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WebSphere extensions to the Enterprise JavaBeans specification

 

This article outlines extensions to the EJB specification that IBM provides with WAS.

 

Inheritance in enterprise beans

In the Java language, inheritance is the creation of a new class from an existing class or a new interface from an existing interface. This product supports two forms of inheritance: standard class inheritance and EJB inheritance.

In standard class inheritance, the home interface, remote interface, or enterprise bean class inherits properties and methods from base classes that are not themselves enterprise bean classes or interfaces.

By contrast in enterprise bean inheritance, an enterprise bean inherits properties (such as container-managed persistence (CMP) fields and container-managed relationship (CMR) fields), methods, and method-level control descriptor attributes from another enterprise bean.

For more information, see the documentation for the IBM Rational Application Developer product.

 

Optimistic concurrency control for container-managed persistence

This product supports optimistic concurrency control of data access. See Concurrency control for more information.

 

Access intents for EJB persistence

WAS supports the application of named data-access policies.

 

Sequence grouping for container-managed persistence

By designating CMP sequence groups for entity beans, you can prevent certain types of database-related exceptions from occurring during the run time of your EJB application. Within each group you specify the order in which the beans update your relational database tables. See Setting the run time for CMP sequence groups for instructions.

 

Performance enhancements

Through the lifetime-in-cache settings, WAS provides a way for you to improve performance for beans that are only occasionally updated. For more information, see "Entity bean assembly settings."

Some enterprise beans created with the IBM Rational Application Developer product can utilize read-ahead for loading a bean and its related beans in a single database operation. An entire object graph or any part of the graph can be preloaded by configuring a finder method to use read-ahead.

 

Assembly and deployment extensions

WAS supports IBM extensions of assembly and deployment options.


 

Related concepts


Concurrency control
Access intent policies
Read-ahead hints
Sequence grouping for container-managed persistence

 

Related tasks


Developing enterprise beans

 

Reference topic