About This Document
This guide describes how to create and deploy Java-based Web Services applications that conform to the Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE platform) specifications in the Sun Java System Application Server Enterprise 7 2004Q2 environment. In addition to describing programming concepts and tasks, this guide offers sample code, implementation tips, and the reference material.
This preface addresses the following topics:
Who Should Use This Guide
The intended audience for this guide is the person who develops, assembles, and deploys beans in a corporate enterprise.
This guide assumes you are familiar with the following topics:
- Java programming
- Java APIs as defined in the Java Servlet, JavaServer Pages (JSP), Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), and Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) specifications
- The SQL structured database query languages
- Relational database concepts
- Software development processes, including debugging and source code control
Using the Documentation
The Sun Java System Application Server Standard and Enterprise Edition manuals are available as online files in Portable Document Format (PDF) and Hypertext Markup Language (HTML).
The following table lists tasks and concepts described in the Sun Java System Application Server manuals. The manuals marked (updated for 7 2004Q2) have been updated for the Sun Java System Application Server Standard and Enterprise Edition 7 2004Q2 release. The manuals not marked in this way have not been updated since the version 7 Enterprise Edition release.
Table 1 Sun Java System Application Server Documentation Roadmap
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For information about
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See the following
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Late-breaking information about the software and the documentation. Includes a comprehensive, table-based summary of supported hardware, operating system, JDK, and JDBC/RDBMS.
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Release Notes
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Sun Java System Application Server 7 overview, including the features available with each product edition.
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Product Overview
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Diagrams and descriptions of server architecture and the benefits of the Sun Java System Application Server architectural approach.
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Server Architecture
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) How to get started with the Sun Java System Application Server product. Includes a sample application tutorial. There are two guides, one for Standard Edition and one for Enterprise Edition.
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Getting Started Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Installing the Sun Java System Application Server Standard Edition and Enterprise Edition software and its components, such as sample applications and the Administration interface. For the Enterprise Edition software, instructions are provided for implementing the high-availability configuration.
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Installation Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Evaluating your system needs and enterprise to ensure that you deploy Sun Java System Application Server in a manner that best suits your site. General issues and concerns that you must be aware of when deploying an application server are also discussed.
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System Deployment Guide
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Creating and implementing Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition (J2EE platform) applications intended to run on the Sun Java System Application Server that follow the open Java standards model for J2EE components such as servlets, Enterprise JavaBeans (EJBs), and JavaServer Pages (JSPs). Includes general information about application design, developer tools, security, assembly, deployment, debugging, and creating lifecycle modules. A comprehensive Sun Java System Application Server glossary is included.
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Developer’s Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Creating and implementing J2EE web applications that follow the Java Servlet and JavaServer Pages (JSP) specifications on the Sun Java System Application Server. Discusses web application programming concepts and tasks, and provides sample code, implementation tips, and reference material. Topics include results caching, JSP precompilation, session management, security, deployment, SHTML, and CGI.
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Developer’s Guide to Web Applications
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Creating and implementing J2EE applications that follow the open Java standards model for enterprise beans on the Sun Java System Application Server. Discusses Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB) programming concepts and tasks, and provides sample code, implementation tips, and reference material. Topics include container-managed persistence, read-only beans, and the XML and DTD files associated with enterprise beans.
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Developer’s Guide to Enterprise JavaBeans Technology
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Creating Application Client Container (ACC) clients that access J2EE applications on the Sun Java System Application Server.
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Developer’s Guide to Clients
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Creating web services in the Sun Java System Application Server environment.
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Developer’s Guide to Web Services
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Java Database Connectivity (JDBC), transaction, Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI), Java Message Service (JMS), and JavaMail APIs.
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Developer’s Guide to J2EE Services and APIs
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Creating custom NSAPI plug-ins.
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Developer’s Guide to NSAPI
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Information and instructions on the configuration, management, and deployment of the Sun Java System Application Server subsystems and components, from both the Administration interface and the command-line interface. Topics include cluster management, the high-availability database, load balancing, and session persistence. A comprehensive Sun Java System Application Server glossary is included.
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Administration Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Editing Sun Java System Application Server configuration files, such as the server.xml file.
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Administrator’s Configuration File Reference
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Configuring and administering security for the Sun Java System Application Server operational environment. Includes information on general security, certificates, and SSL/TLS encryption. HTTP server-based security is also addressed.
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Administrator’s Guide to Security
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Configuring and administering service provider implementation for J2EE Connector Architecture (CA) connectors for the Sun Java System Application Server. Topics include the Administration Tool, Pooling Monitor, deploying a JCA connector, and sample connectors and sample applications.
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J2EE CA Service Provider Implementation Administrator’s Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Migrating your applications to the new Sun Java System Application Server programming model, specifically from iPlanet Application Server 6.x and Sun ONE Application Server 7.0. Includes a sample migration.
