Java Servlet Programming

Java Servlet Programming

Einband:
Kartonierter Einband
EAN:
9780596000400
Untertitel:
Englisch
Genre:
Programmiersprachen
Autor:
Jason Hunter
Herausgeber:
O'Reilly Media
Auflage:
2 Revised edition
Anzahl Seiten:
750
Erscheinungsdatum:
08.05.2001
ISBN:
978-0-596-00040-0

Servlets are an exciting and important technology that ties Java to the Web, allowing programmers to write Java programs that create dynamic web content. Java Servlet Programming covers everything Java developers need to know to write effective servlets. It explains the servlet lifecycle, showing how to use servlets to maintain state information effortlessly. It also describes how to serve dynamic web content, including both HTML pages and multimedia data, and explores more advanced topics like integrated session tracking, efficient database connectivity using JDBC, applet-servlet communicaton, interservlet communication, and internationalization. Readers can use the book's numerous real-world examples as the basis for their own servlets. The second edition has been completely updated to cover the new features of Version 2.2 of the Java Servlet API. It introduces chapters on servlet security and advanced communication, and also introduces several popular tools for easier integration of servlet technology with dynamic web pages. These tools include JavaServer Pages (JSP), Tea, XMLC, and the Element Construction Set. In addition to complete coverage of 2.2 specification, Java Servlet programming, 2nd Edition, also contains coverage of the new 2.3 final draft specification.

Autorentext
Jason Hunter is Senior Technologist with CollabNet, a company that provides tools and services for open source style collaboration. In addition to authoring Java Servlet Programming, he is publisher of Servlets.com, creator of the com.oreilly.servlet library, a contributor to the Apache Jakarta project that creates Tomcat (starting on the project when it was still Sun internal), a member of the expert groups responsible for Servlet/JSP and JAXP API development, and he holds a seat on the JCP Executive Committee overseeing the Java platform, as a representative of the Apache Software Foundation. He also writes columns for JavaWorld, and speaks at many programming and open source conferences. Most recently he co-created the open source JDOM library to enable optimized Java and XML integration, and he leads the expert group responsible for JDOM development. Jason graduated summa cum laude from Willamette University (Salem, Oregon) in 1995 with a degree in computer science. He began programming in Java in the summer of 1995 and has been involved with servlets and related server-side technologies since December 1996. If by some miracle you don't find him at work, he's probably out hiking in the mountains.William Crawford has been developing web-based enterprise applications since 1995, including one of the first web-based electronic medical record systems (at Children's Hospital in Boston) and some of the first enterprise-level uses of Java. He has consulted for a variety of institutional clients, including Boston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical Center, numerous startups and several Fortune 500 companies. Prior to an acquisition he was CTO of Invantage, Incorporated in Cambridge, MA. He received a degree in history and economics from Yale University. He is the co-author of Java Servlet Programming, 2nd Edition, Java Enterprise in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition, and two forthcoming O'Reilly titles. Will is currently Principal Software Architect at Perceptive Informatics, Inc.Massachusetts, provider of software and services to the pharmaceutical industry. He can be reached at http: //www.williamcrawford.info

Klappentext
This new edition of this book has been updated to add the new features of the Java Servlet API Version 2.2, and new chapters on servlet security and advanced communication. It also introduces several popular tools including JavaServer Pages (JSP), Tea, XMLC, and the Element Construction Set.

