User: fleury
Date: 01/02/15 18:48:38
Modified: developers developers.html jboss-overview.html
jboss-server.html lists.html
Added: developers jboss-jbosstx.html jboss-projects.html
jboss-third.html
Log:
updated website
Revision Changes Path
1.9 +71 -88 newsite/developers/developers.html
Index: developers.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/developers/developers.html,v
retrieving revision 1.8
retrieving revision 1.9
diff -u -r1.8 -r1.9
--- developers.html 2001/02/08 05:31:25 1.8
+++ developers.html 2001/02/16 02:48:34 1.9
@@ -10,94 +10,77 @@
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
<tr>
<td width="600" valign="top">
- <table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
- <tr>
- <td class="pageheader"><b>For
developers</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>An
Open Operating System for the web</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class="newsbody">Enterprise web applications, which live on networks
- and are accessible through browsers, are redefining Enterprise Web
- Software. This is the next wave of computing.
- <p>Developers, by nature, seek a standard enterprise-ready platform.
Microsoft is pushing their paper spec �.NET� on Windows. If you want a multi-platform
standard with two years behind it, we recommend Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE),
sponsored by SUN and IBM.
-
-
- <p>JBoss is a free, Open Source J2EE-based implementation.
- <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif" alt="logo: powered by JBoss"></font>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>A
Standard webOS with Industry momentum</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody">
- Sun Microsystems and IBM have
defined J2EE as an open industry process. Today, there are about 30 J2EE application
server vendors. The most popular charges more than $50,000 for a medium-sized
installation.
-
- <p>Enterprise developers can
draw on J2EE to speed up their application development. Instead of hand writing
database code or pool management, they can leverage Enterprise Java Beans (EJBs) to
automatically store data.
-
- <p>Instead of manually dealing
with transactions, system developers can use J2EE�s built-in capabilities to run
transactions in an automated fashion. Instead of creating all business code from
scratch, consultants can assemble components to build their application in a �Lego"
fashion.
-
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>j2ee
APIs </b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody">
- J2EE is a set of standards
that, when used together, provide an excellent web application development and
deployment platform. J2EE includes standards for middleware (EJB and JMS), database
connectivitiy (JDBC), transactions (JTA/JTS), presentation (servlets and Java Server
Pages) and directory services (JNDI).
-
- <p>JBoss, one of the leading
java Open Source groups, integrates and develops these services for a full J2EE-based
implementation.
- <p><img
src="../pictures/jboss3.jpg" align="middle" alt="picture with 4 layers: www, web
server, app server, database"></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Why
Open Source for J2EE?</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody">
- As a web operating system,
J2EE is infrastructure. As such, we believe it is a natural fit for the collaborative,
Open Source mode of development facilitated by the Internet. Our group, composed of
volunteers from around the world, chooses to open the server and container
development. We believe this standard�s reference implementation should be publicly
owned.
-
- <p>The extreme size and
complexity of this sort of operating system is yet another compelling reason for it to
exist in Open Source. Even Microsoft has had difficulties stabilizing Windows 2000.
We, at JBoss, believe that Open Source technology is a credible, efficient and
cost-effective way to scale the development of these large systems.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Who
uses J2EE technology and why?</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><b>1-
Independent software vendors</b><br>
- Two years ago, many Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) developing
- Enterprise applications took the Java route. ISVs would develop
in-house
- proprietary infrastructure software for lack of a defined, open
standard.
- This development is time-consuming, expensive and complex. Today most
- ISVs outsource that infrastructure development to a J2EE server vendor
- in order to focus on "business logic." Choosing an open source server
- makes sense from a pricing standpoint because the application price
- won�t reflect the infrastructure cost. It also makes sense from a
- technological standpoint because you have access to the code, which
- makes for a tighter integration. According to our statistics, about
- 20% of people who download JBoss do so with the objective of embedding
- it in their applications. <br>
- <p><b>2- IT
departments/Startups </b><br>
- A recent study showed
that Java/J2EE, which claims 60% of IT development, is already the dominant platform
for Enterprise Web Software. Most people use our container as a stand-alone web
application server. In many instances, we have been chosen over more pricey
competitors for both development and production. We sport features, such as hot deploy
and runtime-generated stub and skeleton objects (distributed invocation enablers),
that can't be found in most commercial tools no matter how much you are willing to pay!
- <br>
- </p>
- <p><b>3- ISP/ASP, the
next wave of Enterprise Software Hosting </b><br>
- Most ISP providers
already offer Web Hosting for static web pages. For more "enterprise level hosting,"
you need a J2EE platform. Going beyond simple logic and cgi-bin, JBoss was designed
for Application Service Provider (ASP) settings. One can deploy its applications on a
set of hosted machines and have a web-based Java Management Extension (JMX) console to
manage the remote servers. Our integration with Java Server Page (JSP) engines makes
JBoss the candidate of choice for ISP usage. While most J2EE vendors do not focus on
this market, Jboss is well suited for it in two ways. First, the code is modular so
you can administer various configurations, in order to fit every client�s specific
needs. Second, there is no license fee per CPU, so you can grow a J2EE server farm at
little cost.
- <p><b>4- Module and
3rd party developers</b><br>
- Behind JBoss� Open
Source success is a highly modular design, which allows us to scale development. From
the ground up, JBoss is built around the concept of modules and plug-ins. We use the
JMX specification to configure and administer the different plug-ins. We integrate
various modules, from Tomcat to cocobase, to offer a state-of-the-art J2EE container.
By integrating in JBoss, developers gain access to the dominant application
development market and increase the deployment potential for their technology.
