Book Image

Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide

Book Image

Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide

Overview of this book

Oracle WebLogic server has long been the most important, and most innovative, application server on the market. The updates in the 12c release have seen changes to the Java EE runtime and JDK version, providing developers and administrators more powerful and feature-packed functionalities. Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide provides a practical, hands-on, introduction to the application server, helping beginners and intermediate users alike get up to speed with Java EE development, using the Oracle application server. Starting with an overview of the new features of JDK 7 and Java EE 6, Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c quickly moves on to showing you how to set up a WebLogic development environment, by creating a domain and setting it up to deploy the application. Once set up, we then explain how to use the key components of WebLogic Server, showing you how to apply them using a sample application that is continually developed throughout the chapters. On the way, we'll also be exploring Java EE 6 features such as context injection, persistence layer and transactions. After the application has been built, you will then learn how to tune its performance with some expert WebLogic Server tips.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Getting Started with Oracle WebLogic Server 12c: Developer's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Creating the Theater web application


We are now going to create the web application that will stay in the movie theater, so the Store application, our central module, will interact with all the movie theaters through this application. Essentially, it will be responsible to validate and consume tickets, showing available movie exhibitions and seats.

A RESTful Web Service, as defined by JSR-311, will provide this interaction. The Java API that implements Representational State Transfer (REST) Web Services is JAX-RS. Oracle WebLogic 12c comes with Jersey 1.9, which is the JAX-RS reference implementation and also includes JSON APIs for processing and streaming data.

Tip

Despite what many believe, JAX-RS was introduced in Java EE 5 but was only set as an official component in Java EE 6.

There is no official definition of what is a RESTful Web Service, unlike SOAP, which is completely specified by W3C and other organizations such as OASIS or WS-I. But a slight difference is that REST is an architectural...