TSSS - Cliff Schmidt on Beehive
Formerly a BEA technology, Beehive is now an
Apache incubator project designed to allow developers to easily build enterprise
applications.
Cliff is a good speaker and I think he started
off well with an introduction to the Apache incubator program and Beehive itself
as an ease of use framework. It sounds like it is getting community support and
will probably be elevated to a full ASF project in the near future. In Beehive
there are currently 3 components that work well
together:Web Services - for exposing
your servicesControls - for accessing
backend resourcesNetUI - for building page
flow user interfacesTo build any of
these components a developer need only add metadata to their Java classes in
order to support these component models. This makes them very easy to use and
easy to tool. The Beehive infrastructure is designed to be run on a standard
servlet container so you don't need a huge application server to deploy Beehive
components. Tools that are going to be able to manipulate the components
include Eclipse (using Pollinate), IntelliJ, and WebLogic Workshop. This month
it goes beta... I'm definitely going to check it out on my quest for a nice
modern container.Originally Beehive
had its own proprietary standards, but now it implements JSR-181, Web Service
Metadata. There is some expectation that there may be more features later that
extend that standard and move the state of the art forward is possible, but
first and foremost is compliance. It also builds on J1EE 1.4, JAX-RPC 1.1, JSR
109, and J2SE 5.0 rather than using their own infrastructure. These standards
provide "source level compatibility", this is because these specifications
involve some compile time artifacts that may be container
specific.Cliff is talking specifically
about Controls now and I think I'm going to like them. Based on JavaBeans and
leveraging the femtocontainer
they appear to be what I have been looking for as a lightweight component model.
The only problem I have with them so far is that they don't appear entirely
dissimilar from EJB 3 stateful session beans. It will be interesting to find
out how this pans out and how they conflict or complement one
another.Next up is NetUI or Yet
Another Web Framework. I'm going to look into it because it seems to play well
with JSP 2.0. I'm very much an advocate of the new features that are in JSP and
I think that it solves a lot of the problems with the previous versions and
really want that power when I'm building web applications. On the other hand,
it doesn't handle a lot of the page flow type stuff so having a nice framework
that does handle it well will be
nice.By the end of the talk, I'm
convinced that EJB 3 is going to make Beehive Controls completely obsolete.
They are missing some of the ease of use features that are very attractive to me
like the autogeneration of business method interfaces and the IoC is much better
in EJB3 because it matches up the variable name with the JNDI name of the
resource.
Posted: Thu - March 3, 2005 at 10:13 AM
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