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OpenEJB Standlone Server

OpenEJB for Tomcat

EJB 3.0 and other examples (source included)

([pgp|http://www.apache.org/dist/openejb/3.0/openejb-examples-3.0.tar.gz.asc], [md5|http://www.apache.org/dist/openejb/3.0/openejb-examples-3.0.tar.gz.md5] ) * openejb-examples-3.0.zip

([pgp|http://www.apache.org/dist/openejb/3.0/openejb-examples-3.0.zip.asc], [md5|http://www.apache.org/dist/openejb/3.0/openejb-examples-3.0.zip.md5] )

Source Code

Tested On

Windows XP (JDK 1.5) Windows XP (JDK 1.6) Linux (JDK 1.5) Linux (JDK 1.6) Mac OSX (JDK 1.5) Mac OSX (JDK 1.6)
Embedded
Standalone
Tomcat 6.0.14
Tomcat 6.0.13
Tomcat 6.0.10
Tomcat 6.0.9
Tomcat 5.5.26
Tomcat 5.5.25
Tomcat 5.5.23
Tomcat 5.5.20

Change Summary

OpenEJB 3.0 Final includes several improvements and refinements over the very successful 3.0 beta 2 release. Dependency injection got a major boost with support for Java Generics and Enums. A dozen new validations makes it even harder to do something "wrong". JPA users will find it nearly impossible to misconfigure the jta-data-source and non-jta-data-source. More robust EJB references allow for circular and lazy references to ejbs in other ears. Deep levels of annotation inheritance are completely respected allowing for greater design control and less duplicate code.

Features

EJB 3.0

OpenEJB 3.0 supports the EJB 3.0 specification as well as the prior EJB 2.1, EJB 2.0, and EJB 1.1. New features in EJB 3.0 include:

EJB 2.x features since OpenEJB 1.0 also include: - MessageDriven Beans - Container-Managed Persistence (CMP) 2.0 - Timers

The two aspects of EJB that OpenEJB does not yet support are: - JAX-RPC - CORBA

CORBA support will be added in future releases. Support for the JAX-RPC API is not a planned feature.

Embeddable for Testing and Java SE usage

Over the years, OpenEJB has innovated the art of the embedded/Java SE EJB container usable as a plain library much the way an embedded databases work. In a simple 1, 2, 3 step of 1) add OpenEJB to your classpath, 2) add a META-INF/ejb-jar.xml containing at minimum "", then 3) use the org.apache.openejb.client.LocalInitialContextFactory when creating your client InitialContext, you've got a Java SE EJB container that can be used in unit tests, your IDE, or anyway you'd like to drop in EJB functionality. Configuration can be done through an openejb.xml file or can be encapsulated 100% in the test case through the parameters passed to the InitialContext. For example, to create a JTA DataSource for JPA usage, you can simply:

Properties p = new Properties();
p.put(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY,

"org.apache.openejb.client.LocalInitialContextFactory"); p.put("movieDatabase", "new://Resource?type=DataSource"); p.put("movieDatabase.JdbcDriver", "org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver"); p.put("movieDatabase.JdbcUrl", "jdbc:hsqldb:mem:moviedb");

Context context = new InitialContext(p);

See the examples zip for a dozen embedded testing examples that range from simple @Stateless beans to advanced transaction and security testing.

EJB Plugin for Tomcat 6 and 5.5

OpenEJB 3.0 can be plugged into any Tomcat 6 or Tomcat 5.5 server, adding support for EJBs in Web Apps. War files themselves can contain EJBs and the Servlets can use new JavaEE 5 annotations, XA transactions, JPA, and JMS. Webapps can even support fat java clients connecting over HTTP.

Don't use EJBs?

