01_FacilityService_WebSpacePortlet.pdf
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SOA is sometimes shown as a series of 4 layers with Presentation Layer (SOA 1) at the top. Each layer consumes services exposed by layers under it. Service interfaces are described using WSDL. Web Services are the means to decouple functional layers. Functionality in one layer can be swapped in and out without disturbing other layers. Presentation layer is often implemented as JSR-168-compliant or JSR-286-compliant Portlets, exposed through a standards-based Portal.
Here I will walk through development of a JSR-286-compliant Visual Web JSF Portlet, which will use a Web Service as a data provider. I use the NetBeans 6.5.1 IDE, part of the GlassFish ESB v2.1 installation, the Portal Pack 3.0.1 NetBeans Plugin and the JSF Portal Bridge provided by the Web Space Server 10. The Portlet will use JSF components provided by Project Woodstock. The technology will be introduced in a practical manner.
This is not a tutorial on JavaServer Faces, Visual Web JSF, Project Woodstock or Portlet development.
Here I will walk through development of a JSR-286-compliant Visual Web JSF Portlet, which will use a Web Service as a data provider. I use the NetBeans 6.5.1 IDE, part of the GlassFish ESB v2.1 installation, the Portal Pack 3.0.1 NetBeans Plugin and the JSF Portal Bridge provided by the Web Space Server 10. The Portlet will use JSF components provided by Project Woodstock. The technology will be introduced in a practical manner.
This is not a tutorial on JavaServer Faces, Visual Web JSF, Project Woodstock or Portlet development.
About This Media
| Contributor: | Michael.Czapski-Sun |
| Size: | 1.5 MB |
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| Content type: | application/pdf |
| Uploaded at: | 2009-06-24 08:35 |
| Last update at: | 2009-06-24 08:35 |