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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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Toc

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

Expanding our client application


It's time to show how you can leverage the WebSocket features in real life. In the previous chapter, Chapter 7, Adding Web Services to Your Applications, we created the ticket booking application based on the REST API and AngularJS framework. It was clearly missing one important feature: the application did not show information concerning ticket purchases of other users. This is a perfect use case for WebSockets!

Since we're just adding a feature to our previous app, we will only describe the changes we will introduce to it.

In this example, we would like to be able to inform all current users about other purchases. This means that we have to store information about active sessions. Let's start with the registry type object, which will serve this purpose. We can use a Singleton session bean for this task, as shown in the following code:

@Singleton
public class SessionRegistry {

    private final Set<Session> sessions = new HashSet<>();

    @Lock...
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