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spring live 目录

Spring Live

Spring Live

Chapter Summaries

This book is written for Java developers familiar with web frameworks. Its main purpose is for Java developers to learn Spring and evaluate it against other frameworks. One of my hopes is to compare Spring to other web frameworks, or at least show how it can be integrated with other frameworks (i.e. Struts, WebWork, maybe even Tapestry down the road). This book will contain a usable sample application that includes Spring code to wire DAOs and Services together. The book does have a bit of a Struts perspective to it as I have been a Struts developer for almost three years and Struts is the most popular web framework today. It is only natural that I use my experience in my writing.

Chapter 1: Introducing Spring covers the basics of Spring, how it came to be and why it’s getting so much press and rave reviews. It compares the traditional way of resolving dependencies (binding interfaces to implementations using a Factory Pattern) and how Spring does it all in XML. It also briefly covers how it simplifies the Hibernate API.

Chapter 2: Spring Quick Start Tutorial is a tutorial on how to write a simple Spring web application using the Struts MVC framework for the front end, Spring for the middle-tier glue, and Hibernate for the back end. In Chapter 4, this application will be refactored to use the Spring MVC framework.

Chapter 3: The BeanFactory and How It Works. The BeanFactory represents the heart of Spring, so it’s important to know how it works. This chapter explains how bean definitions are written, their properties, dependencies, and autowiring. It also explains the logic behind making singleton beans versus prototypes. Then it delves into Inversion of Control, how it works, and the simplicity it brings. This chapter dissects the Lifecyle of a bean in the BeanFactory to show how it works. This chapter also inspects the applicationContext.xml file for the MyUsers application created in Chapter 2.

Chapter 4: Spring’s MVC Framework describes the many features of Spring’s MVC framework. It shows you how to replace the Struts layer in MyUsers with Spring. It covers the DispatcherServlet, various Controllers, Handler Mappings, View Resolvers, Validation and Internationalization. It also briefly covers Spring’s JSP Tags.

Chapter 5: Advanced MVC covers advanced topics in web frameworks, particularly validation and page decoration.It shows the user how to use Tiles or SiteMesh to decorate a web application. It also explains how the Spring framework handles validation, and shows examples of using it in the web business layers. Finally, it explains a strategy for handling exceptions in the controllers, how to upload files and how to send e-mail.

Chapter 6: View Options covers the view options in Spring’s MVC architecture. At the time of this writing, the options are JSP, Velocity, FreeMarker, XSLT, PDF and Excel. This chapter aims to become a reference for configuring all Spring-supported views. It also contains a brief overview how each view works and compares constructing a page in MyUsers with each option. Additionally, it focuses on internationalization for each view

option.

Chapter 7: Persistence Strategies. Hibernate is quickly becoming a popular choice for persistence in Java applications, but sometimes it doesn’t fit. If you have an existing database schema, or even pre-written SQL, sometimes it’s better to use JDBC or iBATIS (which supports externalized SQL in XML files). This chapter refactors the MyUsers application to support both JDBC and iBATIS as persistence framework options. It also

implements the UserDAO using JDO and OJB to showcase Spring's excellent support for these frameworks.

Chapter 8: Testing Spring Applications explains how to use test-driven development to create high-quality, well-tested, Spring-based applications. You will learn how to test your components using tools like EasyMock, jMock and DBUnit. For the Controllers, you will learn how to use Cactus for in-container testing, and Spring Mocks for out-of-container testing. Lastly, you will learn how to use jWebUnit and Canoo's WebTest for testing the web interface.

Chapter 9: AOP. Aspect Oriented Programming has received a lot of hype in the Java community in the last year. What is AOP and how can it help you in your applications? This chapter will cover the basics of AOP and give some useful examples of how AOP might help you.

Chapter 10: Transactions. Transactions are an important part of J2EE, allowing you to view several database calls as one and roll them back if they don’t all succeed. One of the most highlighted features of EJBs is declarative transactions. This chapter demonstrates how Spring simplifies using declarative and programmatic transactions.

Chapter 11: Web Framework Integration. Spring has its own web framework, but it also integrates well with other frameworks. This allows you to leverage your existing knowledge and still use Spring to manage your business objects and data layer. This chapter explores Spring integration with four popular web frameworks: JSF, Struts, Tapestry and WebWork.

Appendix A: Examples and References includes explicit examples of JSF, Tapestry, and WebWork integration.

 



方向:分布式系统设计

posted on 2005-03-25 11:37 java光环 阅读(885) 评论(0)  编辑  收藏 所属分类: spring


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