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Apache Tomcat (called "Tomcat" for short) is a free and open-source implementation of the Jakarta Servlet, Jakarta Expression Language, and WebSocket technologies. It provides a "pure Java" HTTP web server environment in which Java code can also run. Thus it is a Java web application server, although not a full JEE application server.
Eclipse Jetty is a Java web server and Java Servlet container. While web servers are usually associated with serving documents to people, Jetty is now often used for machine to machine communications, usually within larger software frameworks. Jetty is developed as a free and open source project as part of the Eclipse Foundation.
Direct Web Remoting, or DWR, is a Java open-source library that helps developers write web sites that include Ajax technology. [1] It allows code in a web browser to use Java functions running on a web server as if those functions were within the browser. The DWR project was started by Joe Walker in 2004, 1.0 released at August 29, 2005.
Java-based Template Engine, originally focusing on dynamic web page generation with MVC software architecture GeoApi: Set of Java language programming interfaces for geospatial applications. GeoTools: Java library that provides tools for geospatial data. GlassFish: Application server and official reference implementation for Servlets 3.0 ...
Apache Axis (Apache eXtensible Interaction System) is an open-source, XML based Web service framework. It consists of a Java and a C++ implementation of the SOAP server, and various utilities and APIs for generating and deploying Web service applications.
JSPs are translated into servlets at runtime, therefore JSP is a Servlet; each JSP servlet is cached and re-used until the original JSP is modified. [ 3 ] Jakarta Server Pages can be used independently or as the view component of a server-side model–view–controller design, normally with JavaBeans as the model and Java servlets (or a ...
Built on top of the Servlet API, JSP provides a document-centric, tag-based templates, server programming model which can generate many forms of textual content. Java code may be embedded in JSP files and is compiled and executed when a request is received.
A basic version is free to download, but not open source. 4 May 2006 - Project GlassFish released the 1.0 version (a.k.a. Sun Java System Application Server 9.0) that supports the Java EE 5 specification. 15 May 2006 - Sun Java System Application Server 9.0, derived from GlassFish 1.0, is released. [15]