Book Image

Apache Geronimo 2.1: Quick Reference

Book Image

Apache Geronimo 2.1: Quick Reference

Overview of this book

Apache Geronimo is a robust, scalable, secure, and high-performing application server. But like all application servers, this power comes with a steep learning curve. This book can help you save your time and get working with Geronimo in matter of a few hours. This book is a quick-reference guide to Apache Geronimo that mitigates the starting pains that most developers have when they migrate to a new Application Server. It will help you to extend and amplify your existing development skills, empowering you to build new types of applications regardless of the platform or browser. The book will introduce you to the exciting features of Apache Geronimo Application Server. You will see how easily you can develop and deploy Java EE 5 applications on Geronimo. It covers everything from downloading the server to customizing it using custom GBeans. By following the practical examples in this book, you will be able to develop applications quickly using Geronimo Eclipse Plugin. The book covers Geronimo internals in detail, which helps you write custom services on Geronimo. Also, it helps you to gain a deep understanding of Geronimo plugin architecture and teaches you to extend your server functionality via plugins. By the end of the book, you will develop proficiency in Geronimo and Java EE 5 application development.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Apache Geronimo 2.1
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
Preface

Connecting to a different provider


Apache Geronimo is a Java EE 5 certified application server, and thereby provides the ability to plug any resource adapter in, as long as it complies with the JCA 1.5 specification. This means that you can use other JMS providers by deploying their resource adapters on the server. The server will provide connection management, transaction management, lifecycle management, and security for the resource adapters that are deployed on it. This means that we can have Java EE artifacts that can access and utilize JMS resources irrespective of what message broker they are configured on. The access can be done using standard Java EE APIs in a vendor-neutral manner. We will not be covering this in this book as it is similar to how we configured connectivity to ActiveMQ. Most of the third-party message brokers that support Apache Geronimo will have documentation on how to deploy their resource adapters in Apache Geronimo.