- #Glassfish server netbeans target full
- #Glassfish server netbeans target software
- #Glassfish server netbeans target code
NetBeans 6.8 also improves support for the JavaFX internet application platform, the JSF 2.0 framework for building web-based user interfaces, the Java Persistence 2.0 framework, Enterprise Java Beans 3.1 and RESTful web services, among other features. Version 6.8 of the NetBeans integrated development environment (IDE) supports the new Java EE 6 elements and introduces some new developer features, including support for PHP 5.3, tighter integration with Project Kenai - a collaborative environment for hosting open source projects - and better C/C++ profiling, Sun said. The enterprise version is priced starting at $999 (£612) per server, Sun said. The server supports languages including JRuby, Python and PHP and can be linked with. The company's internal benchmarks found GlassFish Enterprise Server v3 startup times were more than twice as fast as v2, or nearly three times as fast when using the Web Profile.
#Glassfish server netbeans target code
The use of OSGi means an application can load only the modules needed, helping to keep the code footprint as small as possible, thus reducing startup time and resource utilisation, Sun said. The OSGi framework is a module system for Java that implements a complete and dynamic component model.
It is based on a modular OSGi runtime, and works with the Eclipse Equinox and Apache Felix implementations of OSGi. The new GlassFish is the first application server to support Java EE 6, along with the Java EE 6 Web Profile, Sun noted. GlassFish is Sun's reference implementation of Java in the form of an application server, and Sun on Thursday released version 3 of both the commercial GlassFish Enterprise Server and its open-source counterpart, termed simply GlassFish v3. Other new features include version 3.1 of Enterprise Java Beans (EJB), version 2.0 of JavaServer Faces (JSF) and version 3.0 of the specification for servlets, which are Java programming language objects that dynamically process requests and construct responses. The JCP is expected to define more profiles in the future, according to the company.
#Glassfish server netbeans target full
One example is the Web Profile, designed specifically for web applications and intended to allow the quick construction of applications without the need to build and manage a full set of enterprise features, Sun said. The main introduction with the new specification, released on Thursday, is Profiles, which target the platform at specific application scenarios, Sun said.
#Glassfish server netbeans target software
Java, Sun's widely used software platform, is developed through the Java Community Process (JCP), which involves input from players including large organisations such as Google, HP and IBM, as well as open source groups such as Apache and Eclipse. Sun has released version 6 of the Java Platform Enterprise Edition (Java EE), along with version 3 of the GlassFish application server and the open source NetBeans 6.8 development environment, both supporting the new version of Java.