| package | req. by app. client | reg. by applet | req. by web | req. by EJB |
| EJB 3.0 JSR 244 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Servlet 2.5 JSR 154 | N | N | Y | N |
| JSP 2.1 JSR 245 | N | N | Y | N |
| JMS 1.1 JSR 914 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JTA 1.1 JSR 907 | N | N | Y | Y |
| JavaMail 1.4 JSR 919 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JAF 1.1 JSR 925 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Connector 1.5 JSR 112 | N | N | Y | Y |
| Web Services 1.2 JSR 109 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JAX-RPC 1.1 JSR 101? | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JAX-WS 2.0 JSR 224 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JAXB 2.0 JSR 222 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| SAAJ 1.3 JSR 67 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JAXR 1.0 JSR 93 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Java EE management JSR 77 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Java EE management JSR 88 | N | N | N | N |
| JACC 1.1 JSR 115 | N | N | Y | Y |
| JSP Debugging 1.0 JSR 45 | N | N | Y | N |
| JSTL 1.2 JSR 52 | N | N | Y | N |
| Web Services Metadata 2.0 JSR 181 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| JSF 1.2 JSR 252 | N | N | Y | N |
| Common Annotations 1.0 JSR 250 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| StAX 1.0 JSR 173 | Y | N | Y | Y |
| Java Persistence 1.0 JSR 220 | Y | N | Y | Y |
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Optional packages
CX-310-052 Assignment Objectives
- Application Design Concepts and Principles
- Explain the main advantages of an object-oriented approach to system design including the effect of encapsulation, inheritance, and use of interfaces on architectural characteristics
- Describe how the principle of "separation of concerns" has been applied to the main system tiers of a Java Platform, Enterprise Edition application. Tiers include client (both GUI and web), web (web container), business (EJB container), integration, and resource tiers
- Describe how the principle of "separation of concerns" has been applied to the layers of a Java EE application. Layers include application, virtual platform (component APIs), application infrastructure (containers), enterprise services (operating system and virtualization), compute and storage, and the networking infrastructure layers
- Common Architectures
- Explain the advantages and disadvantages of two-tier architectures when examined under the following topics: scalability, maintainability, reliability, availability, extensibility, performance, manageability, and security
- Explain the advantages and disadvantages of three-tier architectures when examined under the following topics: scalability, maintainability, reliability, availability, extensibility, performance, manageability, and security
- Explain the advantages and disadvantages of multi-tier architectures when examined under the following topics: scalability, maintainability, reliability, availability, extensibility, performance, manageability, and security
- Explain the benefits and drawbacks of rich clients and browser-based clients as deployed in a typical Java EE application
- Explain appropriate and inappropriate uses for web services in the Java EE platform
- Integration and Messaging
- Explain possible approaches for communicating with an external system from a Java EE technology-based system given an outline description of those systems and outline the benefits and drawbacks of each approach
- Explain typical uses of web services and XML over HTTP as mechanisms to integrate distinct software components
- Explain how JCA and JMS are used to integrate distinct software components as part of an overall Java EE application
- Business Tier Technologies
- Explain and contrast uses for entity beans, entity classes, stateful and stateless session beans, and message-driven beans, and understand the advantages and disadvantages of each type
- Explain and contrast the following persistence strategies: container-managed persistence (CMP) BMP, JDO, JPA, ORM and using DAOs (Data Access Objects) and direct JDBC technology-based persistence under the following headings: ease of development, performance, scalability, extensibility, and security
- Explain how Java EE supports the deployment of server-side components implemented as web services and the advantages and disadvantages of adopting such an approach
- Explain the benefits of the EJB 3 development model over previous EJB generations for ease of development including how the EJB container simplifies EJB development
- Web Tier Technologies
- State the benefits and drawbacks of adopting a web framework in designing a Java EE application
- Explain standard uses for JSP pages and servlets in a typical Java EE application
- Explain standard uses for JavaServer Faces components in a typical Java EE application
- Given a system requirements definition, explain and justify your rationale for choosing a web-centric or EJB-centric implementation to solve the requirements. Web-centric means that you are providing a solution that does not use EJB components. EJB-centric solution will require an application server that supports EJB components
- Applicability of Java EE Technology
- Given a specified business problem, design a modular solution that solves the problem using Java EE
- Explain how the Java EE platform enables service oriented architecture (SOA) -based applications
- Explain how you would design a Java EE application to repeatedly measure critical non-functional requirements and outline a standard process with specific strategies to refactor that application to improve on the results of the measurements
- Patterns
- From a list, select the most appropriate pattern for a given scenario. Patterns are limited to those documented in the book - Alur, Crupi and Malks (2003). Core J2EE Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies 2nd Edition and named using the names given in that book
- From a list, select the most appropriate pattern for a given scenario. Patterns are limited to those documented in the book - Gamma, Erich; Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides (1995). Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software and are named using the names given in that book
- From a list, select the benefits and drawbacks of a pattern drawn from the book - Gamma, Erich; Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson, and John Vlissides (1995). Design Patterns: Elements of Reusable Object-Oriented Software
- From a list, select the benefits and drawbacks of a specified Core J2EE pattern drawn from the book – Alur, Crupi and Malks (2003). Core J2EE Patterns: Best Practices and Design Strategies 2nd Edition
- Security
- Explain the client-side security model for the Java SE environment, including the Web Start and applet deployment modes
- Given an architectural system specification, select appropriate locations for implementation of specified security features, and select suitable technologies for implementation of those features
- Identify and classify potential threats to a system and describe how a given architecture will address the threats
- Describe the commonly used declarative and programmatic methods used to secure applications built on the Java EE platform, for example use of deployment descriptors and JAAS
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