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IBM CICS and Liberty: What You Need to Know

An IBM Redbooks publication

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Published on 15 January 2016, updated 15 March 2017

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ISBN-10: 0738441368
ISBN-13: 9780738441368
IBM Form #: SG24-8335-00


Authors: Hernan Cunico, Andreas Hümmer, Jonathan Lawrence, Shayla Robinson, Andre Schreiber, Inderpal Singh, Prabhat Srivastava, Phil Wakelin and Dan Zachary

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    Abstract

    This IBM® Redbooks® publication, intended for architects, application developers, and system programmers, describes how to design and implement Java web-based applications in an IBM CICS® Liberty JVM server. This book is based on IBM CICS Transaction Server V5.3 (CICS TS) using the embedded IBM WebSphere® Application Server Liberty V8.5.5 technology.

    Liberty is an asset to your organization, whether you intend to extend existing enterprise services hosted in CICS, or develop new web-based applications supporting new lines of business. Fundamentally, Liberty is a composable, dynamic profile of IBM WebSphere Application Server that enables you to provision Java EE technology on a feature-by-feature basis. Liberty can be provisioned with as little as the HTTP transport and a servlet web container, or with the entire Java EE 6 Web Profile feature set depending on your application requirements.

    This publication includes a Technology Essentials section for architects and application developers to help understand the underlying technology, an Up-and-Running section for system programmers implementing the Liberty JVM server for the first time, and a set of real-life application development scenarios.

    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1. Introduction

    Part 1. Technology essentials

    Chapter 2. Application development

    Chapter 3. Workload management

    Chapter 4. Security options

    Part 2. Up and running

    Chapter 5. Developing and deploying applications

    Chapter 6. Configuring a Liberty server in CICS

    Chapter 7. Configuring the web server plug-in

    Chapter 8. Implementing security options

    Part 3. Scenarios

    Chapter 9. Porting a web application

    Chapter 10. Creating an integration logic application

    Chapter 11. Creating a business logic application

    Part 4. Reference

    Chapter 12. Troubleshooting

     

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