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Posted to java-dev@axis.apache.org by he...@apache.org on 2004/09/04 17:43:53 UTC

cvs commit: ws-axis/contrib/ews/schema web-app_2_3.dtd ejb-jar_2_0.dtd

hemapani    2004/09/04 08:43:53

  Added:       contrib/ews/schema web-app_2_3.dtd ejb-jar_2_0.dtd
  Log:
  add J2EE1.3 DTD's for ejb-jar.xml and web.xml
  
  Revision  Changes    Path
  1.1                  ws-axis/contrib/ews/schema/web-app_2_3.dtd
  
  Index: web-app_2_3.dtd
  ===================================================================
  <!--
  Copyright (c) 2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
  901 San Antonio Road,
  Palo Alto, California 94303, U.S.A.
  All rights reserved.
  
  Sun Microsystems, Inc. has intellectual property rights relating to
  technology embodied in the product that is described in this document.
  In particular, and without limitation, these intellectual property
  rights may include one or more of the U.S. patents listed at
  http://www.sun.com/patents and one or more additional patents or
  pending patent applications in the U.S. and in other countries.
  
  This document and the product to which it pertains are distributed
  under licenses restricting their use, copying, distribution, and
  decompilation.  This document may be reproduced and distributed but may
  not be changed without prior written authorization of Sun and its
  licensors, if any.
  
  Third-party software, including font technology, is copyrighted and
  licensed from Sun suppliers.
  
  Sun,  Sun Microsystems,  the Sun logo,  Java,  JavaServer Pages,  Java
  Naming and Directory Interface,  JDBC,  JDK,  JavaMail and  and
  Enterprise JavaBeans are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun
  Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries.
  
  Federal Acquisitions: Commercial Software - Government Users Subject to
  Standard License Terms and Conditions.
  
  DOCUMENTATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
  CONDITIONS, REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR
  NON-INFRINGEMENT, ARE DISCLAIMED, EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT THAT SUCH
  DISCLAIMERS ARE HELD TO BE LEGALLY INVALID.
  
  
  _________________________________________________________________________
  
  Copyright (c) 2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
  901 San Antonio Road,
  Palo Alto, California 94303, E'tats-Unis.
  Tous droits re'serve's.
  
  Sun Microsystems, Inc. a les droits de proprie'te' intellectuels
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  licencie' par des fournisseurs de Sun.
  
  Sun,  Sun Microsystems,  le logo Sun,  Java,  JavaServer Pages,  Java
  Naming and Directory Interface,  JDBC,  JDK,  JavaMail et  and
  Enterprise JavaBeans sont des marques de fabrique ou des marques
  de'pose'es de Sun Microsystems, Inc. aux E'tats-Unis et dans d'autres
  pays.
  
  LA DOCUMENTATION EST FOURNIE "EN L'E'TAT" ET TOUTES AUTRES CONDITIONS,
  DECLARATIONS ET GARANTIES EXPRESSES OU TACITES SONT FORMELLEMENT
  EXCLUES, DANS LA MESURE AUTORISEE PAR LA LOI APPLICABLE, Y COMPRIS
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  L'APTITUDE A UNE UTILISATION PARTICULIERE OU A L'ABSENCE DE
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  -->
  
  <!--
  This is the XML DTD for the Servlet 2.3 deployment descriptor.
  All Servlet 2.3 deployment descriptors must include a DOCTYPE
  of the following form:
  
    <!DOCTYPE web-app PUBLIC
  	"-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Web Application 2.3//EN"
  	"http://java.sun.com/dtd/web-app_2_3.dtd">
  
  -->
  
  <!--
  The following conventions apply to all J2EE deployment descriptor
  elements unless indicated otherwise.
  
  - In elements that contain PCDATA, leading and trailing whitespace
    in the data may be ignored.
  
  - In elements whose value is an "enumerated type", the value is
    case sensitive.
  
