InfoQ

Presentation

Recorded at:
Recorded at

Configuring the Spring Container

Posted by Rod Johnson on May 29, 2008 03:00 PM

Community
Java
Topics
Web Frameworks ,
Open Source
Tags
QCon ,
Annotations ,
Spring ,
QCon San Francisco 2007 ,
Spring JavaConfig
Summary
In this presentation from QCon San Francisco 2007, Rod Johnson discusses the Spring Framework. Topics covered include the philosophy behind Spring, configuring the Spring container, XML configuration, new XML configuration namespaces, Annotation-based configuration, automatic component annotation scanning, Spring JavaConfig, mixing configuration types, and Spring 2.5 new features.

Bio
Rod is the father of Spring. The Spring Framework began in February 2003, based on the Interface21 framework published with Rod's best-selling Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development. Rod is one of the world's leading authorities on Java and J2EE development. He is a best-selling author, experienced consultant, and open source developer, as well as a popular conference speaker.

About the conference
QCon is a conference that is organized by the community, for the community.The result is a high quality conference experience where a tremendous amount of attention and investment has gone into having the best content on the most important topics presented by the leaders in our community.QCon is designed with the technical depth and enterprise focus of interest to technical team leads, architects, and project managers.

1 comment

Reply

Spring JavaConfig by Chris Beams Posted May 30, 2008 12:25 PM
  1. Back to top

    Spring JavaConfig

    May 30, 2008 12:25 PM by Chris Beams

    For those interested in Rod's section on Spring JavaConfig (45:30-1:00:30), a number of items mentioned in the presentation have since been updated. Take a look at What's new in M3 for details, and also stay tuned for the forthcoming M4 release.

Educational Content

JRuby: The Pain of Bringing an Off-Platform Dynamic Language to the JVM

Charles Nutter discusses bringing JRuby to the JVM, why Ruby is hard to implement, JIT compilation, precompilation, core Ruby implementation, Java library access, library challenges and future plans.

Performance Anti-Patterns in Database-Driven Applications

Alois Reitbauer specifies several architectural anti-patterns that one should stay away from and which can downgrade an application’s performance.

Making TDD Stick: Problems and Solutions for Adopters

Teams in large organizations still struggle to adopt TDD. In this article Mark Levison shares problems he uncovered when he surveyed teams, and his own strategy to introduce TDD into an organization.

Testing is Overrated

In this talk from RubyFringe, Luke Francl asks: is developer-driven testing really the best way to find software defects? Or is the emphasis on testing and test coverage barking up the wrong tree?

VM Optimizations for Language Designers

John Pampuch discusses the HotSpot compiler, the history of Java performance, HotSpot development philosophies and challenges, optimization, JVM library improvements, and tips for better performance.

Keith Braithwaite, an Agile Skeptic

In this interview, Keith Braithwaite, an Agile developer, consultant and trainer, says that we should show a good deal of skepticism towards today’s Agile practice.

Workflow Orchestration Using Spring AOP and AspectJ

This article demonstrates how to build and orchestrate highly configurable and extensible yet light-weight embedded process flow using AOP techniques with Spring AOP and Aspect J.

Embrace Uncertainty

Jeff Patton explains why one needs to embrace uncertainty in order to succeed with his/her Agile project and how to avoid some of the common mistakes leading to project failure.