you can register whatever you want with jndi. i attach a uuid
generator (and lots of other stuff) to jndi and it is not an ejb. we access
it directly from jndi (eg we use no session bean to get to it)
> 2. Use a non EJB (I feel that using ejb's on the server side does not mean
> all server side classes have to be EJbs ). The advantages are that you
> wouldn't have to worry about a persistence layer . Now to actually access
> the singleton class you could use a session bean whose sole purpose is to
> access the singleton class. I don't know if you can directly register the
> Non EJB singleton class with JNDI. I think you can and in that case you
> don't need the session bean.
>
>
> Sachin.
>
>
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