- <p></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Why
should I participate</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class="newsbody">
-Most people come here to learn cutting edge skills. Many of our contributors are
experts in the field and highly recognized individuals in the industry. We see many
independent software developers in our ranks. If you are a startup looking for a
container to embed in your application you can meet all your needs here. If you are a
student, you will find JBoss to be a perfect learning tool, as our code implements
many modern high-level java software design concepts. Finally, it�s a chance to do the
right thing. We believe J2EE is the mass platform of the future and we are working
hard to make it a reality... the information age's infrastructure deserves to be free.
- <br>
- </td>
- </tr>
- </table>
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="pageheader"><b>For Business</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>How we are coding the future</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody">The <a href="jboss.htm">JBoss/Server</a> is an
+ Open Source, standards-compliant, Enterprise JavaBeans application
+ server implemented in 100% Pure Java, as is our full product suite.
+ The JBoss community of over 500 <a href="team.html">developers</a>
+ world wide is working to deliver the full range of J2EE tools as the
+ premier Enterprise Java application server for the Java 2 Enterprise
+ Edition platform. The JBoss/Server and complement of products are
+ delivered under a public license. With 500 downloads per day on
average,
+ JBossServer is the fastest growing J2EE based server.
+ <p>Why should you pay tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars
+ to Java-enable your business enterprise? At those costs it doesn�t
+ take long to figure out there is no future in that, unless you are
+ the server vendor! But JBoss is not just about zero cost. Our tools
+ are innovative. We sport features, such as �hot deploy�, JMX, and
+ "Dynamic Proxies", that can�t be found in many commercial
+ Enterprise Java servers, no matter how much you are willing to
pay!</p>
+
+ <p>So what are you waiting for? <a href="binary.html">Download</a>
+ JBoss/Server and our other JBoss tools today and try them out. Join
+ the community by contributing features and fixes. Tell your fellow
+ architects, engineers, and programmers about JBoss�we are certain
+ they will want to know! The hundreds of others who are obtaining
+ JBoss products every day are finding out just why we have become
+ so popular, why we are deployed all over the world.</p>
+ <p>We are JBoss.org. We are creating world-class J2EE technologies
+ in open source. We are �coding the future.�</p>
+ <p> <a href="http://www.sys-con.com/java/readerschoice2001/"><img
src="../pictures/JDJ-458x601.JPG" width="187" height="58"></a>
+ </p>
+ <tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>January 28- February 4 2001: Flexibility,
+ Management of Group</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody">
+ <p><b>Interceptors externalized:</b> In the great modular tradition
+ of JBoss, Scott Stark commits code that fully externalizes the
interceptor
+ configuration. Need to add a particular logger or monitoring of
+ users for ASP? you can now specify on a bean basis what stacks your
+ beans will see "a la carte". In keeping with the "ease of use"
tradition
+ we still ship JBoss Server with standard pre-configured stacks and
+ containers.
+ <p><b>Growing Pains:</b> In the words of Vaughn Vernon in the February
+ release of <a
href="http://www.sys-con.com/java/archives/0602/vernon/index_i.html">Java
+ Developers Journal</a>, <i> "how long can a group like JBoss go
+ on without some nontechnical assistance? A large-scale project like
+ this will eventually begin to have some large-scale needs. In the
+ spirit of the Linux and Apache projects, I believe that a project
+ of JBoss' magnitude is a natural fit for large-scale financial
support."
+ </i> Folks complain about the lack of developer follow-up and other
+ problems, current core coders respond "we are swamped". Today JBoss
+ is an exploding group and it needs financing.
+ <tr>
+
+ <td class="newsheader">
+ <div align="center"><b><a href="news.html">
+ Read The News!</a></b></div>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ </table>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
1.6 +155 -81 newsite/developers/jboss-overview.html
Index: jboss-overview.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/developers/jboss-overview.html,v
retrieving revision 1.5
retrieving revision 1.6
diff -u -r1.5 -r1.6
--- jboss-overview.html 2001/02/08 05:31:26 1.5
+++ jboss-overview.html 2001/02/16 02:48:35 1.6
@@ -8,88 +8,162 @@
<body marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" onload="">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
- <tr>
- <td width="600" valign="top">
- <table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
- <tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss projects</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>A
full J2EE stack with JMX integration</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Our goal is to provide the full J2EE stack in the
free/open world. We are already there and the reason for our success lies on JMX.
JMX or Java Management eXtension is the best weapon we have found for
integration of software. It provides a common spine in which we plug in modules,
containers and plugins.</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><img src="../pictures/spine.gif" alt=""></font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">Get a feature list of the project as a whole (under
construction)</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif" alt="'powered by JBoss'"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. We currently refer to it as jboss2.0</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, JBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 also standardizes on <b>JMX</b>, the Java Management eXtension
(TM) to offer standard interfaces to the management of its components as well as the
applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here at
JBoss and JBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="71" width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif"
align="left" alt="">Apache Tomcat the JSP/Servlet container from the java apache
organization is integrated in JBoss. JBoss/Tomcat provides various integration levels.
With the JMX spine you can either bring Tomcat and JBoss up in the same
VM but as separate stacks or you can run everyone in the same "<b>integrated
stack" </b>with tremendous speed advantages and native pointer passage. We
continue to closely integrate with the latest releases of Tomcat to offer you the
smooth experience you come to expect from JBoss.</font></td>
- </tr>
+
+
+ <td class="pageheader"><b>J2EE and JBoss - Overview</b></td>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/spyderMQ</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">spyderMQ is our messaging service implementation.
Still alpha it is quite stable and functional. A quality product in the making.
