Tag Archives: GlassFish

Creating Calendar Based Timers in Java EE 6

Java EE 6 allows developers to create application timers that are initialized when either a Stateless Session Bean, a Singleton Bean or a Message Driven Bean are deployed to the application server.

To indicate that a method on any of these beans is to be invoked on a timed basis, the method must be annotated with either the @Schedule annotation (for single timer schedules), or the @Schedules annotation (for multiple timer schedules).

The code below shows a very simple Stateless Session Bean configured with 2 scheduled timers. The first timer is configured with one schedule whereas the second is configured with 2 schedules.

package com.acme.timer;

import javax.ejb.Schedule;
import javax.ejb.Schedules;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.ejb.Timer;

@Stateless
public class CalendarTimer {

  @SuppressWarnings("unused")
  @Schedule(second = "*/10",
            minute = "*",
            hour = "8-17",
            dayOfWeek = "Mon-Fri",
            dayOfMonth = "*",
            month = "*",
            year = "*",
            info = "Scheduled Timer")
  private void scheduledTimeout(final Timer t) {
    System.out.println(t.getInfo().toString() + " called at: " + new java.util.Date()); }

  @SuppressWarnings("unused")
  @Schedules({ 
    @Schedule(second = "15",
              minute = "*",
              hour = "8-17",
              dayOfWeek = "Mon-Fri",
              dayOfMonth = "*",
              month = "*",
              year = "*",
              info = "2nd Scheduled Timer"),
    @Schedule(second = "45",
              minute = "*",
              hour = "8-17",
              dayOfWeek = "Mon-Fri",
              dayOfMonth = "*",
              month = "*",
              year = "*",
              info = "2nd Scheduled Timer")
  })
  private void scheduledTimeout2(final Timer t) {
    System.out.println(t.getInfo().toString() + " called at: " + new java.util.Date()); System.out.println(); 
  }
}

As can be seen, the first timer is annotated with the @Schedule annotation. This annotation takes several parameters that define the timer schedule:

second Number of seconds: 0 through 59
minute Number of minutes: 0 through 59
hour Number of hours: 0 through 23
dayOfWeek Day of the week.  This can take textual values (Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat) or numerical values 0 through 7 (both 0 and 7 indicate Sunday)
dayOfMonth Day of the month. This can take textual values (1st, 2nd etc), or numeric values 1 through 31. Negative values can also be used to indicate days before the end of the month. The value Last can also be used to indicate the last day of the month.
month Month of the year. This can take textual values (Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec) or numerical values 1 through 12
year The year. This can take numeric years in the format yyyy.
info Additional information passed to the timer function.

The table above shows the allowable values that can be used for each expression used to build up a schedule. These values can also be expanded into expressions to make more complex schedules.

Wildcard: A wildcard character (*) is used to indicate that the schedule will fire for every valid value of the specific operand. For example, setting the value second=”0″, minute=”*” would cause a timer to be invoked every minute at 0 seconds.

Lists: Comma separated lists of values allow timers to occur at every value in the list rather than at all valid values as specified by the wildcard character.  For example second=”0″, minute=”0, 15, 30, 45″ would cause a timer to be invoked every quarter of an hour.

Ranges: Hypen separated ranges allow timers to occur within the specified range.  For example dayOfMonth=”1-5″ would cause a timer to be invoked every day for the first 5 days of each month.

Intervals: Intervals are defined in the format start/interval and are valid only for hours, minutes and seconds.  An interval is defined as the start value for a timer and then the interval at which a timer will be invoked.  For example hour=”12/1″ would cause a timer to be invoked on the hour, every hour in an afternoon. It’s possible to combine the wildcard and interval expressions to cause a timer to be invoked every x hours, minutes or seconds.  For example  minute=”*/10″ would cause a timer to be invoked every 10 minutes.

The second method in the example above shows how 2 different schedules can be applied to a timer.  In this instance, the method is annotated with the @Schedules annotation rather than the @Schedule annotation.

Using GlassFish from Eclipse

When I think of developing apps using GlassFish, I usually think of using NetBeans for the development. As you’d expect however, Oracle provides some good tooling to allow you to develop against GlassFish from within Eclipse – even to the point of installing the application server directly from within Eclipse.  So, how is this done?

Installing GlassFish Server Tools

Contrary to what you’d expect, to install GlassFish tooling, you don’t use the Eclipse Marketplace for installation.  To install, right click within the “Servers” pane and select “New | Server” to display the “Define a New Server” dialog. On this dialog, select “Download additional server adaptors” and in the resulting dialog select “Oracle GlassFish Server Tools”.GlassFish Server Tools

After accepting the licence conditions, the GlassFish Server tools will be downloaded upon which you’ll need to restart Eclipse to complete the installation.

Defining a GlassFish Instance

After a restart, opening the ”Define a New Server” dialog will show that GlassFish support has been added.

Define New Server

Choose the GlassFish server you wish to use and press the “Next” button.  On the resulting dialog, you can choose to locate an existing copy of GlassFish, or install an new instance via the “Install Server” button if you don’t already have GlassFish installed.

GlassFish Runtime

One point to note here is that, if you install a new instance of GlassFish, you may then need to browse through the install folder to locate the “glassfish” folder within.  You will see that this is necessary because the “Next>” button will be disabled as you’ve installed an instance of GlassFish, but not correctly identified its location to Eclipse.

When you’ve selected (and installed if necessary) a GlassFish instance, complete the wizard to define the admninistrator credentials of the server.

GlassFish Tools

After creating a GlassFish server instance in Eclipse, you can develop and test Java EE 6 applications against it.  The GlassFish tools provides additional support to assist in this.  For example, right clicking on the server in the “Servers” tab allows you to manage the server or get additional information or support.

GlassFish Tools

New wizards are also installed into Eclipse to assist when creating GlassFish facets such as JMS or JDBC resources as shown below.  These wizards are available on the standard “File | New | Other” dialog under the “GlassFish” folder.

GlassFish Facets

Introduction to JSF 2 Using NetBeans 6.8 and GlassFish v3

I’ve just published an article entitled, “Introduction to JSF 2 Using NetBeans and GlassFish” over at developinjava.com.

In the article I give a brief introduction to JSF 2 and show how you can create JSF 2 managed beans without XML just by using annotations. I also show how you can localize a JSF 2 application and how the Bean Validation Framework can be used to add server side validation onto POJOs.

The article shows how its becoming much easier to write Enterprise Applications using Java EE 6 with the new annotations that are being added to this version of the platform.

To write the sample application in the article I used NetBeans 6.8M1. I’ve found this version of NetBeans to be remarkably stable and the integration with GlassFish 3 to be excellent.

Security for JSF Applications

I see a lot of posts around the internet by people asking what the standard mechanism for security is in JSF web applications.

From a security standpoint, JSF applications are no different from any other servlet based framework applications. If you’re deploying applications on J2EE / EE servers (e.g. GlassFish or JBoss) or even on Tomcat, then my first choice would be to use JAAS for security.

JAAS is straightforward to configure, is flexible and is a standard.

Next time you need to implement a security mechanism, I’d recommend you take a look at JAAS before embarking on writing custom security mechanisms. You never know – it may save you a lot of time.