  - In elements that specify a pathname to a file within the same
    JAR file, relative filenames (i.e., those not starting with "/")
    are considered relative to the root of the JAR file's namespace.
    Absolute filenames (i.e., those starting with "/") also specify
    names in the root of the JAR file's namespace.  In general, relative
    names are preferred.  The exception is .war files where absolute
    names are preferred for consistency with the servlet API.
  -->
  
  
  <!--
  The web-app element is the root of the deployment descriptor for
  a web application.
  -->
  <!ELEMENT web-app (icon?, display-name?, description?, distributable?,
  context-param*, filter*, filter-mapping*, listener*, servlet*,
  servlet-mapping*, session-config?, mime-mapping*, welcome-file-list?,
  error-page*, taglib*, resource-env-ref*, resource-ref*, security-constraint*,
  login-config?, security-role*, env-entry*, ejb-ref*,  ejb-local-ref*)>
  
  <!--
  The auth-constraint element indicates the user roles that should
  be permitted access to this resource collection. The role-name
  used here must either correspond to the role-name of one of the
  security-role elements defined for this web application, or be
  the specially reserved role-name "*" that is a compact syntax for
  indicating all roles in the web application. If both "*" and
  rolenames appear, the container interprets this as all roles.
  If no roles are defined, no user is allowed access to the portion of
  the web application described by the containing security-constraint.
  The container matches role names case sensitively when determining
  access.
  
  
  Used in: security-constraint
  -->
  <!ELEMENT auth-constraint (description?, role-name*)>
  
  <!--
  The auth-method element is used to configure the authentication
  mechanism for the web application. As a prerequisite to gaining access to any web resources which are protected by an authorization
  constraint, a user must have authenticated using the configured
  mechanism. Legal values for this element are "BASIC", "DIGEST",
  "FORM", or "CLIENT-CERT".
  
  Used in: login-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT auth-method (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The context-param element contains the declaration of a web
  application's servlet context initialization parameters.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT context-param (param-name, param-value, description?)>
  
  <!--
  The description element is used to provide text describing the parent
  element.  The description element should include any information that
  the web application war file producer wants to provide to the consumer of
  the web application war file (i.e., to the Deployer). Typically, the tools
  used by the web application war file consumer will display the description
  when processing the parent element that contains the description.
  
  Used in: auth-constraint, context-param, ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref,
  env-entry, filter, init-param, resource-env-ref, resource-ref, run-as,
  security-role, security-role-ref, servlet, user-data-constraint,
  web-app, web-resource-collection
  -->
  <!ELEMENT description (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The display-name element contains a short name that is intended to be
  displayed by tools.  The display name need not be unique.
  
  Used in: filter, security-constraint, servlet, web-app
  
  Example:
  
  <display-name>Employee Self Service</display-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT display-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The distributable element, by its presence in a web application
  deployment descriptor, indicates that this web application is
  programmed appropriately to be deployed into a distributed servlet
  container
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT distributable EMPTY>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-link element is used in the ejb-ref or ejb-local-ref
  elements to specify that an EJB reference is linked to an
  enterprise bean.
  
  The name in the ejb-link element is composed of a
  path name specifying the ejb-jar containing the referenced enterprise
  bean with the ejb-name of the target bean appended and separated from
  the path name by "#".  The path name is relative to the war file
  containing the web application that is referencing the enterprise bean.
  This allows multiple enterprise beans with the same ejb-name to be
  uniquely identified.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  
  Examples:
  
  	<ejb-link>EmployeeRecord</ejb-link>
  
  	<ejb-link>../products/product.jar#ProductEJB</ejb-link>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-link (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-local-ref element is used for the declaration of a reference to
  an enterprise bean's local home. The declaration consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- the EJB reference name used in the code of the web application
  	  that's referencing the enterprise bean
  	- the expected type of the referenced enterprise bean
  	- the expected local home and local interfaces of the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  	- optional ejb-link information, used to specify the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-local-ref (description?, ejb-ref-name, ejb-ref-type,
  		local-home, local, ejb-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref element is used for the declaration of a reference to
  an enterprise bean's home. The declaration consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- the EJB reference name used in the code of
  	  the web application that's referencing the enterprise bean
  	- the expected type of the referenced enterprise bean
  	- the expected home and remote interfaces of the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  	- optional ejb-link information, used to specify the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref (description?, ejb-ref-name, ejb-ref-type,
  		home, remote, ejb-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref-name element contains the name of an EJB reference. The
  EJB reference is an entry in the web application's environment and is
  relative to the java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique
  within the web application.
  
