Book Image

JBoss AS 7 Development - Second Edition

By : Francesco Marchioni
Book Image

JBoss AS 7 Development - Second Edition

By: Francesco Marchioni

Overview of this book

JBoss Application Server meets high standards of reliability, efficiency, and robustness, and is used to build powerful and secure Java EE applications. It supports the most important areas of Java Enterprise programming including EJB 3.1, Contexts and Dependency Injection, JAX-WS and JAX-RS web services, the security framework, and more. Getting started with JBoss application server development can be challenging; however, with the right approach and guidance, you can easily master it and this book promises that.Written in an easy-to-read style, this book will take you from the basics of JBoss AS—such as installing core components and plugins—to the skills that will make you a JBoss developer to be reckoned with, covering advanced topics such as developing applications with the JBoss messaging service, JBoss web services, clustered applications, and more.You will learn the necessary steps to install a suitable environment for developing enterprise applications on JBoss AS. You will also learn how to design Enterprise applications using Eclipse, JBoss plugins, and Maven to build and deploy your applications. Readers will learn how to enable distributed communication using JMS. Storing and retrieving objects will be made easier using the Java Persistence API. The core section of the book will take you into the programming arena with tested, real-world examples. The example programs have been carefully crafted to be easy to understand and useful as starting points for your applications. This practical guide will show you how to gain hands-on experience rapidly on Java EE development using JBoss AS with easy-to-understand and practical programming examples.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
JBoss AS 7 Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Choosing between SOAP and REST services


The choice of adopting SOAP rather than REST depends on your application's requirements. SOAP web services are exposed using its own well-defined protocol and focus on exposing pieces of application logic as services. So if your requirement is to consume business services that are exposed using a well-defined and negotiated contract (between the service consumer and the service provider), SOAP web services are a perfect match.

On the other hand, if you need to access some server resources using stateless HTTP invocations and as little as the navigation bar of your browser, you should probably go with RESTful web services.

That being said, there may still be some scenarios that could fit both the options, and you are free to choose whichever web service suits your requirements the best. Since I have never been able to cure my adversity for SOAP-based Java clients (which are inherently more complex to code than other languages), I'd go for REST web services...