» tagged pages
» logout

sorted by: recent | see : popular
Content Tagged with Weblogic + oracle

SpringSource (and Other Top Vendors) Leading the OSGi Charge | Javalobby

OSGi has been adopted by IBM WebSphere, the Oracle WebLogic Java EE AS, Red Hat's JBoss. And let us not forget Eclipse IDE!

JBoss: del.icio.us tag/jboss

Automating Java Performance Tuning

Tune Wizard kicks-off your load tests, monitors the servers, analyzes the behavior, makes decisions based on embedded intelligence, tunes the configuration and bounces the servers. This process is repeated, automatically adjusting various JVM, OS and WebLogic settings until it finds the best performing combination.

JMeter: del.icio.us/tag/jmeter

Technical Article: Working with Transactions

The first installment of the "SOA Suite Essentials for WLI Users" series maps WebLogic Integration's transaction handling capabilities to their equivalents in Oracle BPEL Process Manager.

BPEL: del.icio.us tag/BPEL

Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse Now Available

Oracle Enterprise Pack for Eclipse Now AvailableExtends Tooling Component of Oracle® Fusion Middleware with Initial Release of Java EE Plug-insRedwood Shores, CA - August 27, 2008

Eclipse: eclipsepowered

Oracle Removes Licensing for Workshop Eclipse Plug-ins | Eclipse Zone

Oracle is delivering the Eclipse tools for Oracle WebLogic Server 10gR3 with a simpler packaging and free.

Eclipse: del.icio.us/tag/eclipse

Technical Article: XML as a Bridge between SQL and Web Applications

Over the past few years XML technology has gained great popularity as a format for exchanging information over the Internet<sep/>

XML: del.icio.us/tag/xml

WebLogic is Oracle's Strategic AppServer - Metro Included

ALT DESCR

I was "on vacation" last week, so the news are a bit late, but the news on July 1st confirmed the rumor: Oracle WebLogic Server is Oracle's "Strategic AppServer" - see the articles at The Register and InfoWorld. This comes on top of recent surveys on Oracle/BEA usage: SOA-Talk and The Register.

A consequence of this move is that Metro is now used Oracle's main AppServer, increasing the adoption of GlassFish's WebServices stack. The same applies to JAXB RI; and, in that case, I know of no mainstream AppServer that uses a different implementation!

GlassFish: The Aquarium

Oracle reveals BEA roadmap | InfoWorld | News | 2008-07-01 | By Paul Krill

http://blogs.sun.com/theaquarium/entry/metro_adoption_now_also_oracle

GlassFish: del.icio.us/tag/glassfish

Sekhar Vajjhala's Blog: Migrating WebLogic's JSP SimpleTag example to GlassFish

As I outlined in Migrate to GlassFish acitivities , I am migrating samples from different application servers to GlassFish to illustrate<sep/>

GlassFish: del.icio.us/tag/glassfish

The Future of BPM at BEA/Oracle | The Intelligent Enterprise Blog

It is possible that Oracle could adopt an IBM-like strategy and keep both threads alive until things sort out, using ALBPM on top of Fusion as the straight BPMS offering, and the current ARIS+SOA Suite to support the apps business. In some ways that's the

bpm: BPM bookmarks from del.icio.us

JBoss (and possibly TomCat) should never have happened. " The Abstract Truth

BEA made a lot of mistakes. Letting JBoss out of the box was probably its biggest. While BEA was looking "up" at its biggest competitor IBM, JBoss was busily undercutting BEA at the bottom end

JBoss: del.icio.us tag/jboss

Meera Subbarao's Java Blog: EJB 3.0 and 4 different Application Servers - Good, bad or ugly.

I wrote a simple, really simple Stateless Session Bean with one method in it and published it as a web service to JBoss, WebLogic,Glassfish and Oracle AS. It's up to you to decide which ones are good, bad, and ugly.

XML: del.icio.us/tag/xml

Meera Subbarao's Java Blog: EJB 3.0 and 4 different Application Servers - Good, bad or ugly.

<sep/>really simple Stateless Session Bean with one method in it and published it as a web service to JBoss, WebLogic,Glassfish and Oracle AS. It's up to you to decide which ones are good, bad, and<sep/>

JBoss: del.icio.us tag/jboss

Meera Subbarao's Java Blog: EJB 3.0 and 4 different Application Servers - Good, bad or ugly.

