size(); i++) {
row = (HashMap) list.get(i);
String a = (String) row.get("First_Name");
String s = (String) row.get("Last_Name");
String b = (String) row.get("Address");
String d = (String) row.get("Nationality");
System.out.println(a + "\t\t" + s + "\t\t" + b + "\t\t" + d);
}
System.out.println("=============================================");
}
}