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Java EE 7 Development with WildFly

You're reading from   Java EE 7 Development with WildFly Leverage the power of the WildFly application server from JBoss to develop modern Java EE 7 applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782171980
Length 434 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with WildFly FREE CHAPTER 2. Your First Java EE Application on WildFly 3. Introducing Java EE 7 – EJBs 4. Learning Context and Dependency Injection 5. Combining Persistence with CDI 6. Developing Applications with JBoss JMS Provider 7. Adding Web Services to Your Applications 8. Adding WebSockets 9. Managing the Application Server 10. Securing WildFly Applications 11. Clustering WildFly Applications 12. Long-term Tasks' Execution 13. Testing Your Applications A. Rapid Development Using JBoss Forge Index

A short introduction to JMS

JMS defines a vendor-neutral (but Java-specific) set of programming interfaces to interact with asynchronous messaging systems. Messaging enables distributed communication that is loosely coupled. The whole messaging interchange is a two-step process where a component sends a message to a destination that is in turn retrieved by the recipient with the mediation of the JMS server. In JMS, there are two types of destinations: topics and queues. These have different semantics, which are explained next.

In a point-to-point model, messages are sent from producers to consumers via queues. A given queue might have multiple receivers, but only one receiver would be able to consume each of the messages. Only the first receiver who requests the message will get it, while the others will not, as shown in the following image:

A short introduction to JMS

A message sent to a topic, on the other hand, might be received by multiple parties. Messages published on a specific topic are sent to all the message...

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