  It is recommended that name is prefixed with "ejb/".
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-ref-name>ejb/Payroll</ejb-ref-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref-type element contains the expected type of the
  referenced enterprise bean.
  
  The ejb-ref-type element must be one of the following:
  
  	<ejb-ref-type>Entity</ejb-ref-type>
  	<ejb-ref-type>Session</ejb-ref-type>
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry element contains the declaration of a web application's
  environment entry. The declaration consists of an optional
  description, the name of the environment entry, and an optional
  value.  If a value is not specified, one must be supplied
  during deployment.
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry (description?, env-entry-name, env-entry-value?,
  env-entry-type)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-name element contains the name of a web applications's
  environment entry.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique within a web application.
  
  Example:
  
  <env-entry-name>minAmount</env-entry-name>
  
  Used in: env-entry
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-type element contains the fully-qualified Java type of
  the environment entry value that is expected by the web application's
  code.
  
  The following are the legal values of env-entry-type:
  
  	java.lang.Boolean
  	java.lang.Byte
  	java.lang.Character
  	java.lang.String
  	java.lang.Short
  	java.lang.Integer
  	java.lang.Long
  	java.lang.Float
  	java.lang.Double
  
  Used in: env-entry
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-value element contains the value of a web application's
  environment entry. The value must be a String that is valid for the
  constructor of the specified type that takes a single String
  parameter, or for java.lang.Character, a single character.
  
  Example:
  
  <env-entry-value>100.00</env-entry-value>
  
  Used in: env-entry
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-value (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The error-code contains an HTTP error code, ex: 404
  
  Used in: error-page
  -->
  <!ELEMENT error-code (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The error-page element contains a mapping between an error code
  or exception type to the path of a resource in the web application
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT error-page ((error-code | exception-type), location)>
  
  <!--
  The exception type contains a fully qualified class name of a
  Java exception type.
  
  Used in: error-page
  -->
  <!ELEMENT exception-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The extension element contains a string describing an
  extension. example: "txt"
  
  Used in: mime-mapping
  -->
  <!ELEMENT extension (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  Declares a filter in the web application. The filter is mapped to
  either a servlet or a URL pattern in the filter-mapping element, using
  the filter-name value to reference. Filters can access the
  initialization parameters declared in the deployment descriptor at
  runtime via the FilterConfig interface.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT filter (icon?, filter-name, display-name?, description?,
  filter-class, init-param*)>
  
  <!--
  The fully qualified classname of the filter.
  
  Used in: filter
  -->
  <!ELEMENT filter-class (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  Declaration of the filter mappings in this web application. The
  container uses the filter-mapping declarations to decide which filters
  to apply to a request, and in what order. The container matches the
  request URI to a Servlet in the normal way. To determine which filters
  to apply it matches filter-mapping declarations either on servlet-name,
  or on url-pattern for each filter-mapping element, depending on which
  style is used. The order in which filters are invoked is the order in
  which filter-mapping declarations that match a request URI for a
  servlet appear in the list of filter-mapping elements.The filter-name
  value must be the value of the <filter-name> sub-elements of one of the
  <filter> declarations in the deployment descriptor.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT filter-mapping (filter-name, (url-pattern | servlet-name))>
  
  <!--
  The logical name of the filter. This name is used to map the filter.
  Each filter name is unique within the web application.
  
  Used in: filter, filter-mapping
  -->
  <!ELEMENT filter-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The form-error-page element defines the location in the web app
  where the error page that is displayed when login is not successful
  can be found. The path begins with a leading / and is interpreted
  relative to the root of the WAR.
  
  Used in: form-login-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT form-error-page (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The form-login-config element specifies the login and error pages
  that should be used in form based login. If form based authentication
  is not used, these elements are ignored.
  
  Used in: login-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT form-login-config (form-login-page, form-error-page)>
  
  <!--
  The form-login-page element defines the location in the web app
  where the page that can be used for login can be found. The path
  begins with a leading / and is interpreted relative to the root of the WAR.
  
  Used in: form-login-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT form-login-page (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The home element contains the fully-qualified name of the enterprise
  bean's home interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-ref
  
  Example:
  
  <home>com.aardvark.payroll.PayrollHome</home>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT home (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The http-method contains an HTTP method (GET | POST |...).
  
