Book Image

Mastering Java EE Development with WildFly

By : Luca Stancapiano
Book Image

Mastering Java EE Development with WildFly

By: Luca Stancapiano

Overview of this book

Packed with rich assets and APIs, Wildfly 10 allows you to create state-of-the-art Java applications. This book will help you take your understanding of Java EE to the next level by creating distributed Java applications using Wildfly. The book begins by showing how to get started with a native installation of WildFly and it ends with a cloud installation. After setting up the development environment, you will implement and work with different WildFly features, such as implementing JavaServer Pages. You will also learn how you can use clustering so that your apps can handle a high volume of data traffic. You will also work with enterprise JavaBeans, solve issues related to failover, and implement Java Message Service integration. Moving ahead, you will be working with Java Naming and Directory Interface, Java Transaction API, and use ActiveMQ for message relay and message querying. This book will also show you how you can use your existing backend JavaScript code in your application. By the end of the book, you’ll have gained the knowledge to implement the latest Wildfly features in your Java applications.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
5
Working with Distributed Transactions
16
WildFly in Cloud

Dependency injection 1.0 for Java

This specification is provided by the javax.inject API. This is a set of packages specifying a means of getting objects in such a way as to achieve major reusability, testability, and maintainability compared to traditional approaches such as constructors, factories, and service locators. This process, known as dependency injection, is beneficial to most non-trivial applications.

With CDI, you don't instantiate the classes. CDI takes care of it. An internal management of the instances lets the developer create better features for the application. Instances are a point of work where we resolve performance problems. All this becomes simpler using a CDI engine.

Take, for example, a book service:

class BookService {
final List<Book> books;
BookService () {
books = new ArrayList(...);
}
}

Using the new construct, we are adding...