Book Image

Getting Started with Eclipse Juno

By : Rodrigo Fraxino Araujo, Vinicius H. S. Durelli, Rafael M. Teixeira
Book Image

Getting Started with Eclipse Juno

By: Rodrigo Fraxino Araujo, Vinicius H. S. Durelli, Rafael M. Teixeira

Overview of this book

<p>Integrated Development Environments (IDEs) such as Eclipse are examples of tools that help developers by automating an assortment of software development-related tasks. By reading this book you will learn how to get Eclipse to automate common development tasks, which will give you a boost of productivity.<br /><br />Getting Started with Eclipse Juno is targeted at any Java programmer interested in taking advantage of the benefits provided by a full-fledged IDE. This book will get the reader up to speed with Eclipse’s powerful features to write, refactor, test, debug, and deploy Java applications.<br /><br />This book covers all you need to know to get up to speed in Eclipse Juno IDE. It is mainly tailored for Java beginners that want to make the jump from their text editors to a powerful IDE. However, seasoned Java developers not familiar with Eclipse will also find the hands-on tutorials in this book useful.</p> <p><br />The book starts off by showing how to perform the most basic activities related to implementing Java applications (creating and organizing Java projects, refactoring, and setting launch configurations), working up to more sophisticated topics as testing, web development, and GUI programming.</p> <p><br />This book covers managing a project using a version control system, testing and debugging an application, the concepts of advanced GUI programming, developing plugins and rich client applications, along with web development.</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Getting Started with Eclipse Juno
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
4
Version Control Systems
Index

Getting started with Apache Tomcat


Servlets are deployed into a servlet container, which is the component that runs and keeps track of several aspects related to servlets. An example of a servlet container is Apache Tomcat (or simply Tomcat). Put succinctly, Tomcat is an open source web server and Java servlet container from the Apache Software Foundation (http://tomcat.apache.org). Tomcat is written in Java, and it implements both the Java servlet and the JSP specifications from Oracle Corporations. Being primarily a servlet container, Tomcat plays a central role in the lifecycle of servlets: it loads classes, instantiates and initializes servlets, maps URLs to servlets, enforces the correct access rights to servlets, and creates (or allocates) threads to run servlets. Roughly, Tomcat is to servlets and JSPs what the JVM is to desktop-based applications— nevertheless, keep in mind that Tomcat runs on the JVM.

Tomcat has a plethora of features, configurations, and options. It is possible...