Book Image

Developing Middleware in Java EE 8

Book Image

Developing Middleware in Java EE 8

Overview of this book

Middleware is the infrastructure in software based applications that enables businesses to solve problems, operate more efficiently, and make money. As the use of middleware extends beyond a single application, the importance of having it written by experts increases substantially. This book will help you become an expert in developing middleware for a variety of applications. The book starts off by exploring the latest Java EE 8 APIs with newer features and managing dependencies with CDI 2.0. You will learn to implement object-to-relational mapping using JPA 2.1 and validate data using bean validation. You will also work with different types of EJB to develop business logic, and with design RESTful APIs by utilizing different HTTP methods and activating JAX-RS features in enterprise applications. You will learn to secure your middleware with Java Security 1.0 and implement various authentication techniques, such as OAuth authentication. In the concluding chapters, you will use various test technologies, such as JUnit and Mockito, to test applications, and Docker to deploy your enterprise applications. By the end of the book, you will be proficient in developing robust, effective, and distributed middleware for your business.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Java Messaging System (JMS)


As we mentioned earlier, JMS is the Java standard API for implementing message-oriented middleware. Any typical Java EE application server (Glassfish, Wildfly, WebLogic, and so on) will have its own implementation for this API. In other words, you don't care, as a Java EE application developer, about the actual implementation used within an application server, and you will be focusing more on  API concepts.

In the next section, we are going to discuss the architecture and the constituent parts of a typical JMS application.

Architecture

JMS is a platform-neutral Java API, which means that it can be used within the context of any Java SE application and is not limited to Java EE. In the following sections, we are going to explain the different parts that make up a typical JMS application, but with a focus on JMS usage from the perspective of Java EE.

JMS provider

An implementation of the JMS API, always bundled with any Java EE application server. However, as mentioned...