Migrating traditional Java EE Applications to mobile
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Transcript of Migrating traditional Java EE Applications to mobile
Migrating traditional Java EE applications to mobileSerge PagopSr. Channel MW Solution Architect, Red [email protected]
Burr SutterProduct Management Director, Red [email protected]
2014-04-16
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Agenda•Migration motivations
•Traditional Java (2) EE technologies usage
•Migration approaches
•Migration of layers
•Modernize to Java EE 6 technologies – Plan for mobile
•REST fits well with the mobile strategy
•Which Mobile application model to choose?
•Mobile Gateway architecture – Mobile + JBoss EAP Runtime
•Demo and Q&A
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Motivations
•Innovation, integration, cost reduction, modernization
•Market Demand, Time to market, Go-To Market strategy
•Complexity, performance, stability, security
•Vendor lock-in, lack of functionalities, standards compliance
•Multi-tenancy, Ready for the Cloud
•Penetrate New Market Segment
•Increase developer productivity
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Motivations – MOBILE VS. DESKTOP - Projection
Source: visual.ly
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Traditional Java (2) EE technologies usageCurrent situation
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Traditional Java (2) EE technologies usageCurrent situation
•Persistence layer
•Standards are JDBC, CMP, BMP, JPA, JDO
•Non-Standards are Hibernate, iBatis, ...
•Business layer
•Standards are Enterprise JavaBeans 2.x / 3.0
•Non-Standards are Spring Framework, JBoss Seam, Google Guice, ...
•Communication layer
•Standards are JAX-WS, JAX-RPC, RMI
•Non-Standards are legacy Web Service Frameworks
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Traditional Java (2) EE technologies usage – Cont.Current situation
•Presentation layer
•Standards are JSP+Servlets, JSF 1.2/2.0
•Non-Standards are: Struts, Tapestry, GWT, Wicket, ...
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Migration approaches
•Complete migration
•Layer-oriented migration
•Module-oriented migration
First Action Item: Migration Assessment
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Migration assessment
•Looks at all facets of applications and infrastructure
•Helps to understand the risks, savings, and anticipated costs
•Enables stakeholders to scope the engineering time and effort required to migrate applications
● Free open source tool for Java EE migration assessment● Analyzes code and generates report with known issues● Provides an estimate of effort required to make changes● Offers suggestions for replacement code● Highlights vendor specific implementations
10,000 Foot View Reporthttp://www.jboss.org/migration
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Complete migration – Big Bang style
•Unique new development
•Migration of the entire application in a new system
•High Complexity because of new development
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Layer-oriented migration
•Based on layer oriented approach: each layer needs a specific handling
•Complexity is defined through
•Multiple migration with associated test and acceptance processes
•Migration of a layer affects overlying layers
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Module-oriented migration
•Defined as Migration On Demand
•Migration of technical modules will be taken in consideration
•Complexity is defined through
•A mix of technologies of new and old ones
•Delimitation of technical modules
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Persistence layer migration
Current-Situation Future-SituationSQL/JDBC Data Access JPA 2.0 Challenges● SQL Queries● DAO / Repository Pattern● Providing Value Objects
● Domain model introduction with relationship● Detached entity objects handling● Adaption of entity objects with unique identity
EJB 2.x Data Access JPA 2.0 Challenges● CMP 2.x - Entity classes and XML descriptors● BMP 2.x - CRUD callback methods
● Domain model introduction with relationship● Detached entity objects handling● Adaption of entity objects with unique identity● Data Access Objects introduction
Hibernate Data Access JPA 2.0 Challenges● O/R Mapping via XML● Using Hibernate APIs