  Used in: web-resource-collection
  -->
  <!ELEMENT http-method (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The icon element contains small-icon and large-icon elements that
  specify the file names for small and a large GIF or JPEG icon images
  used to represent the parent element in a GUI tool.
  
  Used in: filter, servlet, web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT icon (small-icon?, large-icon?)>
  
  <!--
  The init-param element contains a name/value pair as an
  initialization param of the servlet
  
  Used in: filter, servlet
  -->
  <!ELEMENT init-param (param-name, param-value, description?)>
  
  <!--
  The jsp-file element contains the full path to a JSP file within
  the web application beginning with a `/'.
  
  Used in: servlet
  -->
  <!ELEMENT jsp-file (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The large-icon element contains the name of a file
  containing a large (32 x 32) icon image. The file
  name is a relative path within the web application's
  war file.
  
  The image may be either in the JPEG or GIF format.
  The icon can be used by tools.
  
  Used in: icon
  
  Example:
  
  <large-icon>employee-service-icon32x32.jpg</large-icon>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT large-icon (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The listener element indicates the deployment properties for a web
  application listener bean.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT listener (listener-class)>
  
  <!--
  The listener-class element declares a class in the application must be
  registered as a web application listener bean. The value is the fully qualified classname of the listener class.
  
  
  Used in: listener
  -->
  <!ELEMENT listener-class (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The load-on-startup element indicates that this servlet should be
  loaded (instantiated and have its init() called) on the startup
  of the web application. The optional contents of
  these element must be an integer indicating the order in which
  the servlet should be loaded. If the value is a negative integer,
  or the element is not present, the container is free to load the
  servlet whenever it chooses. If the value is a positive integer
  or 0, the container must load and initialize the servlet as the
  application is deployed. The container must guarantee that
  servlets marked with lower integers are loaded before servlets
  marked with higher integers. The container may choose the order
  of loading of servlets with the same load-on-start-up value.
  
  Used in: servlet
  -->
  <!ELEMENT load-on-startup (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The local element contains the fully-qualified name of the
  enterprise bean's local interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT local (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The local-home element contains the fully-qualified name of the
  enterprise bean's local home interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT local-home (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The location element contains the location of the resource in the web
  application relative to the root of the web application. The value of
  the location must have a leading `/'.
  
  Used in: error-page
  -->
  <!ELEMENT location (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The login-config element is used to configure the authentication
  method that should be used, the realm name that should be used for
  this application, and the attributes that are needed by the form login
  mechanism.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT login-config (auth-method?, realm-name?, form-login-config?)>
  
  <!--
  The mime-mapping element defines a mapping between an extension
  and a mime type.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT mime-mapping (extension, mime-type)>
  
  <!--
  The mime-type element contains a defined mime type. example:
  "text/plain"
  
  Used in: mime-mapping
  -->
  <!ELEMENT mime-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The param-name element contains the name of a parameter. Each parameter
  name must be unique in the web application.
  
  
  Used in: context-param, init-param
  -->
  <!ELEMENT param-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The param-value element contains the value of a parameter.
  
  Used in: context-param, init-param
  -->
  <!ELEMENT param-value (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The realm name element specifies the realm name to use in HTTP
  Basic authorization.
  
  Used in: login-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT realm-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The remote element contains the fully-qualified name of the enterprise
  bean's remote interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-ref
  
  Example:
  
  <remote>com.wombat.empl.EmployeeService</remote>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT remote (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-auth element specifies whether the web application code signs
  on programmatically to the resource manager, or whether the Container
  will sign on to the resource manager on behalf of the web application. In the
  latter case, the Container uses information that is supplied by the
  Deployer.
  
  The value of this element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<res-auth>Application</res-auth>
  	<res-auth>Container</res-auth>
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-auth (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-ref-name element specifies the name of a resource manager
  connection factory reference.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique within a web application.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-sharing-scope element specifies whether connections obtained
  through the given resource manager connection factory reference can be
  shared. The value of this element, if specified, must be one of the
  two following:
  
  	<res-sharing-scope>Shareable</res-sharing-scope>
  	<res-sharing-scope>Unshareable</res-sharing-scope>
  
  The default value is Shareable.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-sharing-scope (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-type element specifies the type of the data source. The type
  is specified by the fully qualified Java language class or interface
  expected to be implemented by the data source.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref element contains a declaration of a web application's
  reference to an administered object associated with a resource
  in the web application's environment.  It consists of an optional
  description, the resource environment reference name, and an
  indication of the resource environment reference type expected by
  the web application code.
  
