The Java EE 5 Tutorial

What Is an Enterprise Bean?

Written in the Java programming language, an enterprise bean is a server-side component that encapsulates the business logic of an application. The business logic is the code that fulfills the purpose of the application. In an inventory control application, for example, the enterprise beans might implement the business logic in methods called checkInventoryLevel and orderProduct. By invoking these methods, clients can access the inventory services provided by the application.

Benefits of Enterprise Beans

For several reasons, enterprise beans simplify the development of large, distributed applications. First, because the EJB container provides system-level services to enterprise beans, the bean developer can concentrate on solving business problems. The EJB container, rather than the bean developer, is responsible for system-level services such as transaction management and security authorization.

Second, because the beans rather than the clients contain the application’s business logic, the client developer can focus on the presentation of the client. The client developer does not have to code the routines that implement business rules or access databases. As a result, the clients are thinner, a benefit that is particularly important for clients that run on small devices.

Third, because enterprise beans are portable components, the application assembler can build new applications from existing beans. These applications can run on any compliant Java EE server provided that they use the standard APIs.

When to Use Enterprise Beans

You should consider using enterprise beans if your application has any of the following requirements:

Types of Enterprise Beans

Table 20–1 summarizes the two types of enterprise beans. The following sections discuss each type in more detail.

Table 20–1 Enterprise Bean Types

Enterprise Bean Type 

Purpose 

Session 

Performs a task for a client; optionally may implement a web service

Message-Driven 

Acts as a listener for a particular messaging type, such as the Java 

Message Service API 


Note –

Entity beans have been replaced by Java Persistence API entities. For information about entities, see Chapter 24, Introduction to the Java Persistence API.