No matter, adding OpenEJB to Tomcat gives Servlets several new Java EE 5 capabilities such as JPA, JAX-WS, JMS, J2EE Connectors, transactions, and more as well as enhancing the injection features of Tomcat 6 to now support injection of JavaEE objects like Topics, Queues, EntityManagers, JMS ConnectionFactories, JavaMail Sessions, as well as simpler data types such as Dates, Classes, URI, URL, List, Map, Set, Properties, and more. In the case of Tomcat 5.5 which doesn't support dependency injection at all, even more is gained.

Collapsed EAR (EJBs in .WARs)

Along the lines of the Tomcat integration where OpenEJB can be plugged into Tomcat, we've expanded the idea to also allow your EJBs to be plugged into your webapp. We call this innovative feature Collapsed EAR . In this style 100% of your classes, including your EJBs, can be packed into your WEB-INF/classes and WEB-INF/lib directories. The result is that your WAR file becomes a replacement for an EAR. Unlike an EAR, all multi-packaging and multi-classloader requirements are stripped away and collapsed down to one archive and one classloader all your components, EJBs or otherwise, can share.

Runs on OSGi

All OpenEJB 3.0 binaries come with complete OSGi metadata and are usable as a bundle in any OSGi platform. Look for OpenEJB in the upcoming, OSGi-based ServiceMix 4 which is built on Apache Felix.

CMP via JPA

Our CMP implementation is a thin layer over the new Java Persistence API (JPA). This means when you deploy an old style CMP 1.1 or CMP 2.1 bean it is internally converted and ran as a JPA bean. This makes it possible to use both CMP and JPA in the same application without any coherence issues that can come from using two competing persistence technologies against the same data. Everything is ultimately JPA in the end.

Dependency Injection -- Enums, Classes, Dates, Files, oh my.

Dependency Injection in EJB 3.0 via @Resource is largely limited to objects provided by the container, such as DataSources, JMS Topics and Queues. It is possible for you to supply your own configuration information for injection, but standard rules allow for only data of type String, Character, Boolean, Integer, Short, Long, Double, Float and Byte. If you needed a URL, for example, you'd have to have it injected as a String then convert it yourself to a URL. This is just plain silly as the conversion of Strings to other basic data types has existed in JavaBeans long before Enterprise JavaBeans existed.

OpenEJB 3.0 supports injection of any data type for which you can supply a JavaBeans PropertyEditor. We include several built-in PropertyEditors already such as Date, InetAddress, Class, File, URL, URI, Map, List, any java.lang.Enum and more.

import java.net.URI;
import java.io.File;
import java.util.Date;

@Stateful 
public class MyBean {
    @Resource URI blog;
    @Resource Date birthday;
    @Resource File homeDirectory;
}

Dependency Injection -- Generic Collections and Maps

Support for Java Generics makes the dependency injection that much more powerful. Declare an injectable field that leverages Java Generics and we will use that information to boost your injection to the next level. For example:

import java.net.URI;
import java.io.File;

@Stateful 
public class MyBean {
    @Resource List<Class> factories;
    @Resource Map<URI, File> locations;
}

Dependency Injection -- Custom Types

You can easily add your own types or override the way built-in types are handled and claim dependency injection as your own making it a critical part of your architecture. For example, let's register a custom editor for our Pickup enum.

import java.beans.PropertyEditorManager;

public enum Pickup {

    HUMBUCKER,
    SINGLE_COIL;

    // Here's the little magic where we register the PickupEditor
    // which knows how to create this object from a string.
    // You can add any of your own Property Editors in the same way.
    static {
        PropertyEditorManager.registerEditor(Pickup.class, PickupEditor.class);
    }
}

Reference as follows

@Stateful
public class StratocasterImpl implements Stratocaster {

    @Resource(name = "pickups")
    private List<Pickup> pickups;
}

The META-INF/env-entries.properties

Along the lines of injection, one of the last remaining things in EJB 3 that people need an ejb-jar.xml file for is to supply the value of env-entries. Env Entries are the source of data for all user supplied data injected into your bean; the afore mentioned String, Boolean, Integer, etc. This is a very big burden as each env-entry is going to cost you 5 lines of xml and the complication of having to figure out how to add you bean declaration in xml as an override of an existing bean and not accidentally as a new bean. All this can be very painful when all you want is to supply the value of a few @Resource String fields in you bean class.