It is a fully compliant JMS (Java Messaging Service) implementation</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/JAWS-Minerva</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img src="../pictures/jaws.jpg" alt="jaws::just another web
storage"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">jaws as its name indicates is a discreet JDBC based object storage
facility. It is tightly integrated with JBoss and provides startup table
creation as well as some fairly advanced features of O/R mapping. You can define
custom finders and map complex objects with JBoss/GUI. JBoss/Jaws supports all java
types including fancy collections of EJB references. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss/Minerva is an implementation of generic pool management in JBoss. The
are today used to implement the XA compliant database pools. It is integrated in
JBoss/Server and since recently provides the standard pools for the whole
server.</font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss/JAWS comes with preconfigured settings for each database, to help you
get working in no time. Most leading Database vendors in the market are currently
supported out of the box and the list is growing by the day.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Zola</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="141" width="108" src="../pictures/wap0.gif"
align="left" alt="">ZOL is made of several types of applications and components,
graphical ones that show GUI heavy applications talking to beans as well as business
one, e-commerce oriented. The Test Suite has mostly an API content and will excercise
the server with more than 100 tests to make sure as we rebuild the server that it is
still API compliant and by the book.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/GUI</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img src="../pictures/jbossgui.gif" alt="graphical management
of containers, beans, resources, security"></font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/ZOAP</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/ZOAP is an alternative invocation layer with SOAP as its
basic protocol. To enable interoperability with non-java based systems many take the
alternative invocation layer very seriously. SOAP/XML might well be the wave of
the future.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Deployer</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">A deployer of EAR. You can take your full war and jar
and deploy at once on JBoss and Tomcat.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Castor</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="24" width="85" src="../pictures/castor_sm.gif"
align="left" alt="">Castor JDO is a Java Data Object implementation. Some
people prefer to use this rather than jaws for performance reasons, and some because
they are used to it. JBoss/Castor provides the integration layer between the two.
</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Test</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">The TestSuite for JBoss. With about 200 tests of compliance,
every release we put in the public has to be compliant with the specification. The
TestSuite allows us to spot problems with fixes and patches early.</font></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td width="600" valign="top">
+
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>J2EE: An Open Operating System for the
web</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> Enterprise web applications, which live on networks
+ and are accessible through browsers, are redefining Enterprise Web
+ Software. This is the next wave of computing.
+ <p>Developers, by nature, seek a standard enterprise-ready platform.
+ Microsoft is pushing their paper spec �.NET� on Windows. If you
+ want a multi-platform standard with two years behind it, we recommend
+ Java 2 Enterprise Edition (J2EE), sponsored by SUN and IBM.
+ <p>JBoss is a free, Open Source J2EE-based implementation.
+ <p><img src="../pictures/jboss3.jpg" align="middle" alt="picture with
4 layers: www, web server, app server, database">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>J2EE: A Standard webOS with Industry
momentum</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> Sun Microsystems and IBM have defined J2EE as
+ an open industry process. Today, there are about 30 J2EE application
+ server vendors. The most popular charges more than $50,000 for a
medium-sized
+ installation.
+ <p>Enterprise developers can draw on J2EE to speed up their application
+ development. Instead of hand writing database code or pool
management,
+ they can leverage Enterprise Java Beans (EJBs) to automatically
+ store data.
+ <p>Instead of manually dealing with transactions, system developers
+ can use J2EE�s built-in capabilities to run transactions in an
automated
+ fashion. Instead of creating all business code from scratch,
consultants
+ can assemble components to build their application in a �Lego"
fashion.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>J2EE APIs </b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> J2EE is a set of standards that, when used
together,
+ provide an excellent web application development and deployment
platform.
+ J2EE includes standards for middleware (EJB and JMS), database
connectivitiy
+ (JDBC), transactions (JTA/JTS), presentation (servlets and Java Server
+ Pages) and directory services (JNDI).
+ <p>JBoss, one of the leading java Open Source groups, integrates and
+ develops these services for a full J2EE-based implementation.
+ <p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss: A full J2EE implementation with
+ JMX integration</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody">
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Our goal is to provide the full
J2EE stack
+ in the free/open world. We are already there and the reason for
+ our success lies on JMX. JMX or Java
Management eXtension
+ is the best weapon we have found for integration of software. It
+ provides a common spine in which we plug in modules, containers
+ and plugins.</font> </p>
+ <p><img src="../pictures/spine.gif" alt=""> </p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Why Open Source for J2EE?</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> As a web operating system, J2EE is infrastructure.
+ As such, we believe it is a natural fit for the collaborative, Open
+ Source mode of development facilitated by the Internet. Our group,
+ composed of volunteers from around the world, chooses to open the
+ server and container development. We believe this standard�s reference
+ implementation should be publicly owned.
+ <p>The extreme size and complexity of this sort of operating system
+ is yet another compelling reason for it to exist in Open Source.
+ Even Microsoft has had difficulties stabilizing Windows 2000. We,
+ at JBoss, believe that Open Source technology is a credible,
efficient
+ and cost-effective way to scale the development of these large
systems.
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Who uses J2EE technology and why?</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"><b>1- Independent software vendors</b><br>
+ Two years ago, many Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) developing
+ Enterprise applications took the Java route. ISVs would develop,
in-house
+ proprietary infrastructure software for lack of a defined, open
standard.
+ This development is time-consuming, expensive and complex. Today most
+ ISVs outsource that infrastructure development to a J2EE server vendor
+ in order to focus on "business logic." Choosing an open source server
+ makes sense from a pricing standpoint because the application price
+ won�t reflect the infrastructure cost. It also makes sense from a
+ technological standpoint because you have access to the code, which
+ makes for a tighter integration with your applications. According
+ to our statistics, about 20% of people who download JBoss do so with
+ the objective of embedding it in their applications. <br>
+ <p><b>2- IT departments/Startups </b><br>
+ A recent study showed that Java/J2EE, which claims 60% of IT
development,
+ is already the dominant platform for Enterprise Web Software. Most
+ people use our container as a stand-alone web application server.
