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Web Applications - Basics. Introduction to Web Web features Clent/Server HyperText Transfer Protocol HyperText Markup Language URL addresses Web server.

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Presentation on theme: "Web Applications - Basics. Introduction to Web Web features Clent/Server HyperText Transfer Protocol HyperText Markup Language URL addresses Web server."— Presentation transcript:

1 Web Applications - Basics

2 Introduction to Web Web features Clent/Server HyperText Transfer Protocol HyperText Markup Language URL addresses Web server - a computer program that is responsible for accepting HTTP requests from clients and serving them HTTP responses Web application - a dynamic extension of a web or application server

3 Web (HTTP) servers A Web server handles the HTTP protocol To process a HTTP request, a Web server may respond with a static HTML page or image send a redirect delegate the dynamic response generation to some other program such as CGI scripts JSPs (JavaServer Pages), servlets server-side JavaScripts or some other server-side technology

4 Web server diagram http://www.resultantsys.com/appServer.htm

5 Web server features In practice many web servers implement the following features: Authentication Handling of static and dynamic content HTTPS support (by SSL or TLS) Content compression (i.e. by gzip encoding) Virtual hosting Large file support Bandwidth throttling

6 Web server statistics Web server software vendors statistics http://news.netcraft.com/archives/web_server_survey.html Totals for Active Sites Across All Domains:

7 Web server statistics Web server software vendors statistics http://news.netcraft.com/archives/web_server_survey.html

8 Application servers Application server is responsible for handling the business logic of the system Separation of business logic from the presentation logic and the database logic: 3-tier architecture http://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/fpas/cmp/online/cs14k/client_server_model/webserver.htm

9 Application server diagram http://www.resultantsys.com/appServer.htm Application servers extend web servers to support dynamic content

10 Application server features The application server manages its own resources and may provide features such as: Security Transaction management Database connection pooling Clustering support Messaging Most application servers also contain a Web server

11 Web Applications & Components Web application is a dynamic extension of a web or application server Two types of web applications: Presentation-oriented (HTML, XML pages) Service-oriented (Web services) Web components provide the dynamic extension capabilities for a web server: Java servlets JSP pages Web service endpoints

12 Web Application Interaction [client] sends an HTTP request to the web server [web server] HTTP request  HTTPServletRequest This object is delivered to a web component, which can interact with JavaBeans or a DB to generate dynamic content [web component] generates an HTTPServletResponse or pass the request to another web component [web server] HTTPServletResponse  HTTP response [web server] returns HTTP response to the client

13 Web Application Interaction

14 Java Enterprise Edition Java EE is a comprehensive platform for multi- user, enterprise-wide applications It is based on Java SE and adds APIs for Internet-based server-side computing http://docs.oracle.com/javaee/7/tutorial/doc/

15 Java EE architecture Java EE defines an architecture for implementing services through the use of a Java EE server as multi-tier applications that deliver the scalability, accessibility, and manageability needed by enterprise-level applications The business and presentation logic has to be implemented by the developer The standard system services are provided by the Java EE platform

16 Java EE versions J2EE 1.2 (December 12, 1999) Java EE 5 (May 11, 2006) Java EE 6 (Dec 10, 2009) Java EE 7 (May 28, 2013)

17 Java EE 7 technologies Web Application Technologies Java Servlet 3.1 JavaServer Pages 2.3 JavaServer Faces 2.2 Web Services Technologies JAX-RS 2.0, JAX-WS 2.2, JAXB 2.2, StAX … Enterprise Application Technologies EJB 3.2, JMS 2.0, JPA 2.1, JTA 1.2, JavaMail 1.5… http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javaee/tech/index.html

18 Java EE components Java EE applications are made up of components A Java EE component is a self-contained functional software unit that is assembled into a Java EE application with its related classes and files and that communicates with other components

19 Java EE components Components are compiled in the same way as any program in the Java language Components are assembled into a Java EE application, are verified to be in compliance with the Java EE specification, and are deployed to production, where they are run and managed by a Java EE server

20 Java Web Application Technologies Java Servlet technology is the foundation of all the web application technologies

21 Servlets and JSPs Servlets - Java classes that dynamically process requests and construct responses JSP pages - text-based documents that execute as servlets, but allow a more natural approach to creating static content Appropriate usage Servlets - service-oriented applications, control functions JSP - generating text-based markup (HTML, SVG, WML, XML)

22 Web Containers Web components are supported by the services of a runtime platform called a web container In Java EE, a web container "implements the web component contract of the Java EE architecture“ Web container services: request dispatching security concurrency life-cycle management naming, transactions, email APIs

23 Web Container Examples Non-commercial Apache Tomcat Jetty Commertial Sun Java System Application Server BEA WebLogic Server Oracle Application Server WebSphere Open source JBoss

24 Deployment Web components have to be installed or deployed to the web container Aspects of web application behaviour can be configured during application deployment The configuration information is maintained in a XML file called a web application deployment descriptor

25 Web Application Development A web application consists of: Web components Static resource files (such as images, css) Helper classes and libraries The process for creating and running a web application is different from that of traditional stand-alone Java classes

26 Development Cycle 1.Develop the web component code 2.Develop the web application deployment descriptor 3.Compile the web application components and helper classes referenced by the components 4.Optionally package the application into a deployable unit 5.Deploy the application into a web container 6.Access a URL that references the web application

