In this chapter we covered how to develop messaging applications using the JMS API with NetBeans. We looked at how to configure the application server by adding JMS resources directly from NetBeans. We also covered how NetBeans can generate most of the code necessary to send a JMS message, leaving us application developers to simply "fill in the blanks", and write only the business logic part that is specific to our application. Similarly, we covered how NetBeans can generate most of the code necessary to receive a JMS message from a Message Driven Bean, again leaving only the business logic part of our application to be written by hand.
Java EE 5 Development with NetBeans 6
Java EE 5 Development with NetBeans 6
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Java EE 5 Development with NetBeans 6
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Free Chapter
Getting Started with NetBeans
Developing Web Applications with Servlets and JSPs
Enhancing JSP Functionality with JSTL and Custom Tags
Developing Web Applications using JavaServer Faces
Interacting with Databases through the Java Persistence API
Visual Web JSF Development
Implementing the Business Tier with Session Beans
Messaging with JMS and Message Driven Beans
Web Services
Putting it all Together
Debugging Enterprise Applications with the NetBeans Debugger
Identifying Performance Issues with NetBeans Profiler
Customer Reviews