To fix this, OpenEJB supports the idea of a META-INF/env-entries.properties file where we will look for the value of things that need injection that are not container controlled resources (i.e. datasources and things of that nature). You can configure you ejbs via a properties file and skip the need for an ejb-jar.xml and it's 5 lines per property madness.

blog = http://acme.org/myblog
birthday = 1954-03-01
homeDirectory = /home/esmith/

Support for GlassFish descriptors

Unit testing EJBs with OpenEJB is a major feature and draw for people, even for people who may still use other app servers for final deployment such as Geronimo or GlassFish. The descriptor format for Geronimo is natively understood by OpenEJB as OpenEJB is the EJB Container provider for Geronimo. However, OpenEJB also supports the GlassFish descriptors so people using GlassFish as their final server can still use OpenEJB for testing EJBs via plain JUnit tests in their build and only have one set of vendor descriptors to maintain.

JavaEE 5 EAR and Application Client support

JavaEE 5 EARs, RARs, and Application Clients can be deployed in addition to ejb jars. EAR support is limited to ejbs, application clients, RARs, and libraries; WAR files will be ignored unless embedded in Tomcat. Per the JavaEE 5 spec, the META-INF/application.xml and META-INF/application-client.xml files are optional.

Application Validation for EJB 3.0

Incorrect usage of various new aspects of EJB 3.0 are checked for and reported during the deployment process preventing strange errors and failures.

As usual validation failures (non-compliant issues with your application) are printed out in complier-style "all-at-once" output allowing you to see and fix all your issues in one go. For example, if you have 10 @PersistenceContext annotations that reference an invalid persistence unit, you get all 10 errors on the first deploy rather than one failure on the first deploy with 9 more failed deployments to go.

Validation output comes in three levels. The most verbose level will tell you in detail what you did wrong, what the options are, and what to do next... even including valid code and annotation usage tailored to your app that you can copy and paste into your application. Very ideal for beginners and people using OpenEJB in a classroom setting.

Some example output might look like the following. Here we illegally add some annotations to the "Movies" bean's interface as well as use the wrong annotations for various types of injection:

FAIL ... Movies:  @Stateful cannot be applied to an interface: org.superbiz.injection.jpa.Movies
FAIL ... Movies:  Missing required "type" attribute on class-level @Resource usage
FAIL ... Movies:  Mistaken use of @Resource on an EntityManagerFactory reference.
                  Use @PersistenceUnit for ref "org.superbiz.injection.jpa.MoviesImpl/entityManagerFactory"
FAIL ... Movies:  Mistaken use of @PersistenceUnit on an EntityManager reference.
                  Use @PersistenceContext for ref "org.superbiz.injection.jpa.MoviesImpl/entityManager"
WARN ... Movies:  Inoring @RolesAllowed used on interface org.superbiz.injection.jpa.Movies method deleteMovie.
                  Annotation only usable on the bean class.
WARN ... Movies:  Ignoring @TransactionAttribute used on interface org.superbiz.injection.jpa.Movies method addMovie.
                  Annotation only usable on the bean class.

JNDI Name Formatting

A complication when using EJB is that plain client applications are at the mercy of vendor's chosen methodology for how JNDI names should be constructed. OpenEJB breaks the mold by allowing you to [specify the exact format|OPENEJBx30:JNDI Names] you'd like OpenEJB to use for your server or any individual application. Supply us with a formatting string, such as "ejb/{ejbName}/{interfaceClass.simpleName}", to get a JNDI layout that best matches your needs.

Changelog

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New Features:

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Feature").descending("id"))|columns=key;summary}

Improvements:

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Tasks & Sub-Tasks:

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