TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. TOTD #94 built upon it by using Java Server Faces
2 instead of Servlet 3.0 for displaying the results. However we
are still using a POJO for all the database interactions. This
works fine if we are only reading values from the database but
that's not how a typical web application behaves. The web
application would typically perform all CRUD operations. More
typically they like to perform one or more CRUD …
TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. TOTD #94 built upon it by using Java Server Faces
2 instead of Servlet 3.0 for displaying the results. However we
are still using a POJO for all the database interactions. This
works fine if we are only reading values from the database but
that's not how a typical web application behaves. The web
application would typically perform all CRUD operations. More
typically they like to perform one or more CRUD …
TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. TOTD #94 built upon it by using Java Server Faces
2 instead of Servlet 3.0 for displaying the results. However we
are still using a POJO for all the database interactions. This
works fine if we are only reading values from the database but
that's not how a typical web application behaves. The web
application would typically perform all CRUD operations. More
typically they like to perform one or more CRUD …
TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. JPA 2.0
+ Eclipselink was used for the database connectivity and Servlet
3.0 was used for displaying the results to the user. The sample
demonstrated how the two technologies can be mixed to create a
simple web application. But Servlets are meant for server-side
processing rather than displaying the results to end user.
JavaServer Faces 2 (another new specification in
Java EE 6) is designed to fulfill that purpose.
…
TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. JPA 2.0
+ Eclipselink was used for the database connectivity and Servlet
3.0 was used for displaying the results to the user. The sample
demonstrated how the two technologies can be mixed to create a
simple web application. But Servlets are meant for server-side
processing rather than displaying the results to end user.
JavaServer Faces 2 (another new specification in
Java EE 6) is designed to fulfill that purpose.
…
TOTD #93 showed how to get started with
Java
EE 6 using NetBeans 6.8 M1 and GlassFish v3 by
building a simple Servlet 3.0 + JPA 2.0 web application. JPA 2.0
+ Eclipselink was used for the database connectivity and Servlet
3.0 was used for displaying the results to the user. The sample
demonstrated how the two technologies can be mixed to create a
simple web application. But Servlets are meant for server-side
processing rather than displaying the results to end user.
JavaServer Faces 2 (another new specification in
Java EE 6) is designed to fulfill that purpose.
…
NetBeans 6.8 M1 introduces support for
creating Java EE 6 applications ... cool!
This Tip Of The Day (TOTD) shows how to create a simple web
application using JPA 2.0 and Servlet 3.0 and deploy on GlassFish
v3 latest promoted build (58 as of this writing). If you can work with
the one week older build then NetBeans 6.8 M1 comes pre-bundled
with 57. The example below should work fine on that as
well.
- Create the database, table, and populate some data into it as
shown below:
~/tools/glassfish/v3/58/glassfishv3/bin >sudo mysql --user root
…
NetBeans 6.8 M1 introduces support for
creating Java EE 6 applications ... cool!
This Tip Of The Day (TOTD) shows how to create a simple web
application using JPA 2.0 and Servlet 3.0 and deploy on GlassFish
v3 latest promoted build (58 as of this writing). If you can work with
the one week older build then NetBeans 6.8 M1 comes pre-bundled
with 57. The example below should work fine on that as
well.
- Create the database, table, and populate some data into it as
shown below:
~/tools/glassfish/v3/58/glassfishv3/bin >sudo mysql --user root
…
NetBeans 6.8 M1 introduces support for
creating Java EE 6 applications ... cool!
This Tip Of The Day (TOTD) shows how to create a simple web
application using JPA 2.0 and Servlet 3.0 and deploy on GlassFish
v3 latest promoted build (58 as of this writing). If you can work with
the one week older build then NetBeans 6.8 M1 comes pre-bundled
with 57. The example below should work fine on that as
well.
- Create the database, table, and populate some data into it as
shown below:
~/tools/glassfish/v3/58/glassfishv3/bin >sudo mysql --user root
…
Tucked at the end of TS-4923, Mahesh had a few slides on DTrace support on GlassFish v3. Not yet in the Preview release we released this week but "soon". The support is via Btrace; Mahesh has promised a writeup on the details and I'll try to get a screencast, maybe a Webinar. With this we will have DTrace support on all the key containers: … |