» tagged pages
» logout

sorted by: recent | see : popular
Content Tagged with Axis + Hibernate

Pascal Alma : Blog: Oracle ADF, JDeveloper, JHeadstart, J2EE, Spring, Hibernate, Xfire, Apache AXIS

My name is Pascal Alma and I live in The Netherlands. I have been working in IT business since 1997. I started as a Oracle developer, working with ‘traditional’ tools: Oracle Designer/Developer and PL/SQL. Since 2001 I am developing applications for the J2EE platform, still using the Oracle toolstack: JDeveloper and JHeadstart. Besides the Oracle toolstack I am also using a lot of open source tools/frameworks like Spring/Hibernate/Xfire/Apache Axis/ etc. etc. at various projects. Since 2008 I have started my own company ‘PALMA IT’.

User:jaimecid: Jaime Cid delicious bookmarks (feed)

Pascal Alma : Blog: Oracle ADF, JDeveloper, JHeadstart, J2EE, Spring, Hibernate, Xfire, Apache AXIS

My name is Pascal Alma and I live in The Netherlands. I have been working in IT business since 1997. I started as a Oracle developer, working with ‘traditional’ tools: Oracle Designer/Developer and PL/SQL. Since 2001 I am developing applications for the J2EE platform, still using the Oracle toolstack: JDeveloper and JHeadstart. Besides the Oracle toolstack I am also using a lot of open source tools/frameworks like Spring/Hibernate/Xfire/Apache Axis/ etc. etc. at various projects. Since 2008 I have started my own company ‘PALMA IT’.

Hibernate: del.icio.us tag/hibernate

Apache Sandesha2 Storage Framework | WSO2 Oxygen Tank

This article by Chamikara Jayalath, talks about the storage framework of Apache Sandesha2. This will explain the architecture behind the storage framework and describes how you can use it to plug-in deferent types of storage mechanisms into Apache Sandesh

Hibernate: del.icio.us tag/hibernate

Project Links

Useful information about projects in SASH

Design a simple service-oriented J2EE application framework

Leverage Struts, Spring, Hibernate, and Axis Often, a J2EE Web application framework—Struts, for example—doesn’t address the Web-tier object references between Action/servlet and other layers, such as a plain old Java object (POJO) business manager, Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), Web services, and a data access object (DAO), or between a DAO and JDBC (Java Database Connectivity) stored procedures. Thus, Java developers end up with messy code in the Web tier Action/servlet. This article describes in detail the steps for developing a custom framework that addresses those issues.

SASH: Documentation