Book Image

Java EE 8 Cookbook

By : Elder Moraes
Book Image

Java EE 8 Cookbook

By: Elder Moraes

Overview of this book

Java EE is a collection of technologies and APIs to support Enterprise Application development. The choice of what to use and when can be dauntingly complex for any developer. This book will help you master this. Packed with easy to follow recipes, this is your guide to becoming productive with Java EE 8. You will begin by seeing the latest features of Java EE 8, including major Java EE 8 APIs and specifications such as JSF 2.3, and CDI 2.0, and what they mean for you. You will use the new features of Java EE 8 to implement web-based services for your client applications. You will then learn to process the Model and Streaming APIs using JSON-P and JSON-B and will learn to use the Java Lambdas support offered in JSON-P. There are more recipes to fine-tune your RESTful development, and you will learn about the Reactive enhancements offered by the JAX-RS 2.1 specification. Later on, you will learn about the role of multithreading in your enterprise applications and how to integrate them for transaction handling. This is followed by implementing microservices with Java EE and the advancements made by Java EE for cloud computing. The final set of recipes shows you how take advantage of the latest security features and authenticate your enterprise application. At the end of the book, the Appendix shows you how knowledge sharing can change your career and your life.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Improving the response performance with Server Push

One of the main features of HTTP/2.0 is the Server Push. When it is available, that means, being supported by the protocol, the server, and the browser client—it lets the server send ("push") data to the client before it asks for it.

It is one of the most wanted features in JSF 2.3 and probably the one that demands less effort to use if your application is based on JSF—just migrate to a Java EE 8 compatible server and then you are done.

This recipe will show you how to use it in your application and will even let you compare the performance between HTTP/1.0 and HTTP/2.0 in the same scenario.

Getting ready

Start by adding the dependency to your project...