Figure 13-5 Adding the wasStartupPriority environment property to the Startup Bean
13.6 Runtime environment
This section describes how Startup Bean service behaves from the runtime point
of view.
Startup service runtime flow
The following steps represent the different states in the life cycle of a Startup
Bean. A diagram is shown in Figure 13-6 on page 389.
1.Application startup
After the application’s EAR is loaded, the service looks for all of the Startup
Beans and finds them using the home interface. It then checks whether the
property wasStartupPriority is defined for the startup EJB in the Deployment
Descriptor ...
Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month, and much more.
O’Reilly covers everything we've got, with content to help us build a world-class technology community, upgrade the capabilities and competencies of our teams, and improve overall team performance as well as their engagement.
Julian F.
Head of Cybersecurity
I wanted to learn C and C++, but it didn't click for me until I picked up an O'Reilly book. When I went on the O’Reilly platform, I was astonished to find all the books there, plus live events and sandboxes so you could play around with the technology.
Addison B.
Field Engineer
I’ve been on the O’Reilly platform for more than eight years. I use a couple of learning platforms, but I'm on O'Reilly more than anybody else. When you're there, you start learning. I'm never disappointed.
Amir M.
Data Platform Tech Lead
I'm always learning. So when I got on to O'Reilly, I was like a kid in a candy store. There are playlists. There are answers. There's on-demand training. It's worth its weight in gold, in terms of what it allows me to do.