J2EE Development
using WebSphere Studio v5.0


| Audience |
Java developers,
web page designers and other professionals that
will be designing, developing and implementing
large scale applications using JSPs, servlets,
Enterprise JavaBeans and implementing them using
IBM’s WebSphere Application Server v5.1 |
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Duration |
5 Days |
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| Course Abstract |
This course will integrate
a combination of instructor-led discussions and
interactive workshops to demonstrate the development
and testing of server-side applications using
J2EE v1.4 component model. This course will focus
on illustrating the use of the WSAD v5.1 product
for developing servlets, JSPs, JavaBeans and EJBs.
This seminar will focus on: WSAD wizards, migration
to v5.1, servlet and JSP component development,
session, message and entity EJB development, J2CA
and their adapters, Web Services framework, JMS
and MQSeries, packaging and deployment issues,
J2EE Design patterns and Struts development. |
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| Objectives |
Upon conclusion participants will have acquired
these skills:
- Understand the role of the WSAD v5.0 IDE
tool
- Explain the role of WSAD projects and perspectives
- Demonstrate the usage of WSAD wizards for
rapidly developing components, projects and
servers
- Illustrate the J2EE 1.4 component model and
role in designing server-side applications
- Develop, debug and test servlet and JSP components
- Understand role of JDBC to establish connectivity
to relational structures
- Illustrate the role of Struts and develop
Struts oriented applications
- Understand the role of Web Services, UDDI
Registries and the Service Oriented Architecture
- Depict the role of JMS and MQSeries
- Illustrate the J2EE packaging and deployment
strategies
- Demonstrate the usage of JCA and the role
of resource adapters
- Illustrate WSAD v5.0 projects and packaging
- Deploy applications to the embedded WebSphere
Application Server
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| Class Format |
Lecture and Lab |
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| Prerequisites |
Each student should
have a basic understanding of the WWW and have
been exposed to the Java programming language. |
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