Hi, ok, so what is needed to turn a class to a managed class?
mf Am 27.01.2014 um 18:03 schrieb Romain Manni-Bucau <[email protected]>: > Hi > > EJB can be injected as CDI beans too so you can use @Inject for them. > EJB and CDI beans have the same limitations = you can inject them in > all managed classes. > Romain Manni-Bucau > Twitter: @rmannibucau > Blog: http://rmannibucau.wordpress.com/ > LinkedIn: http://fr.linkedin.com/in/rmannibucau > Github: https://github.com/rmannibucau > > > > 2014-01-27 Martin Funk <[email protected]>: >> Hi, >> >> I am working my way through the "Apache TomEE: JavaEE 6 Web Profile on >> Tomcat" video on youtube and I have a question. >> >> The EJB annotation example, right around 20 minutes, does that only works >> when used in a Servlet? >> >> So what has to be done to use the annotation in an arbitrary class? >> >> For example, what has to be done to use it in a Component of the Wicket >> framework? >> >> I know the wicket community has already implemented a CDI 1.1, which I >> already got running. >> So this is just a question of understanding. >> What is the simplest way of using the EJB Annotation on such Component? >> Should the wicket cdi module be used or is there a more direct way of using >> EJB ? >> >> mf
