Remote debugging of Java web applications in Apache Tomcat and JBoss
Published June 5th, 2009 Under Coding, Services, Software Testing | Leave a Comment
In this four minute tutorial I’m presenting how to remotely debug Java web applications in Apache Tomcat and JBoss containers. This tutorial may be useful if you deployed your application on the remote server and want to debug it in this particular environment. IMPORTANT: remember that your Java application HAS to be compiled with enabled debug information, otherwise you will not be able to debug it.
Seam and Hibernate Development with JBoss
Published April 30th, 2009 Under Architecture, Open Source Tools | Leave a Comment
In this demonstration Jim Tyrrell, JBoss Solutions Architect, will show you exactly how easy it is to use JBoss Developer Studio to reverse engineer a database into a complete web application.
Practical Complex Event Processing Using JBoss
Published February 9th, 2009 Under Architecture, Coding, Open Source Tools, Services | Leave a Comment
Complex Event Processing (CEP) enables enterprises to achieve agile business processes through intelligent correlation of seemingly unrelated events. In this presentation, Chief Information Officer Max Yankelevich of Freedom Open Source Solutions walks attendees through a practical case study of a large Trust/Wealth Management Institution and demonstrates how CEP helped solve a complex business problem – charging their customers more money in fees. The use of JBoss Application Platform including JBoss Rules, jBPM and JBoss Messaging, were leveraged to implement the CEP Architecture and earned the client an extra $20M over the course of five years.
Seam in Action – Part 2
Published September 25th, 2008 Under Architecture, Coding, Open Source Tools | Leave a Comment
After years of Struts/JSP being the default choice for Java web applications, Seam together with JavaServer Faces and Facelets has become an excellent alternative. Seam is an application framework for Java Enterprise Edition which introduces the notion of declarative, contextual application state management. In the first half of this session, Pete Muir will introduce Seam, its contextual programming model and its tight integration with other frameworks such as Hibernate, jBPM and RichFaces. In the second half of this session Peter Hilton and Nicolas Leroux explain why they chose Seam over the many competing frameworks, what it was like getting started with Seam, what its learning curve is like, and what their practical experiences with Seam has been on two commercial projects during the last year.
Peter Hilton and Nicolas Leroux are both software developers at Lunatech Research, based in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. They share many years of experience building Java EE applications for corporate and government IT projects using open-source libraries and agile methods, and recently organised a Benelux JBoss User Group event. Peter is from the South coast of England, while Nicolas comes from the somewhat warmer South coast of France.
Seam in Action – Part 1
Published September 25th, 2008 Under Architecture, Coding, Open Source Tools | Leave a Comment
After years of Struts/JSP being the default choice for Java web applications, Seam together with JavaServer Faces and Facelets has become an excellent alternative. Seam is an application framework for Java Enterprise Edition which introduces the notion of declarative, contextual application state management.
In the first half of this session, Pete Muir will introduce Seam, its contextual programming model and its tight integration with other frameworks such as Hibernate, jBPM and RichFaces. In the second half of this session Peter Hilton and Nicolas Leroux explain why they chose Seam over the many competing frameworks, what it was like getting started with Seam, what its learning curve is like, and what their practical experiences with Seam has been on two commercial projects during the last year.
Pete Muir is a core developer on JBoss Seam, an application framework for enterprise Java, and on JBoss RichFaces, a rich component library for JSF. He is currently employeed by Red Hat Inc. working on JBoss open source projects.
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