27 Web Modules According to Java EE architecture and Java Servlet Specification: Web components and static web content files such as images are called web resources A web module is the smallest deployable and usable unit of web resources Web module corresponds to a web application A web module has a specific structure

28 Web Module Structure The top-level directory of a web module is the document root of the application The document root contains: JSP pages client-side classes client-side archives static web resources

29 Web Module Structure The document root contains a subdirectory /WEB-INF/ web.xml: web application deployment descriptor lib: JAR archives of libraries called by server-side classes

30 Web Module Structure classes: server-side classes: servlets utility classes JavaBeans components tags: tag files, which are implementations of tag libraries

31 Configuring Web Applications Web applications are configured via (optional) deployment descriptor /WEB-INF/web.xml file Configuration options: Map URLs to web components Set initialization parameters Map errors to error screens Declare welcome files Declare resource references

32 Mapping URLs to Web Components When a request is received by the web container it must determine which web component should handle the request Need to add a servlet definition and a servlet mapping for each servlet to web.xml file ServletName ServletClass ServletName /path

33 Initialization Parameters It's possible to pass initialization parameters to the context or to a web component Context parameters: name value Servlet parameters (within servlet definition): name value

34 Handling Errors Web container generates default error page You can specify custom default page to be displayed instead Steps to handle errors Create appropriate error HTML pages for error conditions Modify the web.xml accordingly

35 Example: Setting Error Pages exception.BookNotFoundException /errorpage1.html exception.BooksNotFoundException /errorpage2.html exception.OrderException /errorpage3.html

36 Example: web.xml <web-app xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/javaee/web-app_3_0.xsd" version="3.0"> Your team project name Team N servlets name_of_context_initialization_parameter value_of_context_initializtion_parameter MyServlet com.web.demo.MyServlet MyServlet /servlet

37 WAR Files A web module can be deployed as an unpacked file structure or can be packaged in a JAR file known as a Web Archive File WAR file can be created by: executing jar command using Ant target using IDE (Eclipse for instance) using Maven

38 Setting a Context Root A context root identifies a web application in a Java EE server The server is responsible for mapping URL’s that start with a specific prefix to the location of a web application Usually this is done with a web server configuration file

39 Using Maven & Jetty A convenient way to develop, build, deploy and run Web application is by using: Maven build tool http://maven.apache.org/ Jetty web server http://www.mortbay.org/

40 Creating Directory Structure Maven supports the notion of creating a complete project template with a simple command To create Web project template need to use maven-archetype-webapp archetype type in a single line: mvn archetype:create -DgroupId=com.maven2example -DartifactId=maven2example_webapp -DarchetypeArtifactId=maven-archetype-webapp

41 Maven Web Directory Structure /src/main/webapp/ - directory structure for a WAR

42 Packaging Executing the command mvn package creates a WAR file

43 Running with Jetty It’s easy to run application by using Jetty plugin for Maven Jetty is an open-source, standards-based, full- featured web server implemented entirely in Java First created in 1995 Stable release: 9.0.4 / 2013-06-26

44 Jetty Maven Plugin Useful for rapid development and testing You can add it to any webapp project that is structured according to the usual Maven defaults The plugin can then periodically scan your project for changes and automatically redeploy the webapp if any are found http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/current/jetty- maven-plugin.html

45 Running with Jetty Add the Jetty plugin to the pom.xml maven2example_webapp org.mortbay.jetty jetty-maven-plugin 8.1.13.v20130916

46 Running with Jetty Execute mvn jetty:run command >mvn jetty:run [INFO] Scanning for projects...... [INFO] --- jetty-maven-plugin:8.1.13.v20130916:run (default-cli) @ servlet-jpa-app --- [INFO] Configuring Jetty for project: servlet-jpa-app [INFO] webAppSourceDirectory not set. Defaulting to C:\tmp\servlet-jpa-app\src\main\webapp [INFO] Reload Mechanic: automatic [INFO] Classes = C:\tmp\servlet-jpa-app\target\classes [INFO] Context path = /servlet-jpa-app [INFO] Tmp directory = C:\tmp\servlet-jpa-app\target\tmp [INFO] Web defaults = org/eclipse/jetty/webapp/webdefault.xml [INFO] Web overrides = none [INFO] web.xml file = file:/C:/tmp/servlet-jpa-app/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/web.xml [INFO] Webapp directory = C:\tmp\servlet-jpa-app\src\main\webapp... [INFO] Started Jetty Server Stop by Ctrl+C

47 Opening the Application Open your web browser to http://localhost:8080/

48 Context Path Configuration maven2example_webapp org.mortbay.jetty jetty-maven-plugin 8.1.13.v20130916 10 /my-super-app Now valid URL is: http://localhost:8080/my-super-app

49 Opening the Application Open your web browser to http://localhost:8080/

50 Resources Introduction to Java Platform, Enterprise Edition 7 http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javaee/javaee7- whitepaper-1956203.pdf http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javaee/javaee7- whitepaper-1956203.pdf The Java EE 7 Tutorial http://download.oracle.com/javaee/7/tutorial/doc/ http://download.oracle.com/javaee/7/tutorial/doc/ Article “App server, Web server: What's the difference?” http://www.javaworld.com/javaqa/2002-08/01-qa-0823- appvswebserver.html

51 Resources Building Web Applications with Maven 2 http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/03/01/building-web- applications-with-maven-2.html http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/03/01/building-web- applications-with-maven-2.html Jetty Maven Plugin http://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/current/jetty- maven-plugin.html


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