Architectural Overview: Difference between revisions
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'''The Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) architecture has the following goals''' |
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'''Overall Goals:''' |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be the standard component architecture for building distributed object-oriented business applications in the Java™ programming language. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will support the development, deployment, and use of web services. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will make it easy to write applications: Application developers will not have to understand low-level transaction and state management details, multi-threading, connection pooling, or other complex low-level APIs. |
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*Enterprise JavaBeans applications will follow the Write Once, Run Anywhere™ philosophy of the Java programming language. An enterprise bean can be developed once, and then deployed on multiple platforms without recompilation or source code modification. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will address the development, deployment, and runtime aspects of an enterprise application’s life cycle. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will define the contracts that enable tools from multiple vendors to develop and deploy components that can interoperate at runtime. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will make it possible to build applications by combining components developed using tools from different vendors. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will provide interoperability between enterprise beans and Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) components as well as non-Java programming language applications. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with existing server platforms. Vendors will be able to extend their existing products to support Enterprise JavaBeans. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with other Java programming language APIs. |
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*The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with the CORBA protocols. |
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*[[Classes and Interfaces (Remote/Home)]] |
*[[Classes and Interfaces (Remote/Home)]] |
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*[[Deployment Descriptor (DD)]] |
*[[Deployment Descriptor (DD)]] |
Latest revision as of 08:56, 8 February 2005
The Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) architecture has the following goals
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be the standard component architecture for building distributed object-oriented business applications in the Java™ programming language.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will support the development, deployment, and use of web services.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will make it easy to write applications: Application developers will not have to understand low-level transaction and state management details, multi-threading, connection pooling, or other complex low-level APIs.
- Enterprise JavaBeans applications will follow the Write Once, Run Anywhere™ philosophy of the Java programming language. An enterprise bean can be developed once, and then deployed on multiple platforms without recompilation or source code modification.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will address the development, deployment, and runtime aspects of an enterprise application’s life cycle.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will define the contracts that enable tools from multiple vendors to develop and deploy components that can interoperate at runtime.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will make it possible to build applications by combining components developed using tools from different vendors.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will provide interoperability between enterprise beans and Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE) components as well as non-Java programming language applications.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with existing server platforms. Vendors will be able to extend their existing products to support Enterprise JavaBeans.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with other Java programming language APIs.
- The Enterprise JavaBeans architecture will be compatible with the CORBA protocols.