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!! "Web 2.0 Pack, GlassFish v3 and other cool stuff" Session
!! "GlassFish v3, Identity Services with OpenDS and OpenSSO, and Cool stuff" Session
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In this session, we'll take a look at the ongoing work for the Sun Web Developer Pack (Sun WDP) for Web 2.0 development with RESTful Web Services using AJAX, JavaScript, ATOM, and more. This pack is available today from [http://developers.sun.com/web/swdp/|http://developers.sun.com/web/swdp/]. This pack has both runtime and tooling technologies.
Project jMaki is a lightweight, client/server framework for creating JavaScript-centric Web 2.0 applications. It integrates a set of existing components from Dojo, Scriptaculous, Yahoo!, Google or others but also lets you write your own components. You can use jMaki with PHP, Portlets, Facelets, Java, and JavaScript. Project Phobos is a lightweight, scripting-friendly web application environment that runs on the Java platform. It's current focus is on JavaScript and provides a save/reload development paradigm. Its tooling includes a Phobos-in-the-IDE integration as well as a server-side JavaScript debugger.
The RESTful Web Services API is work in progress to provide a POJO, annotation-driven programing model with HTTP request dispatching in a REST architectural style. WADL (Web Application Description Language) provides a machine processable description of HTTP-based web applications somewhat the equivalent to WSDL in the SOAP Web Services paradigm. The ROME API is an open source set of ATOM/RSS Java utilities that make it easy to work in Java for both generation and consumption of most syndication formats.
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Other surprisingly cool technologies and demos yet to be confirmed.
Identity Services in the GlassFish project are provided by OpenSSO (access and federation services) and OpenDS (100% Java LDAP server). In this part of the session we'll specifically show OpenSSO for OpenID-based authentication to a blog feed that uses Atom for syndication and OpenDS as a data store running on Glassfish. We believe you'll find this unconventional use of OpenDS for blog content leveraging the ATOM standard for syndication to be an innovative web 2.0 use case and to be quite different from a lot of the Flickr and Google maps demos that you run in to at shows.
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This page (revision-4) was last changed on 02-May-07 22:20 PM, -0700 by Alexis Moussine-Pouckhine