Assembling EJB modules
An enterprise bean is a Java component that can be combined with other resources to create J2EE applications. This topic assumes that you have created and unit tested an enterprise bean (EJB file) that you want to assemble in an enterprise application and deploy onto an appserver.
Overview
Assemble an EJB module to contain enterprise beans and related code artifacts. Group Web components, client code, and resource adapter code in separate modules. After assembling an EJB module, you can install it as a standalone application or combine it with other modules into an enterprise application.Use an assembly tool to assemble an EJB module in any of the following ways:
- Import an existing EJB module (EJB JAR file).
- Create a new EJB module.
- Copy code artifacts (such as entity beans) from one EJB module into a new EJB module.
For information on assembling EJB modules, refer to the online documentation or the information center for your assembly tool. This topic points you to AST documentation. The Application Server Toolkit information center accompanies this WAS information center.
Procedure
- Start an assembly tool.
- If you have not done so already, configure the assembly tool for work on J2EE modules. Ensure that J2EE and EJB capabilities are enabled.
- Migrate enterprise bean (JAR) files created with the Assembly Toolkit, Application Assembly Tool (AAT) or a different tool to an assembly tool. To migrate files, import your enterprise bean files to the assembly tool.
- Create a new EJB module.
- Copy code artifacts (such as entity beans) from one EJB module into a new EJB module.
Results
An EJB module is migrated or created, reflecting the J2EE folder structure that specifies the location of enterprise bean content files, class files, class paths, the deployment descriptor, and supporting metadata. Files for the EJB module are shown in the Project Explorer view under Enterprise Applications and EJB Projects.
What to do next
After you finish assembling your EJB module, you are ready to deploy your module.You can generate EJB deployment code and deploy the module to a target server in one step. In the Project Explorer view, right-click on the EJB project and click Deploy.
Defining container transactions for EJB modules
References
EJB references
EJB JNDI names for beans
Sequence grouping for container-managed persistence
Setting the run time for CMP sequence groups
Related concepts
EJB modules
Related tasks
Assembling applications
Related information
Start the Application Server Toolkit assembly tool
Configure the Application Server Toolkit assembly tool
Importing EJB JAR files
Creating EJB projects