  Used in: web-app
  
  Example:
  
  <resource-env-ref>
      <resource-env-ref-name>jms/StockQueue</resource-env-ref-name>
      <resource-env-ref-type>javax.jms.Queue</resource-env-ref-type>
  </resource-env-ref>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref (description?, resource-env-ref-name,
  		resource-env-ref-type)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref-name element specifies the name of a resource
  environment reference; its value is the environment entry name used in
  the web application code.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context and must be unique within a web application.
  
  Used in: resource-env-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref-type element specifies the type of a resource
  environment reference.  It is the fully qualified name of a Java
  language class or interface.
  
  Used in: resource-env-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-ref element contains a declaration of a web application's
  reference to an external resource. It consists of an optional
  description, the resource manager connection factory reference name,
  the indication of the resource manager connection factory type
  expected by the web application code, the type of authentication
  (Application or Container), and an optional specification of the
  shareability of connections obtained from the resource (Shareable or
  Unshareable).
  
  Used in: web-app
  
  Example:
  
      <resource-ref>
  	<res-ref-name>jdbc/EmployeeAppDB</res-ref-name>
  	<res-type>javax.sql.DataSource</res-type>
  	<res-auth>Container</res-auth>
  	<res-sharing-scope>Shareable</res-sharing-scope>
      </resource-ref>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-ref (description?, res-ref-name, res-type, res-auth,
  		res-sharing-scope?)>
  
  <!--
  The role-link element is a reference to a defined security role. The
  role-link element must contain the name of one of the security roles
  defined in the security-role elements.
  
  Used in: security-role-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT role-link (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The role-name element contains the name of a security role.
  
  The name must conform to the lexical rules for an NMTOKEN.
  
  Used in: auth-constraint, run-as, security-role, security-role-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT role-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The run-as element specifies the run-as identity to be used for the
  execution of the web application. It contains an optional description, and
  the name of a security role.
  
  Used in: servlet
  -->
  <!ELEMENT run-as (description?, role-name)>
  
  <!--
  The security-constraint element is used to associate security
  constraints with one or more web resource collections
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-constraint (display-name?, web-resource-collection+,
  auth-constraint?, user-data-constraint?)>
  
  <!--
  The security-role element contains the definition of a security
  role. The definition consists of an optional description of the
  security role, and the security role name.
  
  Used in: web-app
  
  Example:
  
      <security-role>
  	<description>
  	    This role includes all employees who are authorized
  	    to access the employee service application.
  	</description>
  	<role-name>employee</role-name>
      </security-role>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-role (description?, role-name)>
  
  <!--
  The security-role-ref element contains the declaration of a security
  role reference in the web application's code. The declaration consists
  of an optional description, the security role name used in the code,
  and an optional link to a security role. If the security role is not
  specified, the Deployer must choose an appropriate security role.
  
  The value of the role-name element must be the String used as the
  parameter to the EJBContext.isCallerInRole(String roleName) method
  or the HttpServletRequest.isUserInRole(String role) method.
  
  Used in: servlet
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-role-ref (description?, role-name, role-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The servlet element contains the declarative data of a
  servlet. If a jsp-file is specified and the load-on-startup element is
  present, then the JSP should be precompiled and loaded.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT servlet (icon?, servlet-name, display-name?, description?,
  (servlet-class|jsp-file), init-param*, load-on-startup?, run-as?, security-role-ref*)>
  
  <!--
  The servlet-class element contains the fully qualified class name
  of the servlet.
  
  Used in: servlet
  -->
  <!ELEMENT servlet-class (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The servlet-mapping element defines a mapping between a servlet
  and a url pattern
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT servlet-mapping (servlet-name, url-pattern)>
  
  <!--
  The servlet-name element contains the canonical name of the
  servlet. Each servlet name is unique within the web application.
  
