TL;DR
EJB - Enterprise Java Beans is a server-side components written in Java programming language that encapsulate business logic of an application.
Types of EJBs: Session, Entity, Message-Driven
Properties of EJBs:
Types of EJBs: Session, Entity, Message-Driven
Details:
Properties of EJBs:
- EJB has distributable and deployable business logic to clients
- EJB is reusable across application servers
- EJB executed within container that provides management and control services
EJB Modules contain: class files for enterprise beans, and EJB DD (Deployment Descriptors). Such modules are packed as JAR files.
There are three types of EJBs:
- Session
- Entity
- Message-driven (v 2.0)
Session EJB is an object, non-persistent, that lives only between client and EJB. If the user fails to remove the session EJB, it will be removed after a period of time. In order to share the sessions between the clients, we have two types of session EJBs:
- Stateful - addressed for particular client
- Stateless - shared among all the clients
Entity EJBs (deprecated)
Entity EJBs are for persistent objects. These are mainly used for mapping DBs with applications.
Its persistence is delegated to the EJB container or is managed on its own.
In EJB 3.0, entity beans were superseded by the Java Persistence API (which was subsequently completely separated to its own spec as of EJB 3.1). Entity Beans have been marked as a candidate forpruning as of Java EE 6 [1][2] and are therefore considered a deprecated technology.Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entity_Bean