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  2. Jakarta Persistence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Persistence

    The JPA was renamed as Jakarta Persistence in 2019 and version 3.0 was released in 2020. This included the renaming of packages and properties from javax.persistence to jakarta.persistence. Vendors supporting Jakarta Persistence 3.0: DataNucleus (from version 6.0) EclipseLink (from version 3.0) Hibernate (from version 5.5) OpenJPA (from version ...

  3. Jakarta Persistence Query Language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Persistence_Query...

    The Jakarta Persistence Query Language (JPQL; formerly Java Persistence Query Language) is a platform-independent object-oriented query language [1]: 284, §12 defined as part of the Jakarta Persistence (JPA; formerly Java Persistence API) specification. JPQL is used to make queries against entities stored in a relational database.

  4. Jakarta Servlet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Servlet

    A Jakarta Servlet, formerly Java Servlet is a Java software component that extends the capabilities of a server. Although servlets can respond to many types of requests, they most commonly implement web containers for hosting web applications on web servers and thus qualify as a server-side servlet web API .

  5. Jakarta EE - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_EE

    In Jakarta EE, Jakarta Persistence honors bean validation constraints in the persistence layer, while JSF does so in the view layer. Jakarta Batch provides the means for batch processing in applications to run long running background tasks that possibly involve a large volume of data and which may need to be periodically executed.

  6. GlassFish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GlassFish

    GlassFish is the Eclipse implementation of Jakarta EE (formerly the reference implementation from Oracle) and as such supports Jakarta REST, Jakarta CDI, Jakarta Security, Jakarta Persistence, Jakarta Transactions, Jakarta Servlet, Jakarta Faces, Jakarta Messaging, etc. This allows developers to create enterprise applications that are portable ...

  7. Jakarta Enterprise Beans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Enterprise_Beans

    Jakarta Enterprise Beans 4.0, as a part of Jakarta EE 9, was a tooling release that mainly moved API package names from the top level javax.ejb package to the top level jakarta.ejb package. [ 39 ] Other changes included removal of deprecated APIs that were pointless to move to the new top level package and the removal of features that depended ...

  8. Jakarta RESTful Web Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_RESTful_Web_Services

    The annotations use the Java package jakarta.ws.rs (previously was javax.ws.rs but was renamed on May 19, 2019 [2]). They include: @Path specifies the relative path for a resource class or method. @GET, @PUT, @POST, @DELETE and @HEAD specify the HTTP request type of a resource.

  9. Jakarta XML Binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_XML_Binding

    Jakarta XML Binding (JAXB; formerly Java Architecture for XML Binding) is a software framework that allows Java EE developers to map Java classes to XML representations. JAXB provides two main features: the ability to marshal Java objects into XML and the inverse, i.e. to unmarshal XML back into Java objects.