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Frank Jennings, David Salter

"Building SOA-Based Composite Applications Using NetBeans IDE 6"

When new data is identified by the component,
this data can be routed into the JBI framework as a standard WSDL message to
other components. The JDBC Binding Component can connect to any database
that conforms to the JDBC 3.0 specification and can be accessed via a JNDI
datasource lookup.
The JDBC Binding Component is not supplied with the NetBeans 5.5 Enterprise Pack
or with the NetBeans 6.0 SOA pack, and must be downloaded separately from the
Open ESB project (http://open-esb.dev.java.net/Downloads.html). Similarly,
WSDL editor support can be downloaded from the open ESB project website. To
fully support the JDBC Binding Component, the following files must be downloaded:
jdbcbc.jar: The actual JDBC binding component.
org-netbeans-modules-wsdlextensions-jdbc.nbm: NetBeans Module
support allowing JDBC binding editing for WSDL files.
These additional components can be installed into NetBeans in the same way we
installed the SMTP binding component and WSDL support earlier in this chapter.
After installing the WSDL extensions for the JDBC Binding Component, you will
find that visual editing is provided within NetBeans for both consumer and provider
instances. The properties of the WSDL binding can be seen in the following figure:
??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???
Chapter 4
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The WSDL editor provides support for editing the different properties that can be
specified for the binding component.


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