Introduction to the Spring 4 Framework (The Next Generation)
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Inhouse
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Course
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Methodology
Inhouse
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Different dates available
Over the years, Spring has added many new capabilities, in line with the increasing capabilities of the Java platform. As well as being current with Spring 4, this course introduces techniques for using these powerful capabilities. It includes complete coverage of the three main configuration styles: Java-based (@Configuration), annotation-based (@Component), and the traditional XML-based configuration that may still play an important role in existing and new projects. It also provides guidelines for when and how to use each one.The course starts with in-depth coverage on using the powerful capabilities of Spring’s Core module to reduce coupling and increase the flexibility, ease of maintenance, and testing of your applications. It goes on to cover many of the most important capabilities of Spring, including integrating persistence layers (e.g. Hibernate/JPA) with Spring, using Spring’s powerful Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) to program cross-cutting concerns in a safe and maintainable way, and using Spring’s declarative transaction capabilities. It also covers integration of Spring with Java EE Web applications.
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About this course
Understand the core principles of Spring, and of Dependency Injection (DI) / Inversion of ControlUse the Spring Core module and DI to configure and wire application objects (beans) togetherKnow the different types of metadata (XML, annotations/@Component, and Java Configuration/@Configuration), and how and when to use themUnderstand and use the complete capabilities of the Core module, such as lifecycle events, bean scopes, and the Spring APIWork with the ORM (Object-Relational Mapping) module to integrate Spring with technologies such as Hibernate or JPA.Understand and use Spring’s powerful AOP capabilities for programming cross-cutting concerns across multiple points in an applicationLearn safe and maintainable techniques for programming with AOPUnderstand and use Spring’s transaction support, including the easy-to-use Java annotation support, as well as the tx/aop XML configuration elementsIntegrate Spring with Java EE Web applications
Developers
Web Development Experience
This course is hands on with labs to reinforce all the important concepts. It will enable you to build working Spring applications and give you an understanding of the important concepts and technology in a very short time.The standard platform does all labs with the Eclipse IDE, and the lab instructions include detailed directions for setting up and using it. The course can be made available for all major development environments, including IBM RAD and IntelliJ.
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Subjects
- XML training
- Java
- XML
- Web
- Programming
- Oriented Programming
Course programme
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Session 1: Introduction to Spring
Overview of Spring Technology
Challenges for Modern Applications
Motivation for Spring, Spring Architecture
The Spring Framework
Spring Introduction
Managing Beans
Inversion of Control / IoC, Dependency Injection / DI
Configuration Metadata Overview, Configuring Beans (XML)
The Spring Container
Overview of the Spring Container
A Simple Spring Example
ApplicationContext Overview
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext, FileSystemXmlApplicationContext, AnnotationConfigApplicationContext
API and Usage
Dependencies and Dependency Injection (DI)
Examining Dependencies
Dependency Inversion
Dependency Injection (DI) in Spring – Basic Configuration and Usage
Session 2: Configuration in Depth
Annotation Driven Configuration
JSR 330 (@Named) and Spring (@Component) annotation styles
@Named/@Component, @Inject/@Autowired, @Repository, @Service
Configuring Beans and Autowiring with Annotations
Enabling Annotations – context:component-scan
Pros and Cons
Java Based Configuration (@Configuration)
Overview – code-centric Configuration
@Configuration and @Bean
Dependency Injection
Resolving Dependencies on Other Beans, Injecting Configuration Classes
Pros and Cons
Integrating Configuration Types
Choosing a Configuration Style
Integrating Configuration Styles
Importing: @Import and
Scanning with @Configuration style
Bean Scope and Lifecycle
Bean Scope Defined – singleton, prototype, and Other Scopes
Configuring Scope
Bean Creation Lifecycle, Lifecycle Callbacks
BeanPostProcessor, Event Handling
Session 3: Wiring in Depth
Value Injection
Configuring Value Properties, Property Conversions
Externalizing Values in Properties Files
Constructor Injection
Constructor Injection Overview
Configuration – @Configuration and XML
p: and c: namespaces for XML configuration
Qualifiers / Domain Specific Language (DSL)
Limitations of Autowiring
Qualifiers and DSL
Creating and Using an Annotation-Based DSL for Bean Configuration
Benefits of Qualifiers for Bean Configuration
Profiles
Profiles Overview
Configuring Profiles (XML and @Configuration)
Activating Profiles
Overview of SpEL
Session 4: Database Access with Spring
Overview of Spring database support
Configuring a DataSource
Using Spring with Hibernate
High Level Hibernate Overview
SessionFactory configuration, LocalSessionFactoryBean
Contextual Sessions and Spring Integration
Using Spring with JPA
Managing the EntityManager (EM)
LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean and Container-managed EMs
JEE and JNDI Lookup of the EM
Configuration and Vendor Adaptors
Creating a JPA Repository/DAO Bean – @PersistenceUnit, @PersistenceContext
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Session 5: Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP)
Overview of AOP
Crosscutting Concerns
AOP Basics, Aspect, Joinpoint, Advice, Pointcut
Spring AOP Introduction
Configuration – XML and @AspectJ
Defining an Aspect, Pointcut, and Advice
How Advice is Triggered
Pointcut Expressions and Advice
Pointcut Expression Overview
The execution() Designator
Other Designators (within, target, args, @target, …)
Kinds of Advice – before, after, around, after-returning, after-throwing
Marker Annotations (Rubber Stamp AOP)
Issue with AOP Configuration
Defining an AOP Marker / Rubber Stamp
Configuring AOP Using a Marker
Advantages of Marker Annotations
@AspectJ Based AOP Support
@AspectJ Annotations Overview
Defining an Aspect, Pointcut, and Advice
Other Considerations
Spring AOP Proxies and Self-Invocation Issues
Load-Time Weaving
Caveats of AOP
Session 6: Spring Transaction (TX) Management
Intro to Spring Transaction Management
Spring Transaction Managers
Spring Declarative TX Management
Spring TX Scope and Propagation
Spring TX Attributes (REQUIRED, SUPPORTS, etc)
XML Configuration of Transactions
Specifying Advice, TX Attributes, and Methods
Linking Advice with Pointcuts
Benefits of XML Configuration of TX Behavior
Session 7: Web Applications with Spring
Integrating Spring with Java EE Web Apps
ContextLoaderListener
WebApplicationContext
Using Spring beans in Wep app controller logic
Session 8: XML Specific Configuration
Collection Valued Properties – Configuring and using lists, sets, etc.
Additional Capabilities
Factory Classes and Factory Methods
Definition Inheritance (Parent Beans)
AutoWiring with XML
Inner Beans, Compound Names
Appendix: Maven and Spring
Introduction to the Spring 4 Framework (The Next Generation)