  Used in: filter-mapping, servlet, servlet-mapping
  -->
  <!ELEMENT servlet-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The session-config element defines the session parameters for
  this web application.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT session-config (session-timeout?)>
  
  <!--
  The session-timeout element defines the default session timeout
  interval for all sessions created in this web application. The
  specified timeout must be expressed in a whole number of minutes.
  If the timeout is 0 or less, the container ensures the default
  behaviour of sessions is never to time out.
  
  Used in: session-config
  -->
  <!ELEMENT session-timeout (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The small-icon element contains the name of a file
  containing a small (16 x 16) icon image. The file
  name is a relative path within the web application's
  war file.
  
  The image may be either in the JPEG or GIF format.
  The icon can be used by tools.
  
  Used in: icon
  
  Example:
  
  <small-icon>employee-service-icon16x16.jpg</small-icon>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT small-icon (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The taglib element is used to describe a JSP tag library.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT taglib (taglib-uri, taglib-location)>
  
  <!--
  the taglib-location element contains the location (as a resource
  relative to the root of the web application) where to find the Tag
  Libary Description file for the tag library.
  
  Used in: taglib
  -->
  <!ELEMENT taglib-location (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The taglib-uri element describes a URI, relative to the location
  of the web.xml document, identifying a Tag Library used in the Web
  Application.
  
  Used in: taglib
  -->
  <!ELEMENT taglib-uri (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The transport-guarantee element specifies that the communication
  between client and server should be NONE, INTEGRAL, or
  CONFIDENTIAL. NONE means that the application does not require any
  transport guarantees. A value of INTEGRAL means that the application
  requires that the data sent between the client and server be sent in
  such a way that it can't be changed in transit. CONFIDENTIAL means
  that the application requires that the data be transmitted in a
  fashion that prevents other entities from observing the contents of
  the transmission. In most cases, the presence of the INTEGRAL or
  CONFIDENTIAL flag will indicate that the use of SSL is required.
  
  Used in: user-data-constraint
  -->
  <!ELEMENT transport-guarantee (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The url-pattern element contains the url pattern of the mapping. Must
  follow the rules specified in Section 11.2 of the Servlet API
  Specification.
  
  Used in: filter-mapping, servlet-mapping, web-resource-collection
  -->
  <!ELEMENT url-pattern (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The user-data-constraint element is used to indicate how data
  communicated between the client and container should be protected.
  
  Used in: security-constraint
  -->
  <!ELEMENT user-data-constraint (description?, transport-guarantee)>
  
  <!--
  The web-resource-collection element is used to identify a subset
  of the resources and HTTP methods on those resources within a web
  application to which a security constraint applies. If no HTTP methods
  are specified, then the security constraint applies to all HTTP
  methods.
  
  Used in: security-constraint
  -->
  <!ELEMENT web-resource-collection (web-resource-name, description?,
  url-pattern*, http-method*)>
  
  <!--
  The web-resource-name contains the name of this web resource
  collection.
  
  Used in: web-resource-collection
  -->
  <!ELEMENT web-resource-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The welcome-file element contains file name to use as a default
  welcome file, such as index.html
  
  Used in: welcome-file-list
  -->
  <!ELEMENT welcome-file (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The welcome-file-list contains an ordered list of welcome files
  elements.
  
  Used in: web-app
  -->
  <!ELEMENT welcome-file-list (welcome-file+)>
  
  <!--
  The ID mechanism is to allow tools that produce additional deployment
  information (i.e., information beyond the standard deployment
  descriptor information) to store the non-standard information in a
  separate file, and easily refer from these tool-specific files to the
  information in the standard deployment descriptor.
  
  Tools are not allowed to add the non-standard information into the
  standard deployment descriptor.
  -->
  
