Your enterprise beans can use Java™ Message Service (JMS) programming interfaces directly to provide messaging services, and methods that implement business logic.
WebSphere® Application Server supports asynchronous messaging as a method of communication based on JMS programming interfaces. Using JMS, enterprise applications can exchange messages asynchronously with other JMS clients by using JMS destinations (queues or topics). An enterprise application can explicitly poll for messages on a destination.
If you choose not to use JNDI to obtain configuration information for your messaging provider, for example for connection factories or destinations, you can instead use an API provided by your messaging provider to specify that configuration information programmatically.
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