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  2. Bean Validation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bean_Validation

    Java Bean Validation originated as a framework that was approved by the JCP as of 16 November 2009 and accepted as part of the Java EE 6 specification. The Hibernate team provides with Hibernate Validator the reference implementation of Bean Validation and also created the Bean Validation TCK any implementation of JSR 303 needs to pass.

  3. Spring Roo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Roo

    Java Bean Validation (JSR 303) (including Hibernate Validator) ... The following is an example of the commands used by Roo to create a new application plus the Spring ...

  4. Jakarta Enterprise Beans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Enterprise_Beans

    Jakarta Enterprise Beans (EJB; formerly Enterprise JavaBeans) is one of several Java APIs for modular construction of enterprise software. EJB is a server-side software component that encapsulates business logic of an application.

  5. Jakarta Persistence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_Persistence

    This is because entity beans, in previous EJB specifications, called for much complicated code and imposed a heavy resource footprint, and they could be used only on Java EE application servers because of interconnections and dependencies in the source code between beans and DAO objects or persistence frameworks.

  6. Entity Bean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entity_Bean

    An "Entity Bean" is a type of Enterprise JavaBean, a server-side Java EE component, that represents persistent data maintained in a database. An entity bean can manage its own persistence (Bean managed persistence) or can delegate this function to its EJB Container (Container managed persistence). An entity bean is identified by a primary key.

  7. Java Management Extensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Management_Extensions

    Java EE 6 provides that a managed bean is a bean that is implemented by a Java class, which is called its bean class. A top-level Java class is a managed bean if it is defined to be a managed bean by any other Java EE technology specification (for example, the JavaServer Faces technology specification), or if it meets all of the following ...

  8. JavaBeans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaBeans

    In computing based on the Java Platform, JavaBeans is a technology developed by Sun Microsystems and released in 1996, as part of JDK 1.1.. The 'beans' of JavaBeans are classes that encapsulate one or more objects into a single standardized object (the bean).

  9. NetBeans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NetBeans

    NetBeans also supports the JSF 2.0 (Facelets), JavaServer Pages (JSP), Hibernate, Spring, and Struts frameworks, and the Java EE 5 and J2EE 1.4 platforms. It includes GlassFish and Apache Tomcat. Some of its features with Java EE include: Improved support for CDI, REST services and Java Persistence; New support for Bean Validation