+ In many instances, we have been chosen over more pricey competitors
+ for both development and production. We sport features, such as
+ hot deploy and runtime-generated stub and skeleton objects
(distributed
+ invocation enablers), that can't be found in most commercial tools
+ no matter how much you are willing to pay! <br>
+ </p>
+ <p><b>3- ISP/ASP, the next wave of Enterprise Software Hosting </b><br>
+ Most ISP providers already offer Web Hosting for static web pages.
+ For more "enterprise level hosting," you need a J2EE platform. Going
+ beyond simple logic and cgi-bin, JBoss was designed for Application
+ Service Provider (ASP) settings. One can deploy its applications
+ on a set of hosted machines and have a web-based Java Management
+ Extension (JMX) console to manage the remote servers. Our integration
+ with Java Server Page (JSP) engines makes JBoss the candidate of
+ choice for ISP usage. While most J2EE vendors do not focus on this
+ market, Jboss is well suited for it in two ways. First, the code
+ is modular so you can administer various configurations, in order
+ to fit every client�s specific needs. Second, there is no license
+ fee per CPU, so you can grow a J2EE server farm at little cost.
+ <p><b>4- Module and 3rd party developers</b><br>
+ Behind JBoss� Open Source success is a highly modular design, which
+ allows us to scale development and integrate code. From the ground
+ up, JBoss is built around the concept of modules and plug-ins. We
+ use the JMX specification to configure and administer the different
+ plug-ins. We integrate various modules, from Tomcat to cocobase,
+ to offer a state-of-the-art J2EE container. By integrating in JBoss,
+ developers gain access to the dominant application development market
+ and increase the deployment potential for their technology.
+ <p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Why should I participate</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> Most people come here to learn cutting edge skills.
+ Many of our contributors are well paid experts in the field and highly
+ recognized individuals in the industry. We see many independent
software
+ developers in our ranks. If you are a startup looking for a container
+ to embed in your application you can meet all your needs here. If
+ you are a student, you will find JBoss to be a perfect learning tool,
+ as our code implements many modern high-level java software design
+ concepts. Finally, it�s a chance to do the right thing. We believe
+ J2EE is the mass platform of the future and we are working hard to
+ make it a reality... the information age's infrastructure deserves
+ to be free. <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
1.6 +189 -122 newsite/developers/jboss-server.html
Index: jboss-server.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/developers/jboss-server.html,v
retrieving revision 1.5
retrieving revision 1.6
diff -u -r1.5 -r1.6
--- jboss-server.html 2001/02/08 05:31:26 1.5
+++ jboss-server.html 2001/02/16 02:48:36 1.6
@@ -9,139 +9,206 @@
<body marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" onload="">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
<tr>
- <td width="600" valign="top">
- <table border="0" cellpadding="2"
cellspacing="0">
- <tr>
- <td
class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif"></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an implementation of the EJB container
specification. </font></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation container.</b> It takes the patterns
and ideas that were investigated in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be
<b>modular</b>, JBoss introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a
full <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the
success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. </font></p>
-
+
+ <td width="600" valign="top">
+ <table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tr>
+ <td class="pageheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Server</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60"
width="159" src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif"></font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an
implementation
+ of the EJB container specification. </font></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation
+ container.</b> It takes the patterns and ideas that were investigated
+ in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be <b>modular</b>, JBoss
+ introduces yet again many ground breaking features such as a full
+ <b>plug-in approach </b>to the container implementation. Borrowing
+ from the success that met with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach
+ to software implementation, JBoss 2.0 is meant to be developed by
+ distributed parties each working on a cleanly separated part of
+ the server. </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 also standardizes on
<b>JMX</b>,
the Java Management eXtension (TM) to offer standard interfaces
to the management of its components as well as the applications
deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here
- at JBoss and JBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font>
+ at JBoss and JBoss 2.0 will set a new standard.</font>
</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>Enterprise Java Beans Support</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Enterprise Java Beans Support</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
<td class="newsbody"> Being both open and standards-compliant,
JBoss/Server
supports both EJB Session Beans and Entity Beans. EJB Session Beans
are responsible for implementing the business logic of your middle
tier application. As their name implies, they are also responsible
for handling the conversational session between the client side and
the middle tier. Sessions may be either stateless or stateful.
-<p> A stateless
- session means that the Session Bean instance remembers no state between
- calls from a given client object. A stateful session, on the other
- hand, must maintain state data between separate remote method
invocations
- by the same client. This implies that one Stateful Session Bean must
- be allocated for each client creating it, and, therefore, requires
- more resource and runtime overhead for the server, while a single
- Stateless Session Bean may service multiple clients having overlapping
- lifetimes. Entity Beans represent database entities and most often
- a single Entity Bean maps to a single relational database table. Entity
- Beans can be developed and deployed rapidly using Container Managed
- Persistence (CMP) since all the object-to-relational database mapping
- is managed by the JBoss/Server container. But if you must support
- a complex and/or legacy database schema that does not easily map into
- CMP, then for you the answer is Bean Managed Persistence (BMP). With
- BMP you control the loading and saving of complex Entity Beans from
- and to the database using fine-grained control to the SQL statement
- level.
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Modular Server Design</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody">
-Modularly developed from the ground up, the JBoss server and container are
completely implemented using component-based plug-ins. Borrowing from the success of
Linux 2.0 and its modular approach to team-based, open source software implementation,
JBoss 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members, each working on a cleanly
separated part of the server. Our approach makes it easy for you to join our team and
contribute to the hottest open source J2EE server project around. It also ensures that
JBoss/Server will be maintained and extended for years to come.
-<p>
-The modularization effort is supported by the use of JMX, the Java Management
eXtension API. Using JMX, industry-standard interfaces help us manage both
JBoss/Server components and the applications deployed on it. Ease of use is still the
number one priority here at JBoss.org, and JBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new standard for
both modular, plug-in design and ease of server and application management.
-<p>
-This high degree of modularity benefits the application developer in several ways.