Inhalt
Preface; Servlet API 2.2; Readers of the First Edition; Audience; About the Examples; Organization; Conventions Used in This Book; Request for Comments; Acknowledgments; Acknowledgments from the First Edition; Chapter 1: Introduction; 1.1 History of Web Applications; 1.2 Support for Servlets; 1.3 The Power of Servlets; Chapter 2: HTTP Servlet Basics; 2.1 HTTP Basics; 2.2 The Servlet API; 2.3 Page Generation; 2.4 Web Applications; 2.5 Moving On; Chapter 3: The Servlet Lifecycle; 3.1 The Servlet Alternative; 3.2 Servlet Reloading; 3.3 Init and Destroy; 3.4 Single-Thread Model; 3.5 Background Processing; 3.6 Load on Startup; 3.7 Client-Side Caching; 3.8 Server-Side Caching; Chapter 4: Retrieving Information; 4.1 The Servlet; 4.2 The Server; 4.3 The Client; Chapter 5: Sending HTML Information; 5.1 The Structure of a Response; 5.2 Sending a Normal Response; 5.3 Using Persistent Connections; 5.4 Response Buffering; 5.5 Status Codes; 5.6 HTTP Headers; 5.7 When Things Go Wrong; 5.8 Six Ways to Skin a Servlet Cat; Chapter 6: Sending Multimedia Content; 6.1 WAP and WML; 6.2 Images; 6.3 Compressed Content; 6.4 Server Push; Chapter 7: Session Tracking; 7.1 User Authentication; 7.2 Hidden Form Fields; 7.3 URL Rewriting; 7.4 Persistent Cookies; 7.5 The Session Tracking API; Chapter 8: Security; 8.1 HTTP Authentication; 8.2 Form-Based Authentication; 8.3 Custom Authentication; 8.4 Digital Certificates; 8.5 Secure Sockets Layer (SSL); Chapter 9: Database Connectivity; 9.1 Relational Databases; 9.2 The JDBC API; 9.3 Reusing Database Objects; 9.4 Transactions; 9.5 A Guestbook Servlet; 9.6 Advanced JDBC Techniques; 9.7 Beyond the Core; Chapter 10: Applet-Servlet Communication; 10.1 Communication Options; 10.2 Daytime Server; 10.3 Chat Server; Chapter 11: Servlet Collaboration; 11.1 Sharing Information; 11.2 Sharing Control; Chapter 12: Enterprise Servletsand J2EE; 12.1 Distributing Load; 12.2 Integrating with J2EE; Chapter 13: Internationalization; 13.1 Western European Languages; 13.2 Conforming to Local Customs; 13.3 Non-Western European Languages; 13.4 Multiple Languages; 13.5 Dynamic Language Negotiation; 13.6 HTML Forms; Chapter 14: The Tea Framework; 14.1 The Tea Language; 14.2 Getting Started; 14.3 Request Information; 14.4 Tea Administration; 14.5 Tea Applications; 14.6 A Tool Application; 14.7 Final Words; Chapter 15: WebMacro; 15.1 The WebMacro Framework; 15.2 Installing WebMacro; 15.3 WebMacro Directives; 15.4 WebMacro Templates; 15.5 A Tool Application; 15.6 Filters; Chapter 16: Element Construction Set; 16.1 Page Components as Objects; 16.2 Displaying a Result Set; Chapter 17: XMLC; 17.1 A Simple XML Compile; 17.2 The Manipulation Class; 17.3 A Tool Application; Chapter 18: JavaServer Pages; 18.1 Using JavaServer Pages; 18.2 Behind the Scenes; 18.3 Expressions and Declarations; 18.4 Directives; 18.5 JSP and JavaBeans; 18.6 Includes and Forwards; 18.7 A Tool Application; 18.8 Custom Tag Libraries; Chapter 19: Odds and Ends; 19.1 Parsing Parameters; 19.2 Sending Email; 19.3 Using Regular Expressions; 19.4 Executing Programs; 19.5 Using Native Methods; 19.6 Acting as an RMI Client; 19.7 Debugging; 19.8 Performance Tuning; Chapter 20: What's New in the Servlet 2.3 API; 20.1 Changes in the Servlet API 2.3; 20.2 Conclusion; Servlet API Quick Reference; HTTP Servlet API Quick Reference; Deployment Descriptor DTD Reference; HTTP Status Codes; Character Entities; Charsets; Colophon;


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