Our company has been using Stronghold / Jserv with Weblogic's Tengah as an EJB server for close to a year. Any EJB server should be easy to "integrate" with Jserv... Once you have set up your EJB server, the servlet-EJB interaction should work as follows: 1) Servlet is executed 2) Servlet gets a connection to the EJB server 3) Servlet gets a handle to a JNDI tree (I am unsure if all EJB servers use a JNDI tree) 4) Servlet looks up the EJB container/home on the JNDI tree and gets a handle to it 5) Servlet gets EJBObject from EJB home 6) Servlet executes methods on the EJBObject 7) Servlet release EJBObject back into the EJB home "pool" 8) (optional) Sip coffee... -----Original Message----- From: Randall J. Parr [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, February 18, 1999 3:06 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Foreman, Sean Subject: EJB? I would like to beginning working with Enterprise Java Beans. What is the best way, if any, to do this in the Apache / JServ environment? I would prefer to avoid the proprietary solutions such as Oracle Application Server, etc. I have downloaded, but not yet set up, the EJBHome (ejbhome.com) server. Is it possible/reasonable to integrate this into the Apache/JServ environment. Randall J. Parr Temporal Arts ---------------------------------------------------------------- To subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives and Other: <http://www.working-dogs.com/> Problems?: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------------------------------------------- To subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Archives and Other: <http://www.working-dogs.com/> Problems?: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
