Java-Business-Application/C2/Creating-a-Java-web-project/English-timed

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Time
Narration
00.00 Welcome to the spoken-tutorial on Creating a Java Web Project.
00.06 In this tutorial we will learn :
00.09 To create a Java Web Project
00.12 About Deployment Descriptor
00.15 About web.xml file
00.19 Here we are using
00.20 Ubuntu Version 12.04
00.23 Netbeans IDE 7.3
00.26 JDK 1.7
00.28 Firefox web-browser 21.0
00.32 You can use any web-browser of your choice
00.35 To follow this tutorial you must have knowledge of
00.39 Core Java using Netbeans IDE and
00.42 HTML
00.44 If not, for relevant tutorials please visit our website.
00.50 Now, let us see how to create a simple Java Web Project using Netbeans IDE.


00.56 For this we will switch to Netbeans IDE.
01.01 On the top left corner of the IDE, Click on File and click on New Project.
01.08 A New Project window opens up.
01.12 From the categories, choose Java Web and from the Projects choose Web Application.
01.18 Then click on Next.
01.20 On the next window that opens.
01.23 Type the Project Name as MyFirstProject.
01.27 Leave the Project location and project folder as it is


01.31 Then, Click on Next.
01.35 Select GlassFish server as the Server.
01.39 Note that Context Path here is MyFirstProject, this is the same name as our Project.
01.47 We will learn about this in detail.
01.50 Now, Click on Next and then click on Finish.
01.55 Click on the Projects tab,
01.58 We can see there are several nodes here and a web application name My First Project has been created
02.08 Now, We are not concerned about all of these nodes right now.
02.11 But let me click and show you, what it contains.
02.16 Now let us learn about what is known as Deployment Descriptor.
02.21 A web application’s deployment descriptor describes:
02.25 the classes, resources and configuration of the application and
02.31 how the web server uses them to serve web requests
02.37 The web server receives a request for the application.
02.42 It uses deployment descriptor to map the URL of the request.
02.48 It maps the URL to the code that has to handle the request.
02.52 The deployment descriptor is a file named web.xml.
02.57 Now let us come back to the IDE
03.00 We are not able to find the web.xml file from the nodes available here.
03.07 To locate it, at the top left of the IDE, click on File, and then click on New File.
03.16 From the Categories, choose Web.
03.19 And From the File Types, choose Standard Deployment Descriptor(web.xml).
03.25 Then click on Next.
03.27 And Click on Finish.
03.30 Click on the Files tab on the left hand side of the IDE.
03.34 Note that web.xml is visible under the WEB-INF folder of the Web node.
03.42 You can see the Source code now.
03.46 We have an xml header here.
03.50 We also have a web-app node.
03.53 Now, we shall try running the application.
03.57 To do so, right click on MyFirstProject.
04.02 Click on Clean and Build.
04.04 This will delete any previously compiled files and other build outputs.
04.10 It will also recompile the application.
04.14 Again, right click on MyFirstProject and then click on Run.
04.20 So the server is up and running and it has deploy My first Project
04.27 A browser windows open up and displays Hello World
04.32 This is because when we run the project, the web application renders the page shown.
04.39 Now, let’s have a look at the URL here that rendered the page.
04.44 It is localhost colon 8080 slash MyFirstProject.


04.49 So when we run MyFirstProject by default we get a JSP page that says HelloWorld!
04.57 Now, let us come back to our IDE.
05.00 We can see that under the WEB-INF folder there is index dot jsp.
05.07 Double click on index.jsp.
05.10 We can see the source code here.
05.12 It is a simple JSP page with HTML tags only.
05.17 It has the title JSP Page and it has the heading Hello World


05.24 The server provides index.jsp by default when we run the web application.
05.30 Recall that we had come across something called ContextPath earlier.
05.36 We had set the ContextPath as MyFirstProject itself.
05.41 Now, come back to the browser
05.44 Type the URL as localhost colon 8080. and press Enter


05.50 We see that the home page of Glassfish server is displayed.
05.56 Here 8080 is the default course at which the server runs on the machine.
06.01 This Glassfish server instance may have many applications running on it.
06.08 To access a particular application type that application name in the URL.
06.15 So,we must type the specific application that has been deployed on that instance.
06.21 So we will type slash MyFirstProject .
06.26 And Press Enter.
06.27 So we see Hello World displayed
06.31 Let us summarize.
06.32 In this tutorial we have learnt
06.35 To create a simple Java Web project
06.38 Execute the web project
06.41 and about the web.xml file
06.44 To know more about this spoken tutorial project
06.46 Watch the video available at the following link
06.50 It summarizes the Spoken Tutorial project


06.54 If you do not have good bandwidth, you can download and watch it
06.58 The Spoken Tutorial Project Team
07.00 Conducts workshops using spoken tutorials
07.04 Gives certificates for those who pass an online test
07.07 For more details, please write to contact at spoken hyphen tutorial dot org
07.13 Spoken Tutorial Project is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project
07.17 It is supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT, MHRD, Government of India
07.23 More information on this Mission is available at
07.27 http://spoken-tutorial.org/NMEICT- Intro
07.34 The Library Management System has been contributed by a leading software MNC, through their Corporate Social Responsibility program.
07.44 They have also validated the content for this spoken tutorial.
07.48 This is Arya Ratish from IIT Bombay signing off.

Thank you for joining.

Contributors and Content Editors

PoojaMoolya, Pratik kamble, Sandhya.np14