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- What
makes J2EE suitable for distributed multitiered
Applications?
- The J2EE platform uses a multitiered distributed
application model. Application logic is divided into
components according to function, and the various
application components that make up a J2EE application are
installed on different machines depending on the tier in the
multitiered J2EE environment to which the application
component belongs. The J2EE application parts are:
-
Client-tier components run on the client machine.
- Web-tier
components run on the J2EE server.
-
Business-tier components run on the J2EE server.
-
Enterprise information system (EIS)-tier software runs on
the EIS server.
- What is
J2EE? - J2EE is an environment for
developing and deploying enterprise applications. The J2EE
platform consists of a set of services, application
programming interfaces (APIs), and protocols that provide
the functionality for developing multitiered, web-based
applications.
- What
are the components of J2EE application?
- A J2EE component is a self-contained functional software
unit that is assembled into a J2EE application with its
related classes and files and communicates with other
components. The J2EE specification defines the following
J2EE components:
-
Application clients and applets are client components.
- Java
Servlet and JavaServer Pages technology components are web
components.
-
Enterprise JavaBeans components (enterprise beans) are
business components.
- Resource
adapter components provided by EIS and tool vendors.
- What do
Enterprise JavaBeans components contain?
- Enterprise JavaBeans components contains Business code,
which is logic
that solves or meets the needs of a particular business
domain such as banking, retail, or finance, is handled by
enterprise beans running in the business tier. All the
business code is contained inside an Enterprise Bean which
receives data from client programs, processes it (if
necessary), and sends it to the enterprise information
system tier for storage. An enterprise bean also retrieves
data from storage, processes it (if necessary), and sends it
back to the client program.
- Is J2EE
application only a web-based? -
No, It depends on type of application that client wants. A
J2EE application can be web-based or non-web-based. if an
application client executes on the client machine, it is a
non-web-based J2EE application. The J2EE application can
provide a way for users to handle tasks such as J2EE system
or application administration. It typically has a graphical
user interface created from Swing or AWT APIs, or a
command-line interface. When user request, it can open an
HTTP connection to establish communication with a servlet
running in the web tier.
- Are
JavaBeans J2EE components? - No.
JavaBeans components are not considered J2EE components by
the J2EE specification. They are written to manage the data
flow between an application client or applet and components
running on the J2EE server or between server components and
a database. JavaBeans components written for the J2EE
platform have instance variables and get and set methods for
accessing the data in the instance variables. JavaBeans
components used in this way are typically simple in design
and implementation, but should conform to the naming and
design conventions outlined in the JavaBeans component
architecture.
- Is HTML
page a web component? - No. Static
HTML pages and applets are bundled with web components
during application assembly, but are not considered web
components by the J2EE specification. Even the server-side
utility classes are not considered web components, either.
- What
can be considered as a web component?
- J2EE Web components can be either servlets or JSP pages.
Servlets are Java programming language classes that
dynamically process requests and construct responses. JSP
pages are text-based documents that execute as servlets but
allow a more natural approach to creating static content.
- What is
the container? - Containers are
the interface between a component and the low-level platform
specific functionality that supports the component. Before a
Web, enterprise bean, or application client component can be
executed, it must be assembled into a J2EE application and
deployed into its container.
- What
are container services? - A
container is a runtime support of a system-level entity.
Containers provide components with services such as
lifecycle management, security, deployment, and threading.
- What is
the web container? - Servlet and
JSP containers are collectively referred to as Web
containers. It manages the execution of JSP page and servlet
components for J2EE applications. Web components and their
container run on the J2EE server.
- What is
Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) container?
- It manages the execution of enterprise beans for J2EE
applications.
Enterprise beans and their container run on the J2EE server.
- What is
Applet container? - IManages the
execution of applets. Consists of a Web browser and Java
Plugin running on the client together.
- How do
we package J2EE components? - J2EE
components are packaged separately and bundled into a J2EE
application for deployment. Each component, its related
files such as GIF and HTML files or server-side utility
classes, and a deployment descriptor are assembled into a
module and added to the J2EE application. A J2EE application
is composed of one or more enterprise bean,Web, or
application client component modules. The final enterprise
solution can use one J2EE application or be made up of two
or more J2EE applications, depending on design requirements.
A J2EE application and each of its modules has its own
deployment descriptor. A deployment descriptor is an XML
document with an .xml extension that describes a component’s
deployment settings.