● No challenges (Hibernate is JPA provider in JBoss EAP)● May be some challenges with proprietary Hibernate features
JDO Data Access JPA 2.0 Challenges● Domain model approach similar to JPA (based on annotation or configuration)
● JDO and JPA have similarities
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Business layer migrationCurrent-Situation Future-SituationEJB 2.x components EJB 3.1 Challenges● Stateless and Stateful Session Beans● EJB 2.x Pattern and communication
● No challenges● Eliminate J2EE Pattern● Eliminate proprietary infrastructure code
EJB 2.x components CDI 1.0 Challenges● Stateless and Stateful Session Beans● EJB 2.x Pattern and communication
● No challenges● Eliminate J2EE Pattern● Eliminate proprietary infrastructure code
Spring – lightweight DI Framework CDI 1.0 Challenges● Based on XML or annotation● Strong integration support (JDBC template, Tx template, JMS template, Mail template)
● Supports other annotations (@Resource, @Inject)
● No challenges● May be some challenges with Spring Add-On● Different semantics in the field of scopes
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Communication layer migration
Future-Situation – Introduction of a new communication interface JAX-RS - Challenges●New fresh start ●Provide distinct URI for each resource you wish to expose●Expose REST services by injecting EJBs into JAX-RS annotated POJOs ●Use nouns in the URIs●Use links in your responses●Make service stateless●Define what actions should be able to perform on each resource●Map the actions to an appropriate HTTP verbs (@DELETE, @GET, @POST, @PUT, @HEAD)
●Use JSON via JAXB as interchange data format
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Presentation layer migration
Standard like JSP with Servlet or JSF 2.0/2.1 and non-standard web frameworks like Struts, Tapestry, GWT, … do not have a migration path in a mobile strategy
Client side needs a clean / fresh start
Mobile-First strategycreating pages, UI components that address the constraints of mobile, then progressively enhances the experience to other screen spaces, features, and more
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Modernize to Java EE 6 technologiesFuture situation to enable mobile capabilities
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REST fits well with mobile strategy
•REST is flexible and adequate for Client-Server communication
•Communication happens over HTTP using REST styles
•JSON over HTTP/HTTPs should be used for data-interchange
•Stateless, Cacheable, Lightweight, Scalable
•Using HTTP verbs (DELETE, GET, POST, PUT)
•Using Web technologies and security standards
•Fully supported in JBoss EAP (Java EE 6 compliant environment) by a JAX-RS implementation (RESTEasy)
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REST fits well with mobile strategySecuring endpoints - Possibilities
•JBoss EAP 6.2 – Basic Auth
•RealmUsersRoles with *-users.properties and *-roles.properties files
•Database login module - users and roles from a database system
•LDAP login module – users and roles from a LDAP server
•JBoss EAP 6.3 – PicketLink
• Identity Management (IDM)
Which Mobile application model to choose?
Mobile Web
<html><body><div id=”name”/><script src=”x.js”/></body></html>
Native Shell Native App
Native Code
Apple apple appleAndroid androidWindows windowsIOS ios iosJaveObjectve c
<html><body><div id=”name”/><script src=”x.js”/></body></html>
HTML5HTML5
Device Browser Apache Cordova Objective-C / Android JavaPros:
Instant DeploymentReuse of Web Talents
No App Stores
Cons:Limited Device Features
Limited Offline CapabilitiesNo Push
No App Stores
Pros:Cross-Platform
Native Device FeaturesPush
App Stores
Cons:HTML/JS-based UI
Non-native look & feelApp Stores
Pros:Limitless capability
Cons:Unique Codebases
Unique skill-setsAddressing multiple screen dimensions
App Stores
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Internet
DBDB
JAX-RSJAX-RS
UnifiedPush
Server
LDAPLDAP
Fuse or
FSW
Fuse or
FSW
Firewall
REST
APNS
GCMpush
notification
InternalSystem AInternal
System A
InternalSystem BInternal
System B
SalesForceSalesForce
SAPSAP
JBoss EnterpriseApplication
Platform
DBDB
MSSQLMSSQL
DB/2DB/2
OracleOracle
Mobile Gateway architectureMobile + JBoss EAP Server Runtime
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Demo Time!