Part I Development Tasks and Tools
1. Setting Up a Development Environment
3. Using Ant with Enterprise Server
Part II Developing Applications and Application Components
7. Using the Java Persistence API
8. Developing Web Applications
9. Using Enterprise JavaBeans Technology
10. Using Container-Managed Persistence
13. Developing Lifecycle Listeners
Part III Using Services and APIs
14. Using the JDBC API for Database Access
15. Using the Transaction Service
16. Using the Java Naming and Directory Interface
17. Using the Java Message Service
Message Queue Resource Adapter
Administration of the JMS Service
Checking Whether the JMS Provider Is Running
Creating Physical Destinations
Creating JMS Resources: Destinations and Connection Factories
Transactions and Non-Persistent Messages
Using the ConfigurableTransactionSupport Interface
Authentication With ConnectionFactory
Message Queue varhome Directory
Delivering SOAP Messages Using the JMS API
To Send SOAP Messages Using the JMS API
When a JMS client accesses a JMS administered object for the first time, the client JVM retrieves the JMS service configuration from the Enterprise Server. Further changes to the configuration are not available to the client JVM until the client is restarted.