BEA WebLogic Server Bible, 2nd Edition
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  • Wiley

More About This Title BEA WebLogic Server Bible, 2nd Edition

English

Lou Miranda is a consultant specializing in J2EE technologies and Web services. He is owner and lead consultant for MirandaCorp.com, Inc., and has worked at major insurance, medical device, and manufacturing corporations. He has also worked through large consulting companies such as PricewaterhouseCoopers and KPMG Consulting. His Java and WebLogic experience has included architecting membership, payment, production line, and insurance systems, as well as a Web services proof of concept. Other writing assignments have included a stint as a Contributing Editor at PC World magazine, and articles for several programming magazines. He also holds a Masters degree in Molecular Biology. Lou recently started a series of WebLogic training videos on DVD (www.GeekSpeakPress.com).

Joe Zuffoletto is a system architect specializing in application servers and their integration with other host systems. After receiving a computer science degree from Princeton in 1987, he began working with application servers in 1990, when he wrote a number of them for clients in the financial services and technology industries. These servers were based on a C++ framework he developed and enhanced over a five-year span, and they provided serverside execution of business logic, as well as access to embedded and separate relational database systems.
Joe has since left the hard work of writing application servers to others, such as BEA and Sun. He is currently president and co-owner of ZeeWare, Inc. (www.zeeware.com), a systems integration firm focused on building J2EE solutions with WebLogic Server. He lives with his wife in Sausalito, California.

English

Foreword.

Preface.

Acknowledgments.

Part I: Preparing Your Enterprise for WebLogic.

Chapter 1: A Quick Tour of WebLogic Server.

Chapter 2: Assembling and Managing a WebLogic Development Team.

Chapter 3: Designing WebLogic Applications.

Chapter 4: Setting Up a WebLogic Environment.

Part II: WebLogic and the J2EE APIs.

Chapter 5: Working with WebLogic JDBC.

Chapter 6: Understanding Transactions and Working with WebLogic JTA.

Chapter 7: Working with WebLogic JNDI.

Chapter 8: Working with WebLogic RMI.

Chapter 9: Working with WebLogic JMS.

Chapter 10: Working with WebLogic JavaMail.

Part III: Developing Web Components.

Chapter 11: Developing Servlets.

Chapter 12: Developing JavaServer Pages.

Chapter 13: Developing Tag Libraries.

Part IV: Developing EJB Components.

Chapter 14: Understanding Enterprise JavaBeans.

Chapter 15: Developing Session Beans.

Chapter 16: Developing Entity Beans.

Chapter 17: Developing Message-Driven Beans.

Part V: Deploying and Testing Enterprise Applications.

Chapter 18: Assembling and Deploying WebLogic Applications.

Chapter 19: Testing and Tuning WebLogic Applications.

Part VI: Implementing Security.

Chapter 20: Understanding Security Fundamentals.

Chapter 21: Understanding WebLogic’s Security Architecture.

Chapter 22: Securing WebLogic Resources and Programming JAAS.

Part VII: WebLogic Server Administration.

Chapter 23: Working with WebLogic’s Administration Tools.

Chapter 24: Working with WebLogic Clusters.

Chapter 25: Security Administration in WebLogic.

Part VIII: Enterprise Application Integration.

Chapter 26: Web Services with WebLogic Server.

Chapter 27: Web Services with WebLogic Workshop.

Chapter 28: Working with WebLogic and the J2EE Connector Architecture.

Appendix A: Upgrading to WebLogic Server 7.0 from Earlier Versions.

Appendix B: WebLogic Server Tools and Utilities.

Index.

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