JBS-102: Jboss Application Server Administration. Course Length: 4 days



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JBS-102: Jboss Application Server Administration Course Length: 4 days Course Description: Course Description: JBoss Application Server Administration focuses on installing, configuring, and tuning the JBoss application server. This course begins with an overview of the Java SE and EE platform and technologies and then focuses on the hands-on configuration process. By the end of the course, students understand the fundamentals required to setup and manage a JBoss application server installation. Prerequisites: Base experience with system administration on Windows, UNIX, or Linux operating systems Understanding of hardware and networking Understanding JEE programming Detailed description: 1. Overview of Java Enterprise Edition 1.1. What is Java EE? 1.2. Open and Standard-based 1.3. Multi-tier 1.4. Web-Enabled 1.5. Server Centric 1.6. Component-Based Distributed Architecture 1.7. Enterprise Applications 1.8. Java EE Contents 1.9. Java EE Services 2. Overview of JBoss Application Server 2.1. JBoss Organization 2.2. JBoss AS Background 2.3. Highlights of JBoss AS 2.4. What is new in JBoss AS 5? 2.5. JBoss AS Architecture 2.6. JBoss Microcontainer Layer 2.7. Services Layer 2.8. Aspect Layer 2.9. Application Layer 2.10. JBoss AS Services 2.11. JBoss AS Requirements 3. Installing JBoss AS 3.1. Getting and Installing Java 3.2. Configuring Java 3.3. Getting JBoss AS 3.4. Installing JBoss AS 5 4. JBoss Directory Structure 4.1. JBoss AS Directory Structure 4.2. The bin Directory 4.3. The client Directory 4.4. The common directory

4.5. The docs Directory 4.6. The lib Directory 4.7. The server Directory 4.8. The server Configuration Sets 4.9. The default/conf Directory 4.10. The default/data Directory 4.11. The default/deploy Directory 4.12. The default/deployers Directory 4.13. The default/lib Directory 4.14. The default/log Directory 4.15. The default/tmp Directory 4.16. The default/work Directory 5. Controlling the Life-Cycle of JBoss AS 5.1. Starting JBoss AS 5.2. Verifying JBoss AS Startup 5.3. Stopping JBoss AS 5.4. Starting From a Remote Server 6. Deployments on JBoss 6.1. Java EE Deployment Lifecycle 6.2. Deployment Descriptors 6.3. Deployment on JBoss AS 6.4. Deployers on JBoss AS 6.5. Deployment Dependencies 6.6. Hot vs. Cold Deployment 6.7. Bootstrapping JBoss 7. Web Application Administration 7.1. Web Technologies 7.2. CGI vs. Servlets/JSPs 7.3. Tomcat Web Container 7.4. Tomcat s server.xml 7.5. Tomcat s web.xml 7.6. Defining and Mapping Servlets 7.7. Defining and Mapping Filters 7.8. Session Configuration 7.9. Welcome File List 7.10. Error Documents 7.11. Serving Static Content 7.12. Virtual Hosting with Tomcat 7.13. Web Access Logging 8. JNDI Administration 8.1. Java Naming and Directory Interface 8.2. JNDI in Java EE 8.3. JNDI on JBoss 9. Javamail Administration 9.1. What is JavaMail? 9.2. Configuring JavaMail Service 10. JMS Administration 10.1. JMS Overview 10.2. JMS in Java EE 10.3. When is JMS Used 10.4. JMS Architecture 10.5. JMS Messaging Domains

10.6. JMS Message Consumption 10.7. JMS on JBoss Configuration 10.8. Configure JMS connection factories 10.9. Configure JMS destinations 10.10. Advanded JBoss Messaging 10.11. JBoss Messaging bridge 10.12. Persistence service configuration 11. Enterprise Java Beans Administration 11.1. Introduction to EJB 3.0 11.2. EJB 3.0 Components 11.3. EJB Container 11.4. Benefits of EJB Technology 11.5. Drawbacks of EJBs 11.6. Session Beans 11.7. Interceptors 11.8. Entity Beans 11.9. Message-Driven Bean 11.10. Session Beans Client Interfaces 11.11. Stateless Session Beans Life Cycle 11.12. Stateful Session Beans Life Cycle 11.13. Message-Driven Beans Life Cycle 11.14. Configuring the EJB container 11.15. Stateful Session Bean Configuration 12. Web Services and JBoss 12.1. Web Services Overview 12.2. Service Oriented Architecture 12.3. Web Services With JAX-WS 12.4. Web Services on JBoss 12.5. JBoss Web Services Tools 13. JMX Administration 13.1. What is JMX? 13.2. Why JMX? 13.3. JMX Architecture 13.4. JMX on JBoss AS 13.5. JMX Console 13.6. Web Console 13.7. Twiddle Tool 13.8. JBoss AS Administration Console 13.10. JBoss Monitoring 13.11. Snapshot and Web Console 13.12. Monitoring with JConsole 13.13. Scheduling on JBoss 14. Class Loading on JBoss 14.1. Class Namespace Isolation 14.2. Java Class Runtime Identity 14.3. Class Loading in Java EE 14.4. Class Loading On JBoss 14.5. The Class Loader 14.6. Default Class Search Order 14.7. Scoping Classes 14.8. Scoped Class Search Order 14.9. App-specific Log4J Config

14.10. Problems With Class Loading 15. Database Integration on JBoss 15.1. Steps Involved 15.2. Resource Requirement 15.3. Install JDBC Drivers 15.4. Define a RDBMS DBCP Resource 15.5. Map our Resource 15.6. Using our DataSource (RDBMS DBCP) 15.7. Hypersonic Database 15.8. Detecting Connection Leaks 16. Security on JBoss 16.1. Securing Applications 16.2. Filtering Clients by Source 16.3. Authentication & Authorization 16.4. Requiring A&A 16.5. Plain-Text Login Module 16.6. Database Login Module 16.7. FORM-based Login 16.8. Configuring JBoss AS for SSL 16.9. Creating SSL Certificates 16.10. Configure SSL Connector 16.11. Testing SSL Configuration 16.12. Requiring SSL in Apps 16.14. Securing JMS destinations 16.15. Securing JBoss AS 16.16. JBoss AS System User 16.17. File System Security 16.18. Securing JMX Invoker 16.19. Securing JBoss Applications 16.20. Securing Hypersonic DB 16.21. Java Security Manager 16.22. Running Behind a Firewall 17. Tuning JBoss 17.1. JVM Tuning 17.2. Tomcat Tuning 17.3. RMI Tuning 17.4. Log4J Tuning 17.5. Tuning Other Services 17.6. JMS Tuning 17.7. Slimming JBoss 18. High Availability and Scalability on JBoss 18.1. Requirements 18.2. Clustering: General understanding 18.3. Clustering and JBoss 18.4. Simple Web Architecture 18.5. External Load Balancer Architecture 18.6. Smart Proxy Architecture 18.7. General configuration for the following examples 18.8. Fronting with a Web Server 18.9. Fronting with Apache HTTPD 18.10. Installing mod_jk 18.11. Configuring mod_jk

18.12. Simple Load Balancing 18.13. Enabling Sticky Sessions 18.14. Clustered Session Replication 18.15. Clustering Single Sign-On 18.16. Clustering with HA-JNDI 18.17. HA-JNDI Client Configuration 18.18. Clustering with HA-JMS 18.19. Clustering with Stateless Session Beans 18.20. Clustering with Stateful Session Beans