<sep/>Stateless Session Bean with one method in it and published it as a web service to JBoss, WebLogic,Glassfish and Oracle AS. It's up to you to decide which ones are good, bad, and ugly.

GlassFish: del.icio.us/tag/glassfish

Interface21 Team Blog » Oracle Contributing Oracle Application Server Integration Code to Spring Framework

This is similar to what we have with WebLogic 8.1 and above in WebLogicJtaTransactionManager. The OC4JJtaTransactionManager should be used in place of the generic JtaTransactionManager in an OC4J environment, and provides the following benefits

POJO: del.icio.us/tag/pojo

BEA Weblogic Server 10 incluye GlassFish (JEE 5)

 

 

El estándar Java EE 5 (JEE 5) está siendo adoptado rápidamente por los proveedores de Servidores de Aplicaciones. El primero en anunciar una versión certificada fue Sun en la Java One de Mayo de 2006 con Sun JAVA System Application Server 9 PE. En Septiembre, SAP anunció recientemente la certificación de SAP NetWeaver Application Server Java EE 5 Edition. BEA Weblogic Server 10 parece ser el próximo.
El compromiso de BEA con JAVA EE 5 (JEE5) es fuerte. En la BEA eWorld de Beijing, celebrada el 13 y 14 de Diciembre de 2006 ya se pudieron ver versiones preliminares de BEA Weblogic Server 10 que será el primer producto de BEA con certificación JAVA EE 5.
ORACLE ya tiene implementaciones de EJB 3.0 y JSF 1.2, aunque todavía no está certificado, y JBOSS publicó la beta de JBOSS 5.0 en Noviembre de 2006, teniendo disponible desde Octubre de 2006 EJB 3.0 en JBOSS 4.0.5. El único que por ahora no parece tener un roadmap claro es IBM WebSphere.

Pero volviendo al servidor de BEA, la technical preview ya está disponible (Weblogic Server 10 TP), así que nada mejor que instalarlo para ver que lleva dentro. ¡Pero si aquí está GlassFish!, o al menos parte del proyecto.

En el .../server/lib/wseeclient.zip aparecen:

  • glassfish.jaxb_2.0.2.jar
  • glassfish.stax.ex_1.0.0.jar
  • glassfish.xmlstreambuffer_0.1.117.jar

y en el directorio Bea/modules aparecen:

  • glassfish.el_2.1.0.jar
  • glassfish.jaxb_2.0.2.jar
  • glassfish.jaxws.resolver_2.0.1.jar
  • glassfish.jaxws.rt_2.0.1.jar
  • glassfish.jaxws.saaj.impl_2.0.1.jar
  • glassfish.jaxws.sjsxp_2.0.1.jar
  • glassfish.jaxws.tools_2.0.1.jar
  • glassfish.stax.ex_1.0.0.jar
  • glassfish.xmlstreambuffer_0.1.117.jar


Interesante. Muy interesante. Rebuscando un poco más encuentro que en el fichero weblogic.jar existen clases de terceros. De los 29926 archivos que contiene, 1630 son archivos de Sun. Parecen estar relacionados con XML Schema y Web Services, y provienen del JWSDP (com.sun.java.xml.ns.*)

La licencia CDDL permite estas cosas, mezclar código Open Source con código propietario pero manteniendo la integridad de los ficheros Open Source. Es decir que si BEA los mejora, el código sigue teniendo licencia CDDL, y por tanto puede volver a los repositorios de origen.

En resumen, BEA incluye código de GlassFish en Weblogic Server 10, y está contribuyendo a aumentar la calidad del código del Servidor de Aplicaciones de Sun, ya que los ingenieros de BEA están probando código del proyecto GlassFish, que es la base de la siguiente versión del Servidor de Aplicaciones de Sun (9.1 EE). Un ejemplo más de coopetencia y de por donde está evolucionando la industria del software.

La comunidad GlassFish incluye a más de 1200 personas, algunas de ellas de BEA, ORACLE o JBOSS. El núcleo de desarrolladores está formado por 140 personas, una gran mayoría de las cuales trabaja para Sun. El número de líneas de código ha superado los 5 millones.

Más información:

 

User:jaimecid: Blog de Jaime Cid (Feedburner)

Page 1 | Next >>