The already tight code can be further trimmed down in support of applications that
must have a very small footprint. For example, if EJB passivation is unnecessary in
your application, simply take the feature out of the server. However, if you later
decide to deploy the same application under an Application Service Provider (ASP)
model, simply enable the server's passivation feature for that Web-based deployment.
Another example is the freedom you have to drop your favorite O-R mapping tool, such
as TOPLink, right into the container.
-</tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="newsheader"><b>Features That Speed Development</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody">In addition to the fact that JBoss/Server is an
EJB 1.1 compliant application server, there are some innovative features that make our
server a pleasure to use. Specifically two features make application deployment
extremely easy to perform, saving developers much time and effort. In a phrase,
JBoss/Server takes the grunt work out of EJB application development.
-<p>
-First there's dynamically, runtime-generated stub and skeleton classes. In many
commercial EJB servers the generation of these classes must be performed in an
additional step prior to deployment (e.g. using an "ebjc" tool). It goes without
saying that this extra step requires additional developer overhead, adding significant
time to each change-compile-deploy cycle. By generating stub and skeleton classes on
the fly, JBoss/Server takes at least several seconds, and perhaps minutes, off of each
deployment. As an added benefit, the method used by JBoss/Server to accomplish this
time- and effort-savings feature also saves memory and other server resources since
only a single server object supports every deployed Enterprise JavaBeans component!
-<p>
-A second time- and effort-savings feature is automatic hot deploy and redeploy.
Some of the top commercial EJB servers require you to "bounce" the server in order to
successfully deploy your application changes. However, JBoss/Server allows you to
deploy new applications and redeploy existing applications without stopping and
restarting the server. In fact, the feature is as easy as copying your newly built EJB
JAR file to the server deployment directory where JBoss/Server picks up the new file,
automatically undeploys the old JAR (if any) and deploys the new JAR within seconds.
This feature definitely provides the benefit of slicing minutes off of each
change-compile-deploy cycle.
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>Features</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">We will make a feature matrix available here (under
construction)</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0</font></p>
- <ul>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Full EJB 1.1 support (all beans, all persistent types and all
transactional tags supported)</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">XML compliant</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JDK1.2.2 and up support</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JNDI compliant</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JTA/JTS compliant</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JDBC compliant Container Managed Persistence</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Most database vendors work out of the box </font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Easy-to-use standard configuration</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Differential metadata, easy change</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Fully modular for easy Integration</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated Pool Management</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with CastorJDO</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with CocoBase</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with JBuilder</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with Tomcat</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with JAAS for security</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with SOAP for invocation</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">InVM stack optimization with Tomcat</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Optimized J2EE stack</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">State of the art EAR Deployment technology</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Fast Cache technology</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Resilient and fail safe keys</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Advanced O/R mapping technology</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Automated Table creation</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Easy to use GUI</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Remote Administration </font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">HTTP administration</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">RMI administration</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JMX compatible </font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Passivating Caches</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Stable Open source technology, runs for weeks with >100,000
beans uninterrupted</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Scalable Open Source technology, can handle 1000's of
concurent requests on 1 bean</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">Excellent support available</font>
- <li><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">And much much more</font>
- </ul>
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>Mailing Lists</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><a
href="lists.html"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">[EMAIL PROTECTED]
</font></a>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to support and user discussions about jboss traffic
is medium-heavy to heavy (20-50 mails/day). Many world expert answer questions on this
list. </font></p>
- <p><a
href="lists.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</font></a></p>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to the development of jboss. The traffic is low
noise high quality and medium (20 mails/day). Some of the world's most advanced java
technology is invented here.</font></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td
class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="newsbody"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/Server is part of the <a href="binary.html">JBoss/Server
distribution</a></font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">CVS module is <a href="cvs.html">jboss</a></font></td>
- </tr>
- </table>
+ <p> A stateless session means that the Session Bean instance remembers
+ no state between calls from a given client object. A stateful
session,
+ on the other hand, must maintain state data between separate remote
+ method invocations by the same client. This implies that one Stateful
+ Session Bean must be allocated for each client creating it, and,
+ therefore, requires more resource and runtime overhead for the
server,
+ while a single Stateless Session Bean may service multiple clients
+ having overlapping lifetimes. Entity Beans represent database
entities
+ and most often a single Entity Bean maps to a single relational
+ database table. Entity Beans can be developed and deployed rapidly
+ using Container Managed Persistence (CMP) since all the
object-to-relational
+ database mapping is managed by the JBoss/Server container. But if
+ you must support a complex and/or legacy database schema that does
+ not easily map into CMP, then for you the answer is Bean Managed
+ Persistence (BMP). With BMP you control the loading and saving of
+ complex Entity Beans from and to the database using fine-grained
+ control to the SQL statement level.
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Modular Server Design</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"> Modularly developed from the ground up, the JBoss
+ server and container are completely implemented using component-based
+ plug-ins. Borrowing from the success of Linux 2.0 and its modular
+ approach to team-based, open source software implementation, JBoss
+ 2.0 is being developed by distributed team members, each working on
+ a cleanly separated part of the server. Our approach makes it easy
+ for you to join our team and contribute to the hottest open source
+ J2EE server project around. It also ensures that JBoss/Server will
+ be maintained and extended for years to come.
+ <p> The modularization effort is supported by the use of JMX, the
+ Java Management eXtension API. Using JMX, industry-standard
interfaces
+ help us manage both JBoss/Server components and the applications
+ deployed on it. Ease of use is still the number one priority here
+ at JBoss.org, and JBoss/Server 2.0 sets a new standard for both
+ modular, plug-in design and ease of server and application
management.
+ <p> This high degree of modularity benefits the application developer
+ in several ways. The already tight code can be further trimmed down
+ in support of applications that must have a very small footprint.
