Book Image

Spring 2.5 Aspect Oriented Programming

Book Image

Spring 2.5 Aspect Oriented Programming

Overview of this book

Developing powerful web applications with clean, manageable code makes the maintenance process much easier. Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) is the easiest and quickest way to achieve such results. Spring is the only Java framework to offer AOP features. The combined power of Spring and AOP gives a powerful and flexible platform to develop and maintain feature-rich web applications quickly. This book will help you to write clean, manageable code for your Java applications quickly, utilizing the combined power of Spring and AOP. You will master the concepts of AOP by developing several real-life AOP-based applications with the Spring Framework, implementing the basic components of Spring AOP: Advice, Joinpoint, Pointcut, and Advisor. This book will teach you everything you need to know to use AOP with Spring. It starts by explaining the AOP features of Spring and then moves ahead with configuring Spring AOP and using its core classes, with lot of examples. It moves on to explain the AspectJ support in Spring. Then you will develop a three-layered example web application designed with Domain-Driven Design (DDD) and built with Test-Driven Development methodology using the full potential of AOP for security, concurrency, caching, and transactions.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

About the Reviewer

Stefano Sanna is senior engineer and Java ME Tech Lead at Beeweeb Technologies (Rome), where his activities are focused on mobile multimedia applications (JME, iPhone, Android). His experience on Java for mobile devices began in 1999 on a Psion handheld computer. He is author of the Italian book "Java Micro Edition", targeted on developing network-oriented applications for mobile phones and published by Hoepli (Nov 2007). He has written more than 50 technical articles on Java ME, mobile technologies, and Linux. He has presented more than 30 seminars on the same topics, including Sun SPOTs and Arduino sensor networks. Stefano supports some Italian communities: JUG Sardegna, Java Mobile Developers Forum, and Java Italian Association. Before joining Beeweeb, he was a software engineer at CRS4 (Sardinia) in the Network Distributed Applications group, where he worked on multimodal applications and mobile cartography. He regularly writes about mobile computing, Java, embedded systems, and good Italian food on his blog: http://www.gerdavax.it.

This book is dedicated to my wife Monica and my children Michele, Mattia and Chiara