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RESTful Java Web Services

You're reading from   RESTful Java Web Services A pragmatic guide to designing and building RESTful APIs using Java

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788294041
Length 420 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Author (1):
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Balachandar Bogunuva Mohanram Balachandar Bogunuva Mohanram
Author Profile Icon Balachandar Bogunuva Mohanram
Balachandar Bogunuva Mohanram
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing the REST Architectural Style 2. Java APIs for JSON Processing FREE CHAPTER 3. Introducing the JAX-RS API 4. Advanced Features in the JAX-RS APIs 5. Introducing JAX-RS Implementation Framework Extensions 6. Securing RESTful Web Services 7. Description and Discovery of RESTful Web Services 8. RESTful API Design Guidelines 9. The Role of RESTful APIs in Emerging Technologies 10. Useful Features and Techniques

Packaging and deploying JAX-RS applications

There are multiple ways to configure, package, and deploy a JAX-RS application. While configuring an application, you can use an annotation-based approach (for the Servlet 3.x-based container) and thereby avoid deployment descriptors such as web.xml. Alternatively, you can use a mix of both approaches, which uses both annotations and web.xml. This section describes the various configurations and packaging models followed for a JAX-RS web service application.

The JAX-RS specification states that a RESTful web service must be packaged as part of a web application if you want to run it in a container (web server or application server). Following this rule, any JAX-RS application that you want to deploy on a server must be packaged in a Web Application Archive (WAR) file. If the web service is implemented using an EJB, it must be packaged...

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