Summary

At this point, you have knowledge of several client libraries that you can attach to your remote code when dealing with WebLogic, the concepts that involve creation and usage of JMS resources and how to actually create these components, post, and consume messages to a JMS queue, and the possibilities that the SAF client enables when you need to make a remote client more resilient to unexpected events such as network outages.

In the next chapter, we will explore some of the security-related features WebLogic Server gives us, such as using an LDAP server as a repository for user provisioning, authentication, and authorization.

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