+ For example, if EJB passivation is unnecessary in your application,
+ simply take the feature out of the server. However, if you later
+ decide to deploy the same application under an Application Service
+ Provider (ASP) model, simply enable the server's passivation feature
+ for that Web-based deployment. Another example is the freedom you
+ have to drop your favorite O-R mapping tool, such as TOPLink, right
+ into the container.
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Features That Speed Development</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody">In addition to the fact that JBoss/Server is an
+ EJB 1.1 compliant application server, there are some innovative
features
+ that make our server a pleasure to use. Specifically two features
+ make application deployment extremely easy to perform, saving
developers
+ much time and effort. In a phrase, JBoss/Server takes the grunt work
+ out of EJB application development.
+ <p> First there's dynamically, runtime-generated stub and skeleton
+ classes. In many commercial EJB servers the generation of these
+ classes must be performed in an additional step prior to deployment
+ (e.g. using an "ebjc" tool). It goes without saying that this extra
+ step requires additional developer overhead, adding significant
+ time to each change-compile-deploy cycle. By generating stub and
+ skeleton classes on the fly, JBoss/Server takes at least several
+ seconds, and perhaps minutes, off of each deployment. As an added
+ benefit, the method used by JBoss/Server to accomplish this time-
+ and effort-savings feature also saves memory and other server
resources
+ since only a single server object supports every deployed Enterprise
+ JavaBeans component!
+ <p> A second time- and effort-savings feature is automatic hot deploy
+ and redeploy. Some of the top commercial EJB servers require you
+ to "bounce" the server in order to successfully deploy your
application
+ changes. However, JBoss/Server allows you to deploy new applications
+ and redeploy existing applications without stopping and restarting
+ the server. In fact, the feature is as easy as copying your newly
+ built EJB JAR file to the server deployment directory where
JBoss/Server
+ picks up the new file, automatically undeploys the old JAR (if any)
+ and deploys the new JAR within seconds. This feature definitely
+ provides the benefit of slicing minutes off of each
change-compile-deploy
+ cycle.
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><a name="features"></a><b>Features</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody">
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0</font></p>
+ <ul>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Full EJB 1.1 support (all beans,
+ all persistent types and all transactional tags supported)</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Partial EJB 2.0 support (Home
+ methods and Message Driven beans are supported)</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">XML compliant</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JDK1.2.2 and up support</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JNDI compliant</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JTA/JTS compliant</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JDBC compliant Container
+ Managed Persistence</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Most database vendors work out
+ of the box </font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Easy-to-use standard
configuration</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Differential metadata, easy
change</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Fully modular for easy
Integration</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated Pool Management</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with CastorJDO</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with CocoBase</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with JBuilder</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with Tomcat</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with JAAS for
security</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Integrated with SOAP for
+ invocation</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">InVM stack optimization with
+ Tomcat</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Optimized J2EE stack</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">State of the art
EAR Deployment
+ technology</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Fast Cache technology</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Resilient and fail safe keys</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Advanced O/R mapping
technology</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Automated Table creation</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Easy to use GUI</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Remote Administration </font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">HTTP administration</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">RMI administration</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JMX compatible </font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Passivating Caches</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Stable Open source technology,
+ runs for weeks with >100,000 beans uninterrupted</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Scalable Open Source technology,
+ can handle 1000's of concurent requests on 1 bean</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Excellent support available</font>
+ <li><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">And much much more</font>
+ </ul>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Mailing Lists</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"><a href="lists.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">[EMAIL PROTECTED]
+ </font></a>
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to support
+ and user discussions about jboss traffic is medium-heavy to heavy
+ (20-50 mails/day). Many world expert answer questions on this list.
+ </font></p>
+ <p><a href="lists.html"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial">[EMAIL PROTECTED]</font></a></p>
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to the
development
+ of jboss. The traffic is low noise high quality and medium (20
mails/day).
+ Some of the world's most advanced java technology is invented
here.</font>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss/Server is part
+ of the <a href="binary.html">JBoss/Server distribution</a></font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">CVS module is <a
href="cvs.html">jboss</a></font>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
1.7 +41 -17 newsite/developers/lists.html
Index: lists.html
===================================================================
RCS file: /products/cvs/ejboss/newsite/developers/lists.html,v
retrieving revision 1.6
retrieving revision 1.7
diff -u -r1.6 -r1.7
--- lists.html 2001/02/08 05:31:27 1.6
+++ lists.html 2001/02/16 02:48:37 1.7
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
<td class="pageheader"
width="648"><b>Main mailing lists</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED] </b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b> </td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">Is the <b>main list for general
discussion</b> of JBoss, send support questions here as well. </font>
@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@
<p><a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/"><font
face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED] </b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED] </b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>For development only</b>, all the
architecture discussion are taken on this list. Deep EJB design stuff and
modeling fun. It notifies you updates in the cvs tree. Register here if you are
interested in following and participating in the building of the source tree. </font>
@@ -32,39 +32,63 @@
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To unsubscribe</b> follow the directions in the bodies of the mail.
</font></p>
<p><a
href="http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
</tr>
+
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">ZOL develops a full blown application in
J2EE. The development of ZOL is done on this list. If you are interested in
participating in the largest application building in J2EE join the list. You will
learn a lot. </font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/ejboss-zol">here</a></font></p>
- <p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/messages/ejboss-zol"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ develops a JMS server as a JBoss
project. This list is unified for now and focused on development at this stage. Most
JBoss projects will rely on the JBossMQ infrastructure at some point. Deep
techno</font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/spyderMQ">here</a></font></p>
+ <p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/group/spyderMQ"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">spyderMQ develops a JMS server as a
JBoss project. This list is unified for now and focused on development at this stage.
