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Mastering Java EE Development with WildFly

You're reading from   Mastering Java EE Development with WildFly Create Enterprise-grade Java applications with WildFly

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787287174
Length 468 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Luca Stancapiano Luca Stancapiano
Author Profile Icon Luca Stancapiano
Luca Stancapiano
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Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Java EE and Configuring the Development Environment 2. Working with Dependency Injection FREE CHAPTER 3. Persistence 4. Implementing Business Logic 5. Working with Distributed Transactions 6. Creating REST Services 7. Implementing WebSockets 8. Working with Messaging 9. Implementing a Mail Client 10. Asynchronous REST 11. Asynchronous EJB 12. Batches and Workflows 13. Working with Servlets and JSP 14. Writing a JSF Application 15. Sharing the Web Sessions 16. WildFly in Cloud 17. Share your Data 18. Deployment 19. Working with OSGi

Asynchronous clients

The asynchronous processing works on the client side too; JAX-RS APIs are available for it. The following is a simple example of a client using an asynchronous client API:

Client client = newClient();
WebTarget target = client.target(url);
final AsyncInvoker asyncInvoker = target.request().async();
Future<Response> future = asyncInvoker.get();
Response response = future.get();

Unlike synchronous invocation, the asynchronous client calls the HTTP get() method through the javax.ws.rs.client.AsyncInvoker instead of the javax.ws.rs.client.SyncInvoker. The AsyncInvoker returns calling the javax.ws.rs.client.Invocation.Builder.async() method as shown earlier.

The AsyncInvoker provides methods similar to the SyncInvoker, with the difference that these methods do not return a synchronous response. The synchronous responses are replaced by the Future class, shown...

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