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Jakarta Connectors (JCA; formerly known as Java EE Connector Architecture and J2EE Connector Architecture) are a set of Java programming language tools designed for connecting application servers and enterprise information systems (EIS) as a part of enterprise application integration (EAI). While JDBC is specifically used to establish ...
The platform was known as Java 2 Platform, Enterprise Edition or J2EE from version 1.2, until the name was changed to Java Platform, Enterprise Edition or Java EE in version 1.5. Java EE was maintained by Oracle under the Java Community Process. On September 12, 2017, Oracle Corporation announced that it would submit Java EE to the Eclipse ...
The Jakarta Messaging API (formerly Java Message Service or JMS API) is a Java application programming interface (API) for message-oriented middleware. It provides generic messaging models, able to handle the producer–consumer problem , that can be used to facilitate the sending and receiving of messages between software systems . [ 1 ]
The specification writers and expert groups of the Java EE web-tier technologies have worked on a unified expression language which was first included in the JSP 2.1 specification (JSR-245), and later specified by itself in JSR-341, part of Java EE 7.
A Jakarta EE application (formerly also called Java EE or J2EE application) is any deployable unit of Jakarta EE functionality. This can be a single Jakarta EE module or a group of modules packaged into an EAR file along with a Jakarta EE application deployment descriptor. Jakarta EE applications are typically engineered to be distributed ...
Jakarta Mail (formerly JavaMail) is a Jakarta EE API used to send and receive email via SMTP, POP3 and IMAP. Jakarta Mail is built into the Jakarta EE platform, but also provides an optional package for use in Java SE. [1] The current version is 2.1.3, released on February 29, 2024. [2]
The Jakarta EE infrastructure is partitioned into logical containers. EJB container: Enterprise Beans are used to manage transactions. According to the Java BluePrints , the business logic of an application resides in Enterprise Beans —a modular server component providing many features, including declarative transaction management, and ...
The limited version adheres to a proper subset of the specification called EJB 3.1 Lite [36] [37] and is part of Java EE 6's web profile (which is itself a subset of the full Java EE 6 specification). EJB 3.1 Lite excludes support for the following features: [38] Remote interfaces; RMI-IIOP Interoperability; JAX-WS Web Service Endpoints