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Class Schedule

San Diego, CA
Instructol Lead Training

Cost: $1,999 ($1,599 early bird rate)

Feb 8 - 12 (2010)
Mar 22 - 26 (2010)
Apr 12 - 16 (2010)
May 24 - 28 (2010)
Jun 14 - 18 (2010)
Jul 12 - 16 (2010)
Aug 11 -13 (2010)
Sep 20 - 24 (2010)
Oct 25 - 29 (2010)
Nov 8 - 12 (2010)
Dec 20 - 24 (2010)

Virtual Training
Cost: $1399 ($1199 early bird rate)

Feb 8 - 12 (2010)
Mar 22 - 26 (2010)
Apr 12 - 16 (2010)
May 24 - 28 (2010)
Jun 14 - 18 (2010)
Jul 12 - 16 (2010)
Aug 11 -13 (2010)
Sep 20 - 24 (2010)
Oct 25 - 29 (2010)
Nov 8 - 12 (2010)
Dec 20 - 24 (2010)

 

Request a class! Looking for a custom course or one that better fits your schedule? Email us with your request and we will place you on a wait list.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
 
 


Introduction to
Java Enterprise Edition

4 Day Course Description
This intense four-day course teaches Java programmers how to develop enterprise applications using the ease of development features introduced in Java EE 5. Students will learn how to create dynamic web applications with JSP, Java Servlets, JSTL, and JSF. They will use JAX-WS to develop SOAP based web services. Students will learn about session and message-driven EJBs, as well as the new Persistence API. They will also be introduced to JavaMail, Java Message Service, Java Transaction API, and Java Management Extensions.


Audience
Java programmers who need to learn about Java EE 5.

Prerequisites
Java Programming.

Course Contents

Introduction to Java EE 5
Java SE Building Blocks
Servlets, JSPs, and Web Applications
Web Services
Enterprise JavaBeans
Additional Java EE APIs
Java EE Clients
POJO, Dependency Injection, and Annotations
The Java EE Platform

Introduction to JSP and JSTL
MVC and Web Applications
JSP As the View
JSP Scripting Elements
Expression Language
EL Operators
Request and Response
include and forwards
JSTL
Conditionals and Iteration in JSTL
JSTL Variables And Output

Introduction to Java Servlets and JavaBeans
Java Servlets as the Controller
HttpServlet
HTTPServletRequest
HTTPServletResponse
HttpSession
RequestDispatcher
JavaBeans as the Model
Bean Scopes
web.xml

JavaServer Faces
Frameworks
JSF Benefits
JSF Tag Libraries
Components
Managed Beans
Event handling
Navigation
Validators and Converters
Lifecycle
JSF Application Structure

JMS
Messaging Concepts
What is JMS ?
Point-to-Point
Publish/Subscribe
Message Object
Session
Creating the Client

JavaMail
Mail Systems and JavaMail
The javax.mail Packages
Establishing a Session
The MimeMessage Class
Sending a Message
Retrieving Email Messages
Multi-part Messages

EJB3 Overview
The Enterprise JavaBean
EJB Benefits
Defining the Bean Interface
Defining the Bean Class
Creating a Client Servlet
Assembly and Deployment of EJBs

Session Beans and Message-Driven Beans
A Session Bean
Stateless Session Beans
PostConstruct and PreDestroy
Lifecycle of a Stateless Session Bean
Stateful Session Beans
Lifecycle of a Stateful Session Bean
Lifecycle Callbacks
Dependency Injection
Message-Driven Beans
MDB Lifecycle
Sending a Message

Introduction to the Persistence API

What is Java Persistence?
Persistence Objects and Metadata
Creating an Entity Class
The Entity Manager
Looking up Entities
The Persistence Unit
Deployment

Persisting Entities

EntityManager and Persistence Context
Entity Lifecycle
Creating and Removing Entities

Transactions

Transaction Terminology
The Java Transaction API
The UserTransaction Interface
Transactions in Java EE
Bean-Managed Transactions
Container-Managed Transactions
Transaction Attributes
Transaction Rollbacks

Data Binding with JAXB 2.0

W3C XML Schema
XML Data Binding Basics
JAXB Architecture
Compiling Schema to Java
JAXBContext
Unmarshalling
Marshalling
Validation
Custom Binding Declarations
Java to Schema

Java API for XML-Based Web Services (JAX-WS)

JAX-WS
Creating a Web Service Endpoint
The Service Implementation
The Service Interface
apt and wsgen
Generated Files
Packaging and Deploying the Application
A JAX-WS Client
wsimport

Java Management Extension (JMX)

What is a JMX?
MBeans
Creating a Standard MBean
Object Names
The MBean Server
Local Client
Remote Client
JConsole
Notifications

Case Study

Persistence
Stateless Session Bean
Web Tier Client: HTML
Web Tier Client: Controller Servlet
Web Tier Client: Data Transfer JavaBean
Web Tier Client: JSP
Web Tier Client: web.xml
Message-Driven Bean
JMS Client
JAX-WS Endpoint
Web Service Client


 

 
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