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    Spring in Action 目錄

    Part 1  Spring essentials   1


    1  A Spring jump start   3
    1.1 Why Spring? 5
    A day in the life of a J2EE developer 5
    Spring’s pledge 6
    1.2 What is Spring? 8
    Spring modules 9
    1.3 Spring jump start 12
    1.4 Understanding inversion of control 15
    Injecting dependencies 16
    IoC in action 16
    IoC in enterprise applications 23
    1.5 Applying aspect-oriented programming 25
    Introducing AOP 25
    AOP in action 27
    AOP in the enterprise 30
    1.6 Spring alternatives 33
    Comparing Spring to EJB 33
    Considering other lightweight containers 36
    Web frameworks 38
    Persistence frameworks 40
    1.7 Summary 40
    2  Wiring beans   42
    2.1 Containing your beans 44
    Introducing the BeanFactory 44
    Working with an application context 46
    A bean’s life 47
    2.2 Basic wiring 50
    Wiring with XML 54
    Adding a bean 55
    Injecting dependencies via setter methods 58
    Injecting dependencies via constructor 65
    2.3 Autowiring 69
    Handling ambiguities of autowiring 71
    Mixing auto and explicit wiring 72
    Autowiring by default 72
    To autowire or not to autowire 72
    2.4 Working with Spring’s special beans 73
    Postprocessing beans 74
    Postprocessing the bean factory 76
    Externalizing the configuration 78
    Customizing property editors 80
    Resolving text messages 83
    Listening for events 85
    Publishing events 86
    Making beans aware 87
    2.5 Summary 90
    3  Creating aspects   91
    3.1 Introducing AOP 92
    Defining AOP terminology 93
    Spring’s AOP implementation 95
    3.2 Creating advice 97
    Before advice 99
    After advice 101
    Around advice 102
    Throws advice 104
    Introduction advice 105
    3.3 Defining pointcuts 105
    Defining a pointcut in Spring 105
    Understanding advisors 107
    Using Spring’s static pointcuts 107
    Using dynamic pointcuts 111
    Pointcut operations 113
    3.4 Creating introductions 115
    Implementing IntroductionInterceptor 115
    Creating an IntroductionAdvisor 119
    Using introduction advice carefully 120
    3.5 Using ProxyFactoryBean 122
    3.6 Autoproxying 124
    BeanNameAutoProxyCreator 124
    DefaultAdvisorAutoProxy-Creator 126
    Metadata autoproxying 128
    3.7 Summary 128

    Part 2  Spring in the business layer   131


    4  Hitting the database   133
    4.1 Learning Spring’s DAO philosophy 134
    Understanding Spring’s DataAccessException 135
    Working with DataSources 137
    Consistent DAO support 139
    4.2 Using JDBC with Spring 141
    The problem with JDBC code 142
    Using JdbcTemplate 144
    Creating operations as objects 152
    Auto-incrementing keys 155
    4.3 Introducing Spring’s ORM framework support 156
    4.4 Integrating Hibernate with Spring 157
    Hibernate overview 157
    Managing Hibernate resources 159
    Accessing Hibernate through HibernateTemplate 162
    Subclassing HibernateDaoSupport 163
    4.5 Spring and JDO 164
    Configuring JDO 164
    Accessing data with JdoTemplate 165
    4.6 Spring and iBATIS 166
    Setting up SQL Maps 167
    Using SqlMapClientTemplate 168
    4.7 Spring and OJB 169
    Setting up OJB’s PersistenceBroker 169
    4.8 Summary 171
    5  Managing transactions   173
    5.1 Understanding transactions 174
    Explaining transactions in only four words 176
    Understanding Spring’s transaction management support 177
    Introducing Spring’s transaction manager 178
    5.2 Programming transactions in Spring 181
    5.3 Declaring transactions 183
    Understanding transaction attributes 185
    Declaring a simple transaction policy 189
    5.4 Declaring transactions by method name 191
    Using NameMatchTransactionAttributeSource 191
    Shortcutting name-matched transactions 194
    5.5 Declaring transactions with metadata 195
    Sourcing transaction attributes from metadata 196
    Declaring transactions with Commons Attributes 197
    5.6 Trimming down transaction declarations 201
    Inheriting from a parent TransactionProxyFactoryBean 202
    Autoproxying transactions 203
    5.7 Summary 206
    6  Remoting   207
    6.1 Spring remoting overview 208
    6.2 Working with RMI 212
    Wiring RMI services 212
    Exporting RMI services 214
    6.3 Remoting with Hessian and Burlap 218
    Accessing Hessian/Burlap services 219
    Exposing bean functionality with Hessian/Burlap 220
    6.4 Using Http invoker 223
    Accessing services via HTTP 224
    Exposing beans as HTTP Services 225
    6.5 Working with EJBs 226
    Accessing EJBs 227
    Developing Spring-enabled EJBs 231
    6.6 Using JAX-RPC web services 233
    Referencing a web service with JAX-RPC 234
    Wiring a web service in Spring 236
    6.7 Summary 238
    7  Accessing enterprise services   240
    7.1 Retrieving objects from JNDI 241
    Working with conventional JNDI 241
    Proxying JNDI objects 243
    7.2 Sending e-mail 244
    7.3 Scheduling tasks 248
    Scheduling with Java’s Timer 248
    Using the Quartz scheduler 250
    Invoking methods on a schedule 254
    7.4 Sending messages with JMS 256
    Sending messages with JMS templates 257
    Consuming messages 261
    Converting messages 263
    7.5 Summary 266

