Jakarta EE cookbook : practical recipes for enterprise Java developers to deliver large scale applications with Jakarta EE / Elder Moreas
Material type:
- 978-1-8364-288-4
- GC QA 76 .M67 2020
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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NU BALIWAG | NU BALIWAG | Information Technology | General Circulation | GC QA 76 .M67 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | NUBUL000004418 |
Include index
Chapter 1. New Features and Improvements Running your first Jakarta Bean Validation 2.0 code -- Chapter 2. Server-side Development Using Jakarta CDI to inject context and dependencies -- Chapter 3. Building Powerful Services with JSON and RESTful Features Building server-side events with JAX-RS -- Chapter 4. Web and Client-Server Communications Using servlets for request and response management -- Chapter 5. Security of the Enterprise Architecture Domain protection with authentication -- Chapter 6. Reducing Coding Effect by Relying on Standards Preparing your application to use a connection pool -- Chapter 7. Deploying and Managing Applications or Major Jakarta EE Servers -- Chapter 8. Building Lightweight Solutions Using Microservices Building microservices from a monolith -- Chapter 9. Using Multithreading on Enterprise Context Building asynchronous tasks with returning results -- Chapter 10. Using Event-Driven Programming to Build Reactive Applications -- Chapter 11. Rising to the Cloud - Jakarta EE, Containers, and Cloud Computing.
Java EE is being transferred from Oracle to Eclipse Foundation and will have a new name: Jakarta EE. It will be a collection of technologies and APIs that would help developers build Enterprise Applications. This book will help enterprise Java developers to create real-world solutions using the latest features and specifications of Jakarta EE.
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