Home    |    Instructor-led Training    |    Self-Paced Learning    |    Online Training          Email Us   Phone :
Contact Us   -   About Us   -   Clients    
Loading
Courses
A+
ADA
Adobe
AJAX
Android
Apache
AutoCAD
Business Analysis
Business Objects
Business Skills and Technology
C++ programming
Cisco
Citrix
Cloud Computing
COBOL
Cognos
ColdFusion
COM/COM+
CORBA
Corel
Crystal Reports
Datawarehousing
DB2
Desktop Application Software
DNS
Embedded Systems
Enterprise Architecture
Google Web Toolkit (GWT)
IPhone
ITIL
Java
JBoss
LDAP
Leadership Development
Legato
Lotus
Macintosh
Mainframe programming
Microsoft technologies
MS Access
MultiMedia and design
.NET
Network+
New Manager Development
Object oriented analysis and design
OpenVMS
Oracle
Perl
PHP
PowerBuilder
Professional Development
Professional Soft Skills Workshops
Project Management
Quality Center/Quick Test
Rational
Sales Performance
SAP
SAS
Security
SharePoint
SOA
Software Engineering
Software quality and testing
SQL Server
Sybase
Telecommunications
Tivoli
Tomcat
Unix/Linux/Solaris/AIX/
HP-UX
Visual Basic
Visual Foxpro
VMware
Web 2.0
Web Development
WebLogic
WebSphere
Websphere MQ (MQSeries)
Windows programming
XML
XML Web Services
Spring-MVC Web Applications
Overview

This course enables the experienced Java developer to use the Spring application framework to manage objects in a lightweight "IoC" (inversion-of-control) container; to create simple and complex web applications; and to manage persistent objects using Spring's support for DAOs and transaction control. Spring is a far-reaching framework that aims to facilitate all sorts of Java development, including every level of multi-tier distributed systems. Here we focus on the Core and Web/MVC modules, with a lighter (but by no means dismissive) touch on persistence through DAO and ORM modules.

The Core module gives the developer declarative control over object creation and assembly; this is useful for any tier of any Java application. So is Spring's validation framework, and so we study these things in a mix of standalone (Java SE) applications and web applications. Then students build web applications that use the Spring MVC framework to rationalize their designs into coherent request/response cycles. They use Spring command objects to manage HTML forms and their data, and connect these to the validation framework. We connect our applications to persistent stores and study the DAO and ORM modules, to better understand JDBC and JPA persistence models and declarative transaction control.

Prerequisites

  • Servlets programming.
  • JSP.
Learning Objectives
  • Build a web application as a Spring DispatcherServlet and associated application context, with declared beans acting as controllers, command objects, and view resolvers
  • Build and manage HTML forms with Spring command objects and custom tags
  • Use Spring interceptors to implement horizontal features in the web application
  • Connect business objects to persistent stores using Spring's DAO and ORM modules
Course Duration

5 Days

Course outline

IDE Support: SpringIDE 2.2
  • In addition to the primary lab files, an optional overlay is available that adds support for SpringIDE 2.2. Students can code, build, deploy, and test all exercises from within Eclipse, and take advantage of Eclipse WTP's built-in editors and wizards for web applications, XML files, JSPs, and more. An appendix in the coursebook introduces SpringIDE features. See also our orientation and please be advised that this is an optional feature; it is not a separate version of the course, and the course itself does not contain explicit Eclipse-specific lab instructions.
Chapter 1. Overview of Spring
  • Java EE: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly
  • Enter the Framework
  • Spring Value Proposition
  • The Spring Container
  • Web Applications
  • Persistence Support
  • Aspect-Oriented Programming
  • The Java EE Module(s)
  • Integrating Other Frameworks
Chapter 2. The Container
  • JavaBeans, Reconsidered
  • The Factory Pattern
  • Inversion of Control
  • XML View: Declaring Beans
  • Java View: Using Beans
  • Singletons and Prototypes
Chapter 3. Instantiation and Configuration
  • Configuring Through Properties
  • Configuration Namespaces
  • The p: Notation
  • Bean (Configuration) Inheritance
  • Configuring Through Constructors
  • Bean Post-Processors
  • Lifecycle Hooks
  • Integrating Existing Factory Code
Chapter 4. Dependency Injection
  • Complex Systems
  • Assembling Object Graphs
  • Dependency Injection
  • Single and Multiple Relationships
  • The Utility Schema
  • Bean Aliases
  • Inner Beans
  • Autowiring
  • Auto-Detecting Beans
  • @Autowired Properties
  • Best Practices with Spring 2.5 Annotations
Chapter 5. Assembling Object Models
  • Collections and Maps
  • Support for Generics
  • The Spring Utility Schema (util:)
  • Autowiring to Multiple Beans
  • Order of Instantiation
  • Bean Factory vs. Application Context
Chapter 6. Validation
  • Validators
  • The Errors Object
  • ValidationUtils
  • Error Messages and Localization
  • Nested Property Paths