  <!ATTLIST auth-constraint id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST auth-method id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST context-param id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST description id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST display-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST distributable id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-link id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-local-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-value id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST error-code id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST error-page id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST exception-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST extension id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST filter id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST filter-class id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST filter-mapping id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST filter-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST form-error-page id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST form-login-config id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST form-login-page id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST home id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST http-method id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST icon id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST init-param id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST jsp-file id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST large-icon id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST listener id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST listener-class id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST load-on-startup id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST local id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST local-home id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST location id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST login-config id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST mime-mapping id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST mime-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST param-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST param-value id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST realm-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST remote id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-auth id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-sharing-scope id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST role-link id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST role-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST run-as id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-constraint id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-role id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-role-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST servlet id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST servlet-class id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST servlet-mapping id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST servlet-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST session-config id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST session-timeout id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST small-icon id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST taglib id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST taglib-location id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST taglib-uri id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST transport-guarantee id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST url-pattern id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST user-data-constraint id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST web-app id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST web-resource-collection id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST web-resource-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST welcome-file id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST welcome-file-list id ID #IMPLIED>
  
  
  
  1.1                  ws-axis/contrib/ews/schema/ejb-jar_2_0.dtd
  
  Index: ejb-jar_2_0.dtd
  ===================================================================
  <!--
  Copyright (c) 2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
  901 San Antonio Road,
  Palo Alto, California 94303, U.S.A.
  All rights reserved.
  
  Sun Microsystems, Inc. has intellectual property rights relating to
  technology embodied in the product that is described in this document.
  In particular, and without limitation, these intellectual property
  rights may include one or more of the U.S. patents listed at
  http://www.sun.com/patents and one or more additional patents or
  pending patent applications in the U.S. and in other countries.
  
  This document and the product to which it pertains are distributed
  under licenses restricting their use, copying, distribution, and
  decompilation.  This document may be reproduced and distributed but may
  not be changed without prior written authorization of Sun and its
  licensors, if any.
  
  Third-party software, including font technology, is copyrighted and
  licensed from Sun suppliers.
  
  Sun,  Sun Microsystems,  the Sun logo,  Java,  JavaServer Pages,  Java
  Naming and Directory Interface,  JDBC,  JDK,  JavaMail and  and
  Enterprise JavaBeans are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun
  Microsystems, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries.
  
  Federal Acquisitions: Commercial Software - Government Users Subject to
  Standard License Terms and Conditions.
  
  DOCUMENTATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
  CONDITIONS, REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED
  WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR
  NON-INFRINGEMENT, ARE DISCLAIMED, EXCEPT TO THE EXTENT THAT SUCH
  DISCLAIMERS ARE HELD TO BE LEGALLY INVALID.
  
  
  _________________________________________________________________________
  
  Copyright (c) 2000 Sun Microsystems, Inc.,
  901 San Antonio Road,
  Palo Alto, California 94303, E'tats-Unis.
  Tous droits re'serve's.
  
  Sun Microsystems, Inc. a les droits de proprie'te' intellectuels
  relatants a` la technologie incorpore'e dans le produit qui est de'crit
  dans ce document. En particulier, et sans la limitation, ces droits de
  proprie'te' intellectuels peuvent inclure un ou plus des brevets
  ame'ricains e'nume're's a` http://www.sun.com/patents et un ou les
  brevets plus supple'mentaires ou les applications de brevet en attente
  dans les E'tats-Unis et dans les autres pays.
  
  Ce produit ou document est prote'ge' par un copyright et distribue'
  avec des licences qui en restreignent l'utilisation, la copie, la
  distribution, et la de'compilation.  Ce documention associe n peut
  e^tre reproduite et distribuer, par quelque moyen que ce soit, sans
  l'autorisation pre'alable et e'crite de Sun et de ses bailleurs de
  licence, le cas e'che'ant.
  
  Le logiciel de'tenu par des tiers, et qui comprend la technologie
  relative aux polices de caracte`res, est prote'ge' par un copyright et
  licencie' par des fournisseurs de Sun.
  
  Sun,  Sun Microsystems,  le logo Sun,  Java,  JavaServer Pages,  Java
  Naming and Directory Interface,  JDBC,  JDK,  JavaMail et  and
  Enterprise JavaBeans sont des marques de fabrique ou des marques
  de'pose'es de Sun Microsystems, Inc. aux E'tats-Unis et dans d'autres
  pays.
  
