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Spring MVC Cookbook

You're reading from   Spring MVC Cookbook Over 40 recipes for creating cloud-ready Java web applications with Spring MVC

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2016
Last Updated in Feb 2025
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784396411
Length 466 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Alexandre Bretet Alexandre Bretet
Author Profile Icon Alexandre Bretet
Alexandre Bretet
Alex Bretet Alex Bretet
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Alex Bretet
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Setup Routine for an Enterprise Spring Application FREE CHAPTER 2. Designing a Microservice Architecture with Spring MVC 3. Working with Java Persistence and Entities 4. Building a REST API for a Stateless Architecture 5. Authenticating with Spring MVC 6. Implementing HATEOAS 7. Developing CRUD Operations and Validations 8. Communicating Through WebSockets and STOMP 9. Testing and Troubleshooting Index

Introduction

The Java Persistence API (JPA) is a specification that has been produced in different releases from 2006 (JPA 1.0) to 2013 (JPA 2.1) by a group of various experts. Historically, it is one of the three pieces of the EJB 3.0 specification, which has come along with JEE5.

More than an upgrade of Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB), JPA was pretty much a complete redesign. At the time, the leading providers of Object Relational Mapping solution (such as Hibernate) and of J2EE application servers (such as WebSphere, JBoss) have been involved, and the global result has been unarguably simpler. All the types of EJBs (stateful, stateless, and entities) are now simple Plain Old Java Objects (POJOs) that are enriched with specific metadata that is nicely presented as annotations.

The Entities' benefits

Entities play a key role in the EJB3 model. As simple POJOs, they can be used in every single layer of the application.

Ideally, an entity represents an identifiable functional unit within a...

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