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Published byDorcas Norton Modified over 9 years ago
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JAVA EE 6 Best Practices for Migrating Spring to WTF ?!?
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Bert Ertman Fellow at Luminis in the Netherlands JUG Leader for NLJUG and a Java Champion
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Who is this talk for? You are using old school Spring and wonder how to move forward Java EE seems to be hot again, should you jump on this train? You love the J2EE Design and Development book; but is it still actual?
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Why listen to us? We’re not working for an application server vendor We’re no Rod Johnson groupies either We’ve worked extensively with J2EE, Spring and modern Java EE Had endless Java EE vs. Spring discussions...
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Why migrate? Spring is proprietary technology Upgrading from old school Spring requires a lot of work anyway Why not take it to the standard?
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Scenario A
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But now we want this
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Let’s get a couple of misunderstanding out of the way first...
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Isn’t Java EE too fat? Startup times with application deployed JBoss AS 7 ~2 seconds Glassfish V3 ~4 seconds Tomcat 6 + Spring ~4 seconds Java EE 6 WAR file < 100kb
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But I need Dependency Injection Java EE 6 introduced CDI More powerful, contextual DI model Makes the platform extensible in a standard way
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But I need AOP! Really? You love getting your code all asymmetric and unreadable? Or are you just using AOP light a.k.a. Spring AOP a.k.a. (Java EE) Interceptors?
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Do I need heavy tooling?
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Capabilities comparison CapabilitySpringJavaEE Dependency InjectionSpring ContainerCDI TransactionsAOP / annotationsEJB Web frameworkSpring Web MVCJSF AOPAspectJ (limited to Spring beans)Interceptors MessagingJMSJMS / CDI Data AccessJPA / JDBC templates / other ORMJPA RESTful Web Services Spring Web MVC (3.0)JAX-RS Integration testingSpring Test frameworkArquillian * * Not part of the Java EE specification
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It can all be done using plain vanilla light weight Java EE
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rm -Rf spring* ?
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Sure it would be fun! realistic?
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Typical old school Spring app lots of complex XML, no annotations old / outdated ORM solution (JDBC Templates, Kodo, Toplink etc.) deprecated extension based Web MVC (SimpleFormController etc.)
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Run Spring and Java EE container side by side 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Run Spring and Java EE container side by side 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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Upgrade Spring version Upgrade Spring runtime (replace JAR files) No code / configuration changes
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Add Java EE code, keep old Spring code 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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Replace old frameworks within Spring presentaton layer Data / Integration layer Web MVCTasks Spring JDBC Templates Kodo @AutoWired business layer JMS beans @AutoWired JPA JSF Don’t touch Spring specific APIs yet Spring beans
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Add Java EE code, keep old Spring code 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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myapp.war Spring container Servlet Container Spring application Spring beans TX manager AOP ORM
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Java EE 6 application server CDI / EJB container myapp.war CDI beans Session beans TX manager SecurityInterceptorsJPA Java EE application
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Java EE 6 application server CDI / EJB container myapp.war CDI beans Session beans TX manager SecurityInterceptorsJPA Spring container Spring beans TX manager AOP ORM Mixed
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Run Spring within a Java EE container presentaton layer Data / Integration layer Spring beansTasks Spring JDBC Templates business layer JMS beans @AutoWired JPA JSF
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Add Java EE code, keep old Spring code presentaton layer Data / Integration layer Spring beansTasks Spring JDBC Templates business layer JMS beans @AutoWired JPA JSFEJBCDI @Inject
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The Spring DAO
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Spring configuration
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JSF / CDI bean Here we don’t want to know about Spring
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Encapsulate Spring with CDI Write a CDI extension that bootstraps the Spring container looks up Spring Beans in the Spring container and publish in CDI context
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CDI extension example
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Add Java EE code, keep old Spring code 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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Replace Spring entirely presentaton layer Data / Integration layer Spring beansTasks Spring JDBC Templates business layer JMS beans @AutoWired JPA JSFEJBCDI @Inject
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Replace Spring entirely presentaton layer Data / Integration layer EJB Timers business layer MDB @AutoWired JPA JSFEJBCDI @Inject Spring JDBC Templates
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The TX layer Migrate Spring TX and DAOs to EJB The TX manager is in the app server An EJB is transactional by default EJB has JPA integration
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Come on, are you telling me EJBs are cool now? You bet! EJBs are just container managed POJOs Just like Spring beans, but without the container configuration...
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DAO Spring
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DAO configuration
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The Java EE alternative EJB
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Dealing with Lazy Loading Many Spring apps use the Open- EntityManager-In-View pattern EJB has the Extended Persistence Context more explicit and more powerful
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LazyInitializationException
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Fixing lazy loading Keeps an EntityManager open as long a the bean exists
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Template addict? What if I’m hooked to JDBC Template? Hmm, let’s start the old discussion about whether or not to use ORM phase 1: denial phase 2: eventually you will migrate ;- )
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Using JDBC Template within Java EE Can be injected with simple Producer method Possible because it is not relying on Spring container some extra dependencies though
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Template producer example
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Migration Path 1. Upgrade Spring version 2. Replace old frameworks (ORM, web framework) within Spring 3. Add Java EE code, keep old Spring code 4. Replace Spring entirely 5. Remove Spring container
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Removing dependencies Our classpath just has to contain APIs, no framework classes From ~40 dependencies to just 1
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What about testing? Spring has always been great at testing DI makes unit testing possible Spring test framework makes testing within the Spring container possible Flexible configuration for multi- environment testing
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How to test this?
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Arquillian Create a micro deployment using an API Deploy to a real application server Run tests in the server
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Arquillian example
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Is it all worth it?
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Is there life after Spring? We believe that there is always room for innovation Ideally through Open Source If it flies, bring it back to the spec!
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There is more! 4-part article series on Jboss web site Step-by-step migration of Pet Clinic sample application http://www.howtojboss.com
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thank you
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