Enterprise Java Computing
From the founding editor-in-chief of 'Java Report Online' comes advanced information on JDBC, servlets, JNI, RMI, Java IDL, and EJBs - the basic building blocks of any significant corporate business application. Enterprise Java Computing is the ideal hands-on reference, not only for mastering these cutting-edge concepts, but also for gaining hard knowledge on practical design and deployment issues.
Using this book, developers should be able to:
• Integrate relational databases with RMI and servlets using JDBC
• Develop sophisticated servlet-based middleware
• Design multi-tier EJB applications
• Write Jini services
• Understand advanced issues regarding RMI and Java IDL development
• Perform Java/legacy-system integration using JNI
This book empowers corporate developers to deliver mission-critical Java applications that can be deployed in the real world. With Enterprise Java Computing the reader will master the critical building blocks that are necessary for developing robust client-server applications, without getting bogged down in the specifics of the Java language and its syntax.
- One of the first books to address the emerging field of Java as an enterprise computing platform
- Delivers valuable information on the basic building blocks of any significant enterprise Java application
- Written by a seasoned Java expert, this book goes well beyond the basic material found in much of the current crop of Java books
Reviews & endorsements
'… a good introductory guide for anyone who is interested in learning and using the advanced concepts provided in the Java 2 platform.' Jaideep Roy, Computing Reviews
Product details
June 1999Paperback
9780521657129
372 pages
236 × 178 × 23 mm
0.63kg
57 b/w illus. 22 tables
Unavailable - out of print
Table of Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Introduction to enterprise java computing
- 2. Java database connectivity
- 3. Deploying java servlets
- 4. Melding java with legacy systems using JNI
- 5. Object serialization
- 6. Remote method invocation
- 7. Java IDL: java meets CORBA
- Enterprise JavaBeans
- Index.