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Migrating and Redeploying Server Applications Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) How and why to tune your Sun Java System Application Server to improve performance.
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Performance Tuning Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Information on solving Sun Java System Application Server problems.
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Troubleshooting Guide
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Information on solving Sun Java System Application Server error messages.
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Error Message Reference
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(Updated for 7 2004Q2) Utility commands available with the Sun Java System Application Server; written in manpage style.
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Utility Reference Manual
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Using the Sun Java System Message Queue 3.5 software.
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The Sun Java System Message Queue documentation at:
http://docs.sun.com/db?p=
prod/s1.s1msgqu
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How This Guide Is Organized
This guide provides instructions for the development and the deployment of Web services to Sun Java System Application Server. The guide also provides information on developing client applications that can invoke Web services.
This chapter introduces you to Web services and the standards used in implementing Web services. Also discusses about the working of Web services in the Sun Java System Application Server environment.
This chapter describes the procedure to develop, deploy, execute JAX-RPC Web services and clients that access such services.
This chapter introduces you to the SAAJ and JAXM APIs, how to use these APIs to develop message-oriented services and clients in Sun Java System Application Server environment.
This chapter introduces you to the JAXR API, how to use the API to build clients, and how to manage the registry data.
This appendix provides XML Schema Definitions for the various configuration files used in developing JAX-RPC Web services and clients.
Finally, Index are provided.
Reference Information
In addition to the information in the Sun Java System Application Server documentation collection listed in Using the Documentation", we recommend the following resources:
General J2EE Information:
Core J2EE Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies by Deepak Alur, John Crupi, & Dan Malks, Prentice Hall Publishing
Java Security, by Scott Oaks, O’Reilly Publishing
Web Services:
Java Web Services, by David Chappell and Tyler Jewell, O’Reilly Publishing
Programming with EJB components:
Enterprise JavaBeans, by Richard Monson-Haefel, O’Reilly Publishing
About Java XML APIs:
http://java.sun.com/xml/index.jsp
Java Web Services Tutorial:
http://java.sun.com/webservices/tutorial.html
Documentation Conventions
This section describes the types of conventions used throughout this guide:
General Conventions
The following general conventions are used in this guide:
- File and directory paths are given in UNIX® format (with forward slashes separating directory names). For Windows versions, the directory paths are the same, except that backslashes are used to separate directories.
- URLs are given in the format:
http://server.domain/path/file.html
In these URLs, server is the server name where applications are run; domain is your Internet domain name; path is the server’s directory structure; and file is an individual filename. Italic items in URLs are placeholders.
By default, the location of install_dir on most platforms is:
- Solaris and Linux file-based installations:
user’s home directory/sun/appserver7
- Windows, all installations:
system drive:\Sun\AppServer7
For the platforms listed above, default_config_dir and install_config_dir are identical to install_dir. See Conventions Referring to Directories for exceptions and additional information.
- Instance root directories are indicated by instance_dir in this document, which is an abbreviation for the following:
default_config_dir/domains/domain/instance
- UNIX-specific descriptions throughout this manual apply to the Linux operating system as well, except where Linux is specifically mentioned.
Conventions Referring to Directories
By default, when using the Solaris package-based or Linux RPM-based installation, the application server files are spread across several root directories. This guide uses the following document conventions to correspond to the various default installation directories provided:
- install_dir refers to /opt/SUNWappserver7, which contains the static portion of the installation image. All utilities, executables, and libraries that make up the application server reside in this location.
- default_config_dir refers to /var/opt/SUNWappserver7/domains, which is the default location for any domains that are created.
- install_config_dir refers to /etc/opt/SUNWappserver7/config, which contains installation-wide configuration information such as licenses and the master list of administrative domains configured for this installation.
Contacting Sun
You might want to contact Sun Microsystems in order to:
Give Us Feedback
If you have general feedback on the product or documentation, please send this to http://www.sun.com/hwdocs/feedback
Obtain Training
Application Server training courses are available at:
http://training.sun.com/US/catalog/enterprise/web_application.html/
Visit this site often for new course availability on the Sun Java System Application Server.
Contact Product Support
If you have problems with your system, contact customer support using one of the following mechanisms:
Please have the following information available prior to contacting support. This helps to ensure that our support staff can best assist you in resolving problems:
- Description of the problem, including the situation where the problem occurs and its impact on your operation
- Machine type, operating system version, and product version, including any patches and other software that might be affecting the problem. Here are some of the commonly used commands:
- Solaris: pkginfo, showrev
- Linux: rpm
- All: asadmin version --verbose
- Detailed steps on the methods you have used to reproduce the problem
- Any error logs or core dumps
- Configuration files such as:
- instance_dir/config/server.xml
- a web application’s web.xml file,
when a web application is involved in the problem
- For an application, whether the problem appears when it is running in a cluster or standalone