December 2017
Intermediate to advanced
372 pages
8h 46m
English
Sometimes it is useful to have some processing done asynchronously, that is, invoking a method call and returning control immediately to the client, without having the client wait for the method to finish.
In earlier versions of Java EE, the only way to invoke EJB methods asynchronously was to use message-driven beans (discussed in the next section). Although message-driven beans are fairly easy to write, they do require some configuration, such as setting up JMS message queues or topics, before they can be used.
EJB 3.1 introduced the @Asynchronous annotation, which can be used to mark a method in a session bean as asynchronous. When an EJB client invokes an asynchronous method, control immediately goes back to ...