Module 2. Web Applications

Chapter 1. The Web Module
  • Servlets and JSPs: What's Missing
  • The MVC Pattern
  • The Front Controller Pattern
  • DispatcherServlet
  • A Request/Response Cycle
  • The Strategy Pattern
  • JavaBeans as Web Components
  • Web Application Contexts
  • Handler Mappings
  • "Creating" a Model
  • View Resolvers
Chapter 2. Customizing Control Flow
  • HandlerMapping Options
  • ViewResolver Options
  • Chaining View Resolvers
  • Triggering Redirects
Chapter 3. Controllers and Commands
  • Working with Forms
  • Command Objects
  • The Template Method Pattern
  • Command Controllers
  • Data Binding
  • MultiActionController
  • Scope and Granularity of Command Objects
  • Auto-Detecting @Controllers
  • The @RequestMapping Annotation
Chapter 4. Binding and Validation
  • Property Editors
  • Custom Property Editors
  • Registrars
  • Validating Form Input
Chapter 5. Form Controllers
  • Form Controllers
  • AbstractFormController
  • SimpleFormController
  • Spring Custom Tags
  • <form:form> and Friends
  • <form:errors>
  • Reporting Errors
  • @RequestMapping for Form Controllers
  • @RequestMapping for Multi-Action Controllers
  • Other Handler Annotations
  • Controller vs. @Controller
Chapter 6. Refining the Handling Cycle
  • The Intercepting Filter Pattern
  • Exception Handling
  • Interceptors
  • The Decorator Pattern
  • Context and Lifecycle
  • Awareness Interfaces
  • Support and Utility Classes
  • "Death By XML"

Module 3. Persistence

Chapter 1. Templates and DAOs
  • The DAO Pattern
  • The DaoSupport Hierarchy
  • The DataAccessException Hierarchy
  • JDBC DAOs
  • JdbcTemplate and RowMapper
Chapter 2. Working with JPA
  • Object/Relational Mapping
  • The Java Persistence API
  • Blending Spring and JPA
  • Entity Manager Factories
  • Configuration Issues
Chapter 3. Transactions
  • Transaction Managers
  • Transaction Advice
  • AOP vs. Annotations
  • JDBC Transaction Manager
  • JPA Transaction Manager
Appendix A. Spring IDE
  • Installing Spring IDE
  • Naviation Features
  • Auto-Completes
  • Validation
  • Support for Spring WebFlow
Appendix B. Learning Resources

System Requirements

Hardware Requirements (Minimum)
  • 1.0 GHz, 256 meg RAM, 500 meg disk space.
Hardware Requirements (Recommended)
  • 1.5 GHz, 512 meg RAM, 1 gig disk space.
Operating System
  • Tested on Windows XP Professional. Course software should be viable on all systems which support a J2SE 5.0 JDK.
Network and Security
  • Limited privileges required
Software Requirements
  • All free downloadable tools.

Contact Information
WINTRAC INC. - the one stop shopping center for IT training.
16523 S.W. McGwire Ct. Beaverton OR -97007
Phone: (503) 259-0312
Fax: 707-598-2268
Email: sales@wintrac.com

Send mail to webmaster@wintrac.com with questions or comments about this web site.
Copyright © 2011 Wintrac Inc.