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Comment: Migration of unmigrated content due to installation of a new plugin

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The Time Bean Example

This is an example of a JSP-page calling a Session Bean. The result looks like this:
I have tried to strip of everything just to make this example as easy as possible to understand. This is an example using Geronimo 2.0, Java 1.5 and EJB 3.0.

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MyTimeBean.java is an EJB that can tell time. I have put my EJB in a package that I call org.apache.geronimo.samples.mytimepak. By using the @Stateless annotation Geronimo will recognize that this is a stateless session bean. There is no need for a ejb-jar.xml.

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MyTimeLocal.java is the Local interface. As this EJB will only be used from a JSP-page that is running in the same server (same JVM) I use a Local interface that do not make use of the network.

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openejb-jar.xml does nothing but specifies the module's information.

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index.jsp utilizes the MyTimeBean to tell time.

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geronimo-web.xml specifies the module's information and the url for the web-app.

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web.xml references the EJB present in the WEB-INF/classes/org/apache/geronimo/samples/mytimepak directory.

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Tools Used

Apache Maven 2

Maven is a popular open source build tool for enterprise Java projects, designed to take much of the hard work out of the build process. Maven uses a declarative approach, where the project structure and contents are described, rather than the task-based approach used in Ant or in traditional make files, for example. This helps enforce company-wide development standards and reduces the time needed to write and maintain build scripts. The declarative, lifecycle-based approach used by Maven 1 is, for many, a radical departure from more traditional build techniques, and Maven 2 goes even further in this regard. Maven 2 can be download from the following URL:
http://maven.apache.org

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