    Part 3  Spring in the web layer   267


    8  Building the web layer   269
    8.1 Getting started with Spring MVC 270
    A day in the life of a request 271
    Configuring DispatcherServlet 272
    Spring MVC in a nutshell 275
    8.2 Mapping requests to controllers 279
    Mapping URLs to bean names 280
    Using SimpleUrlHandlerMapping 281
    Using metadata to map controllers 281
    Working with multiple handler mappings 282
    8.3 Handling requests with controllers 283
    Writing a simple controller 285
    Processing commands 287
    Processing form submissions 289
    Processing complex forms with wizards 294
    Handling multiple actions in one controller 301
    Working with Throwaway controllers 305
    8.4 Resolving views 307
    Using template views 308
    Resolving view beans 310
    Choosing a view resolver 313
    8.5 Using Spring’s bind tag 314
    8.6 Handling exceptions 317
    8.7 Summary 317
    9  View layer alternatives   319
    9.1 Using Velocity templates 321
    Defining the Velocity view 321
    Configuring the Velocity engine 322
    Resolving Velocity views 323
    Formatting dates and numbers 324
    Exposing request and session attributes 325
    Binding form fields in Velocity 326
    9.2 Working with FreeMarker 327
    Constructing a FreeMarker view 328
    Configuring the FreeMarker engine 329
    Resolving FreeMarker views 330
    Binding form fields in FreeMarker 330
    9.3 Designing page layout with Tiles 332
    Tile views 332
    Tile controllers 335
    9.4 Generating non-HTML output 337
    Producing Excel spreadsheets 338
    Generating PDF documents 340
    Generating other non-HTML files 343
    9.5 Summary 344
    10  Working with other web frameworks   346
    10.1 Working with Jakarta Struts 347
    Registering the Spring plug-in 348
    Implementing Spring-aware Struts actions 348
    Delegating actions 350
    10.2 Working with Tapestry 352
    Replacing the Tapestry Engine 353
    Loading Spring beans into Tapestry pages 355
    10.3 Integrating with JavaServer Faces 357
    Resolving variables 357
    Publishing request handled events 361
    10.4 Integrating with WebWork 362
    WebWork 1 363
    XWork/WebWork2 364
    10.5 Summary 365
    11  Securing Spring applications   367
    11.1 Introducing the Acegi Security System 368
    Security interceptors 369
    Authentication managers 370
    Access decisions managers 370
    Run-as managers 370
    11.2 Managing authentication 371
    Configuring a provider manager 371
    Authenticating against a database 373
    Authenticating against an LDAP repository 382
    Enabling Single Sign-On with Acegi and Yale CAS 384
    11.3 Controlling access 389
    Voting access decisions 389
    Deciding how to vote 390
    Handling voter abstinence 392
    11.4 Securing web applications 392
    Proxying Acegi’s filters 394
    Enforcing web security 397
    Processing a login 400
    Setting up the security context 406
    Ensuring a secure channel 407
    Using the Acegi tag library 411
    11.5 Securing method invocations 412
    Creating a security aspect 412
    Securing methods using metadata 414
    11.6 Summary 416
    A  Spring setup   417
    A.1 Downloading Spring 418
    A.2 Choosing a distribution 418
    A.3 Setting up your project 419 A.4 Building with Ant 420
    B  Spring-related projects   422
    B.1 AppFuse 423
    B.2 Rich Client Project 424
    B.3 Spring.NET 424

    index 427


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    posted on 2005-03-25 10:57 java光環 閱讀(670) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: spring

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