- What is
a thin client? - A thin client is
a lightweight interface to the application that does not
have such operations like query databases, execute complex
business rules, or connect to legacy applications.
- What
are types of J2EE clients? -
Following are the types of J2EE clients:
- Applets
-
Application clients
- Java Web
Start-enabled rich clients, powered by Java Web Start
technology.
- Wireless
clients, based on Mobile Information Device Profile (MIDP)
technology.
- What is
deployment descriptor? - A
deployment descriptor is an Extensible Markup Language (XML)
text-based file with an .xml extension that describes a
component’s deployment settings. A J2EE application and each
of its modules has its own deployment descriptor. For
example, an enterprise bean module deployment descriptor
declares transaction attributes and security authorizations
for an enterprise bean. Because deployment descriptor
information is declarative, it can be changed without
modifying the bean source code. At run time, the J2EE server
reads the deployment descriptor and acts upon the component
accordingly.
- What is
the EAR file? - An EAR file is a
standard JAR file with an .ear extension, named from
Enterprise ARchive file. A J2EE application with all of its
modules is delivered in EAR file.
- What is
JTA and JTS? - JTA is the
abbreviation for the Java Transaction API. JTS is the
abbreviation for the Jave Transaction Service. JTA provides
a standard interface and allows you to demarcate
transactions in a manner that is independent of the
transaction manager implementation. The J2EE SDK implements
the transaction manager with JTS. But your code doesn’t call
the JTS methods directly. Instead, it invokes the JTA
methods, which then call the lower-level JTS routines.
Therefore, JTA is a high level transaction interface that
your application uses to control transaction. and JTS is a
low level transaction interface and ejb uses behind the
scenes (client code doesn’t directly interact with JTS. It
is based on object transaction service(OTS) which is part of
CORBA.
- What is
JAXP? - JAXP stands for Java API
for XML. XML is a language for representing and describing
text-based data which can be read and handled by any program
or tool that uses XML APIs. It provides standard services to
determine the type of an arbitrary piece of data,
encapsulate access to it, discover the operations available
on it, and create the appropriate JavaBeans component to
perform those operations.
- What is
J2EE Connector? - The J2EE
Connector API is used by J2EE tools vendors and system
integrators to create resource adapters that support access
to enterprise information systems that can be plugged into
any J2EE product. Each type of database or EIS has a
different resource adapter. Note: A resource adapter is a
software component that allows J2EE application components
to access and interact with the underlying resource manager.
Because a resource adapter is specific to its resource
manager, there is typically a different resource adapter for
each type of database or enterprise information system.
- What is
JAAP? - The Java Authentication
and Authorization Service (JAAS) provides a way for a J2EE
application to authenticate and authorize a specific user or
group of users to run it. It is a standard Pluggable
Authentication Module (PAM) framework that extends the Java
2 platform security architecture to support user-based
authorization.
- What is
Java Naming and Directory Service?
- The JNDI provides naming and directory functionality. It
provides applications with methods for performing standard
directory operations, such as associating attributes with
objects and searching for objects using their attributes.
Using JNDI, a J2EE application can store and retrieve any
type of named Java object. Because JNDI is independent of
any specific implementations, applications can use JNDI to
access multiple naming and directory services, including
existing naming and
directory services such as LDAP, NDS, DNS, and NIS.
- What is
Struts? - A Web page development
framework. Struts combines Java Servlets, Java Server Pages,
custom tags, and message resources into a unified framework.
It is a cooperative, synergistic platform, suitable for
development teams, independent developers, and everyone
between.
- How is
the MVC design pattern used in Struts framework?
- In the MVC design pattern, application flow is mediated by
a central Controller. The Controller delegates requests to
an appropriate handler. The handlers are tied to a Model,
and each handler acts as an adapter between the request and
the Model. The Model represents, or encapsulates, an
application’s business logic or state. Control is usually
then forwarded back through the Controller to the
appropriate View. The forwarding can be determined by
consulting a set of mappings, usually loaded from a database
or configuration file. This provides a loose coupling
between the View and Model, which can make an application
significantly easier to create and maintain. Controller:
Servlet controller which supplied by Struts itself; View:
what you can see on the screen, a JSP page and presentation
components; Model: System state and a business logic
JavaBeans.
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