Using enterprise beans in applications
Steps for this task
Design a J2EE application and the enterprise beans that it needs.
See "Resources for learning" for links to design information that is specific to enterprise beans.
Develop any enterprise beans
that your application will use.
Prepare for assembly. For your EJB 2.x-compliant entity beans,
decide on an appropriate access intent policy
.
Assemble the beans using the into one or more EJB modules. This includes
setting security
.
Assemble the modules into a J2EE application using the .
For a given application server,
update the EJB container configuration
if needed for the application to be deployed, and determine if you want to batch commands
batch commands
or
defer commands
for container managed persistence.
Deploy the application
in an application server.
Test the modules.
As needed, debug
problems with the container
.
Debug
access
and
deployment
problems.
Assemble the production application using the.
Deploy the application to a production environment.
Manage the application:
Manage installed EJB modules.
After an application has been installed, you can manage its EJB modules individually through
administrative console settings
.
Manage other aspects of the J2EE application.
Update the module and redeploy it using the.
Tune the performance of the application. See
Best practices for developing enterprise beans
.
Enterprise beans
EJB modules
EJB containers
Enterprise beans: Resources for learning
EJB method Invocation Queuing
Monitoring performance
Searchable topic ID: tejbep1
Last updated: Jun 21, 2007 8:07:48 PM CDT WebSphere Business Integration Server Foundation, Version 5.0.2
http://publib.boulder.ibm.com/infocenter/wasinfo/index.jsp?topic=/com.ibm.wasee.doc/info/ee/ae/tejb_ep1.html
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