This topic provides an overview of the high-level tasks for using ActivitySessions in J2EE applications.
The following high level tasks illustrate how to use an ActivitySession in a J2EE application:
In this scenario, the enterprise beans used by the application have an Activation policy of ActivitySession and a local transaction containment policy with a boundary of ActivitySession and resolution-control of ContainerAtBoundary. The synchronization of the EJB state data is synchronized, by the container, with the one-phase resource managers at ActivitySession completion and no application code is required to be aware of ActivitySession support.
In this scenario, the enterprise beans used by the application have an Activation policy of ActivitySession and a local transaction containment policy with a boundary of ActivitySession and resolution-control of Application. The application logic starts and ends the RMLTs, for example using the javax.resource.cci.LocalTransaction interface offered by a LocalTransaction Connector, but is not constrained to start and commit the LocalTransaction in the same method.
In this scenario, the enterprise beans used by the application client have an Activation policy of ActivitySession and a local transaction containment policy appropriate to the function of the enterprise bean. The J2EE client application can represent a period of user activity, for example a signon period, during which a number of interactions occur with one or more enterprise beans. If the J2EE client application begins an ActivitySession and invokes the enterprise beans within the scope of the UOW represented by the ActivitySession, then the enterprise bean instances are activated by the container on the ActivitySession boundary and remain in the active state until passivated by the container at the end of the ActivitySession. Workload affinity management based on the ActivitySession is a platform quality of service. Global transactions can begin and end within the ActivitySession, if they are wholly encapsulated by the ActivitySession and run serially. EJB instances activated at the ActivitySession boundary remain active across the serial global transactions.
The Web container manages ActivitySessions based on deployment descriptor attributes associated with the Web application module.