Most JBoss projects will rely on the spyderMQ infrastructure at some point. Deep
techno</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/spyderMQ">here</a></font></p>
- <p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/group/spyderMQ"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossCMP offers all the functionality of a
powerful O->R tool. It is designed to be very lightweight and adapted to the needs
of an EJB container. </font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">here.</a> And<b> put "subscribe
jbosscmp" in the body</b> of the text.</font></p>
+ <p><a
href="http://www.kpi.com.au/jbossarchive/"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JAWS (Just Another Web Store) offers
all the functionality of a powerful O->R tool. It is designed to be very
lightweight and adapted to the needs of an EJB container. This little tool
will grow really quick.</font>
- <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">here.</a> And<b> put "subscribe
jaws" in the body</b> of the text.</font></p>
- <p><a
href="http://www.kpi.com.au/jawsarchive/"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">ZOL develops a full blown application in
J2EE. The development of ZOL is done on this list. If you are interested in
participating in the largest application building in J2EE join the list. You will
learn a lot. </font>
+ <p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To subscribe</b> just click <a
href="http://www.egroups.com/subscribe/ejboss-zol">here</a></font></p>
+ <p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/messages/ejboss-zol"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> </font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This is a private list for board
discussions. However you can send emails that deal with JBoss as a whole and issues
you want to raise to the boards attention. </font>
<p><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>To send an email to the board</b> just click <a
href="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]">here</a></font></td>
</tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648">
+
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list the main list of
documentation
+ synchronization in JBoss. Post your "howtos" and specific
documentation
+ enhancements here.</font></p>
+ <p> Here is its <a
href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/jboss-docs">
+ home page </a> </p>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class="newsbody"
width="648">
+ <p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is
dedicated to discussions
+ of business issues regarding
JBoss.</font></p>
+ <p> Here is its <a
href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/jboss-business">
+ home page </a> </p>
+ </tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><b>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">This list is dedicated to discussions of
license issues regarding JBoss. </font>
@@ -72,7 +96,7 @@
<p><a
href="http://www.egroups.com/messages/jbosslicense"><font face="Myriad
Web,Arial"><b>Archive</b></font></a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
- <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font color="white" face="Myriad Web,Arial"
size="3"><b>IRC:#jboss.org</b></font></td>
+ <td class="newsheader"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial" size="3"><b>IRC:#jboss.org</b></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"
width="648"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss now has a dedicated IRC channel thanks
to Markus from Austria. To use it download an IRC client (mIRC on windows) connect to
an IRCNet server (NY for US) and /join #jboss.org. You will find us there.</font></td>
1.1 newsite/developers/jboss-jbosstx.html
Index: jboss-jbosstx.html
===================================================================
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<html>
<LINK rel="stylesheet" href="main.css" type="text/css">
<BODY marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" onload="">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
<tr>
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<td class="pageheader">JBossTX</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossTx a JTS/JTA implementation</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"> The transaction engine of JBoss was originaly
started by Marc Fleury and Rickard Oberg as a mini TX engine for
"fast
in VM" operation of JBoss 2.0. Recently renamed JBossTX, and
under the current leadership of <b>Ole Husgaard</b>, JBossTX is now
a fully independent project. The development of a full fledged
Transaction
Monitor with JTA/JTS support as a plugin of JBoss2.0 is developed
under the JBossTX banner. </td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><a name="features"></a><b>Features</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<p>(under Development)</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>Mailing lists</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> JBossTX development
is discussed on the main jboss-dev list you can subscribe <a
href="lists.html">here.</a></font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>Distribution and CVS</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossTX is distributed
as part of JBoss/Server.</font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">CVS module will be available shortly<a
href="cvs.html"></a></font>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="600"></td>
</tr>
</table>
</BODY>
</html>
1.1 newsite/developers/jboss-projects.html
Index: jboss-projects.html
===================================================================
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1">
<meta name="generator" content="Adobe GoLive 4">
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="main.css" >
</head>
<body marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" onload="">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
<td class="pageheader"><b>JBoss Projects- Overview</b></td>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<p>Go directly to the PROJECT PAGE for:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="jboss-server.html">JBossServer</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-jbossmq.html">JBossMQ</a> </li>
<li><a href="jboss-jaws.html">JBossCMP</a></li>
<li><a href="../documentation/jca_config.html">JBossCX</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-jbosstx.html">JBossTX</a> </li>
<li><a href="../documentation/HowTo.Security.html">JBossSS</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-zoap.html">JBossSOAP</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-test.html">JBossTest</a></li>
<li><a href="../documentation/HowTo-JavaMail.html">JBossMail</a></li>
<li><a href="doco.html">JBossDoc</a></li>
</ul>
</td>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossServer -- Enterprise Java Beans (EJB) </b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="60" width="159"
src="../pictures/powered_by_jboss_flat_sepia.gif" alt="'powered by JBoss'"></font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss the container is an implementation
of the EJB container specification. We currently refer to it as
jboss2.0</font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><b>JBoss 2.0 is truly a 3rd generation
container.</b> It takes the patterns and ideas that were investigated
in 1.0. Designed from the ground up to be <b>modular</b>, JBoss introduces
yet again many ground breaking features such as a full <b>plug-in approach
</b>to the container implementation. Borrowing from the success that met
with Linux 2.0 and it's modular approach to software implementation, JBoss
2.0 is meant to be developed by distributed parties each working on a
cleanly separated part of the server. </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBoss 2.0 also standardizes on <b>JMX</b>,
the Java Management eXtension (TM) to offer standard interfaces to the
management of its components as well as the applications deployed on it.
Ease of use is still the number one priority here at JBoss and JBoss 2.0
will set a new standard.</font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossMQ -- Java Messaging Service (JMS) </b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> <img
src="../pictures/jbossmq-simple-with-queue.jpg" width="167" height="62"></font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossMQ is our messaging service
implementation.
