Skip to main content


developerWorks  >  Lotus | WebSphere | Sample IT projects | Java technology  >

Building a J2EE application with Domino and WebSphere

developerWorks

Level: Advanced

David Gallardo (david@gallardo.org), Software consultant

24 Jul 2002

Register now or sign in using your IBM ID and password.

WebSphere Application Server and Lotus Domino are both platforms for building distributed, server-based applications. They have different strengths: Application Server provides a complete J2EE platform while Domino provides the unique ability to build collaborative applications. After briefly surveying the various possible ways the two can work together using Java, the tutorial concentrates on how Domino can be used in an Application Server environment using standard multi-tier J2EE design. It pays special attention to the issue of separating presentation logic from business logic and how Domino can participate in the Model-View-Controller (MVC) design using Java ServerPages (JSP), Java servlets, and Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB).

Prerequisites

This tutorial is for developers who want to use Domino's collaborative features in the context of a standard J2EE environment. It covers essential setup and configuration issues but concentrates on how to design and code with the Domino classes in JSPs, servlets, and EJBs. Familiarity with WebSphere Application Server, Domino and Java technology are recommended.


System requirements

To follow the examples, Application Server and Domino installations are required on either the same or separate machines. Links to free trial downloads of both products are provided in the tutorial.



Duration

Under one hour


Formats

html, pdf


Share this....

digg Digg this story del.icio.us del.icio.us Slashdot Slashdot it!


Back to top


Document options

Document options requiring JavaScript are not displayed


My developerWorks needs you!

Connect to your technical community