Developing Applications for the Java EE 6 Platform Training Institute in Chennai (ISQL Global)
The
Developing Applications for the Java(TM) EE Platform training at Oracle Authorised Training Institute ISQL Global (SQL Star) helps you
develop the knowledge to build and deploy enterprise applications that comply with Java(TM) Platform, Enterprise Edition 6 technology
standards. This course is ideal for Sun(TM) Certified Java technology programmers who want to develop enterprise applications that conform
to the Java EE platform standards.
Learn To:
- Describe the application model for the Java EE platform and the context for
the model.
- Understand enterprise components and work with (JSP(TM)) technology.
- Create web services using SOAP and RESTful techniques.
- Assemble and deploy an application into an application server (Java EE
platform runtime environment).
- Develop expertise using Enterprise Java Beans(TM) (EJB(TM)) technology.
- Become familiar with the Java Persistence API.
- Create User interfaces using servlets, JSP technology (JSP pages) and Java Server Faces (JSF).
- Develop
simple web services for the Java EE platform.
- Understand
RESTful and SOAP web services and the Java technology clients who
use them.
Benefits to YouBy investing in this course, you'll learn how to boost the productivity, communication and collaboration of your organization. You'll reduce the cost of application ownership through executing more efficient development techniques, while maintaining your edge as you stay
current with the global standard for developing networked applications.
Engage in Hands-On Labs
Throughout the course, you'll also perform lab exercises using NetBeans(TM)Integrated Development Environment (IDE). Expert Oracle University instructors will help you gain hands-on experience building an end-to-end, distributed business application. You'll get a chance to explore session EJB components, which implement the Session Facade pattern and provide a front-end to entity components
using the Java Persistence API. Finally, you'll deep dive into message-driven EJB components as well, which act as Java Message Service (JMS) consumers.
Who Should Enroll in this Course
This is a relevant and worthwhile course to take if you have Java Programming experience and would like a broad overview of the Java EE
platform. It's also an ideal course to invest in if you're planning
to take one or more of the Enterprise Java EE6 certification exams.
Suggested Prerequisite
- Experience with the Java programming language
- Familiarity
with the use of an IDE
- Familiarity
with relational database theory and the basics of structured query
language (SQL)
- Familiarity with object serialization
Audience- J2EE
Developer
- Java EE Developers
- Java Developers
Course Objectives- Select the correct Java EE Profile for a given application
- Develop
and run an EJB technology application
- Develop
basic Java Persistence API entity classes to enable database access
- Develop
a web-based User interface using Servlets, JSPs, and JSF
Course Topics
Survey of Java EE Technologies- Certifications Paths
- Describe the needs of enterprise applications
- Describe the different Java platforms and versions
- Introducing
Applications Servers
- Enterprise Modules
- Introduce the Java EE APIs and services
Enterprise Application Architecture- Design
Patterns
- Model View Controller
- Synchronous
and Asynchronous communication
- Network
Topologies and Clustering
- Layering (client, presentation, service, integration, persistence)
Web Technology Overview- Describe the role of web components in a Java EE application
- Define the http request-response model
- Brief
introduction to technologies not covered in detail
- Compare Java servlets, JSP, and JSF
Developing
Servlets- Use the request and response APIs
- Describe the servlet API
- Servlet configuration through annotations and deployment descriptors
- Servlets
as controllers
Developing
With Java Server Pages Technology- Author
JSP pages
- Evaluate the role of JSP technology as a presentation mechanism
- Brief
introduction to the JSTL and EL
- Process
data received from servlets in a JSP page
Java Server Faces- The
JSF model explained
- Configuring
JSF page navigation
- JSF
Conversion, Validation, and Error Handling
- JSF
Managed beans
- Using
the JSF tag libraries
- Adding
JSF support to web applications
EJB Overview- Java Persistence API as a replacement for Entity EJBs
- EJB
types: Message Driven beans
- Describe the role of EJBs in a Java EE application
- EJB
types: Session Beans
- EJB lite
Implementing
EJB 3.0 Session Beans- Describe the operational characteristics of a singleton session bean
- Describe the operational characteristics of a stateful session bean
- Describe the operational characteristics of a stateless session bean
- Package and deploy session beans
- Create session beans
- Create session bean clients
- Compare stateless and stateful behaviour
The
Java Persistence API- Object Relational Mapping
- The
life cycle and operational characteristics of Entity components
- The
role of the Java Persistence API in a Java EE application
- Entity
class creation
- Using the Entity Manager API
- Persistent Units and Packaging
Implementing
a Transaction Policy- Compare programmatic and declarative transaction scoping
- Implement a container-managed transaction policy
- Use the Java Transaction API (JTA) to scope transactions
programmatically
- Describe transaction semantics
- Using
transactions with the web profile
- Support pessimistic locking of entity components
- Support optimistic locking with the versioning of entity components
Developing Asynchronous Java EE Applications and Messaging- List the capabilities and limitations of Java EE components as messaging
producers and consumers
- The need for asynchronous execution
- JMS
administration
- JMS technologyintroduction
- JMS
and transactions
Developing Message-Driven Beans- Describe the properties and life cycle of message-driven beans
- Create a JMS message-driven bean
Web Service Model- List the specifications used to make web services platform independent
- Describe the role of web services
- Describe the Java APIs used for XML processing and web services
- Web
service models
Implementing
Java EE Web Services with JAX-WS and JAX-RS- Describe endpoints supported by the Java EE 6 platform
- Developing
Web Services with Java
- Creating
Web Service Clients with Java
Implementing a Security Policy- Configure authentication in the web tier
- Define User roles and responsibilities
- Exploit container-managed security
- Create a role-based security policy
- Use the security API