It is reaching 1.0 status, it is quite stable and functional. A quality
product in the making. It is a fully compliant JMS;(Java Messaging Service)
implementation.</font></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossCMP -- EJB Persistence engine</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img
src="../pictures/jaws.jpg" alt="jaws::just another web storage"></font>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossCMP is a
JDBC based object storage facility. It is tightly integrated
with JBoss and provides startup table creation as well as some fairly
advanced features of O/R mapping. You can define custom finders and
map complex objects with JBossGUI. JBossCMP supports all java types
including fancy collections of EJB references. </font></p>
<p><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossCMP comes with preconfigured settings
for each database, to help you get working in no time. Most leading Database
vendors in the market are currently supported out of the box and the list
is growing by the day.</font>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossNS -- Java Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI)
</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
Previously known as "JNP" JBossNS is the naming provider for all thing JBoss.
A fully distributed lookup system it provides a JNDI interface to the clients and
containers in JBoss.
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossCX -- Java Connector Architecture (JCA)</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
JBoss lives in distributed enterprise systems. The need to deal with
disparate sources in J2EE is addressed through the latest spec from SUN, the Java
Connector Architecture. This specification is promised to a great future and here at
JBoss we provide an implementation that works in the JBoss framework.
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossTX -- Java Transaction Service (JTA/JTS)</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">The transactional web is the future of the web. He who
owns the transactional web owns the web. JBossTX provides a reference implementation
of JTA/JTS for the JBoss framework. Fully based on the JTA/JTS specifications,
JBossTX is optimized for the JBoss framework.
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossSS -- Security Service (JAAS based)</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"> As an enterprise-ready system, JBoss comes with a security
framework. Based on JAAS the implementation from SUN and IBM, JBossSS is fully
functional security framework for your enterprise applications. Integrated with
JBossServer, JBossSS provides transparent propagation of credentials in our framework.
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossGUI</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img
src="../pictures/jbossgui.gif" alt="graphical management of containers, beans,
resources, security"></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossZOAP</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">JBossZOAP is an alternative
invocation layer with SOAP as its basic protocol. To enable interoperability
with non-java based systems many take the alternative invocation layer very
seriously. SOAP/XML might well be the wave of the future.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossDeployer</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">A deployer of EAR. You
can take your full war and jar and deploy at once on JBoss and
Tomcat.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBossTest</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial">The TestSuite for JBoss.
With about 200 tests of compliance, every release we put in the public has
to be compliant with the specification. The TestSuite allows us to spot
problems with fixes and patches early.</font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="600" valign="top"> </td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="600"></td>
</tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>
1.1 newsite/developers/jboss-third.html
Index: jboss-third.html
===================================================================
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1">
<meta name="generator" content="Adobe GoLive 4">
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="main.css" >
</head>
<body marginwidth="0" marginheight="0" onload="">
<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="3">
<td class="pageheader"><b>Third Party products with JBoss- Overview</b></td>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<p>Go directly to the PROJECT PAGE for:</p>
<ul>
<li><a href="jboss-tomcat.html">Tomcat</a></li>
<li><a href="../documentation/petstore-1.1.1-01.html">Petstore</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-jetty.html">Jetty</a></li>
<li><a href="jboss-castor.html">Castor</a></li>
<li><a href="http://www.thoughtinc.com/jboss/">Cocobase</a></li>
</ul>
<p>Read all about our <a
href="http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/2001/02/01/jmx.html">
open source integration with JMX</a></p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td width="600" valign="top">
<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Tomcat</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="71"
width="100" src="../pictures/tomcat_3.gif" align="left" alt="">Apache
Tomcat the JSP/Servlet container from the java apache organization
is integrated in JBoss. JBoss/Tomcat provides various integration
levels. With the JMX spine you can either bring Tomcat and JBoss
up in the same VM but as separate stacks or you can run everyone
in the same "<b>integrated stack" </b>with tremendous speed
advantages and native pointer passage. We continue to closely integrate
with the latest releases of Tomcat to offer you the smooth experience
you come to expect from JBoss. <a href="jboss-tomcat.html">PROJECT
PAGE</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Petstore</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="141"
width="108" src="../pictures/wap0.gif" align="left" alt="">Petstore
is a reference application produced by SUN. Most people first want
to know how to get that application running under JBoss since it gives
beginners an easy point of entry into JBoss configuration. There is
a team of people dedicated withing the JBoss organization to making
sure that Petstore as well as other standard apps work as they should
on JBoss.<font face="Myriad Web,Arial"> <a
href="../documentation/petstore-1.1.1-01.html">PROJECT PAGE</a></font></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Jetty</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img
src="../pictures/jetty.png" width="140" height="58" align="left" alt="">Jetty
is an Open Source HTTP Servlet Server written in 100% Java. It is
designed to be light weight, high performance, embeddable, extensible
and flexible, thus making it an ideal platform for serving dynamic
HTTP requests from any Java application. <a
href="jboss-jetty.html">PROJECT PAGE</a></font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Castor</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img height="24" width="85"
src="../pictures/castor_sm.gif" align="left" alt="">Castor
JDO is a Java Data Object implementation. Some people prefer
to use this rather than jaws for performance reasons, and some because they
are used to it. JBoss/Castor provides the integration layer between the
two.<a href="jboss-castor.html">PROJECT PAGE</a> </font></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsheader"><b>JBoss/Cocobase</b></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td class="newsbody">
<div align="left"><font face="Myriad Web,Arial"><img
src="../pictures/thought.GIF" width="162" height="62" align="left" alt="">Thought
inc, markets Cocobase a leading commercial O/R mapper that generates
BMPs optimized for EJB access. JBoss templates are available from
the throughtinc <a
href="http://www.thoughtinc.com/jboss/">website</a>.</font></div>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>