  LA DOCUMENTATION EST FOURNIE "EN L'E'TAT" ET TOUTES AUTRES CONDITIONS,
  DECLARATIONS ET GARANTIES EXPRESSES OU TACITES SONT FORMELLEMENT
  EXCLUES, DANS LA MESURE AUTORISEE PAR LA LOI APPLICABLE, Y COMPRIS
  NOTAMMENT TOUTE GARANTIE IMPLICITE RELATIVE A LA QUALITE MARCHANDE, A
  L'APTITUDE A UNE UTILISATION PARTICULIERE OU A L'ABSENCE DE
  CONTREFAC,ON.
  -->
  
  <!--
  This is the XML DTD for the EJB 2.0 deployment descriptor.
  All EJB 2.0 deployment descriptors must include a DOCTYPE
  of the following form:
  
    <!DOCTYPE ejb-jar PUBLIC
  	"-//Sun Microsystems, Inc.//DTD Enterprise JavaBeans 2.0//EN"
  	"http://java.sun.com/dtd/ejb-jar_2_0.dtd">
  
  -->
  
  <!--
  The following conventions apply to all J2EE deployment descriptor
  elements unless indicated otherwise.
  
  - In elements that contain PCDATA, leading and trailing whitespace
    in the data may be ignored.
  
  - In elements whose value is an "enumerated type", the value is
    case sensitive.
  
  - In elements that specify a pathname to a file within the same
    JAR file, relative filenames (i.e., those not starting with "/")
    are considered relative to the root of the JAR file's namespace.
    Absolute filenames (i.e., those starting with "/") also specify
    names in the root of the JAR file's namespace.  In general, relative
    names are preferred.  The exception is .war files where absolute
    names are preferred for consistency with the servlet API.
  -->
  
  
  <!--
  The ejb-jar element is the root element of the EJB deployment
  descriptor. It contains
  
  	- an optional description of the ejb-jar file
  	- an optional display name
  	- an optional small icon file name
  	- an optional large icon file name
  	- mandatory structural information about all included
  	  enterprise beans
  	- a descriptor for container managed relationships, if any
  	- an optional application-assembly descriptor
  	- an optional name of an ejb-client-jar file for the ejb-jar.
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-jar (description?, display-name?, small-icon?,
  large-icon?, enterprise-beans, relationships?, assembly-descriptor?,
  ejb-client-jar?)>
  
  <!--
  The abstract-schema-name element specifies the name of the abstract
  schema type of an entity bean with cmp-version 2.x. It is used in EJB
  QL queries.
  
  For example, the abstract-schema-name for an entity bean whose local
  interface is com.acme.commerce.Order might be Order.
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT abstract-schema-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The acknowledge-mode element specifies whether JMS AUTO_ACKNOWLEDGE or
  DUPS_OK_ACKNOWLEDGE message acknowledgment semantics should be used
  for the onMessage message of a message-driven bean that uses bean
  managed transaction demarcation.
  
  The acknowledge-mode element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<acknowledge-mode>Auto-acknowledge</acknowledge-mode>
  	<acknowledge-mode>Dups-ok-acknowledge</acknowledge-mode>
  
  Used in: message-driven
  -->
  <!ELEMENT acknowledge-mode (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The assembly-descriptor element contains application-assembly information.
  
  The application-assembly information consists of the following parts:
  the definition of security roles, the definition of method
  permissions, the definition of transaction attributes for
  enterprise beans with container-managed transaction demarcation and
  a list of methods to be excluded from being invoked.
  
  All the parts are optional in the sense that they are omitted if the
  lists represented by them are empty.
  
  Providing an assembly-descriptor in the deployment descriptor is
  optional for the ejb-jar file producer.
  
  Used in: ejb-jar
  -->
  <!ELEMENT assembly-descriptor (security-role*, method-permission*,
  container-transaction*, exclude-list?)>
  
  <!--
  The cascade-delete element specifies that, within a particular
  relationship, the lifetime of one or more entity beans is dependent
  upon the lifetime of another entity bean. The cascade-delete element
  can only be specified for an ejb-relationship-role element contained
  in an ejb-relation element in which the other ejb-relationship-role
  element specifies a multiplicity of One.
  
  Used in: ejb-relationship-role
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cascade-delete EMPTY>
  
  <!--
  The cmp-field element describes a container-managed field. The
  field element includes an optional description of the field, and the
  name of the field.
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cmp-field (description?, field-name)>
  
  <!--
  The cmp-version element specifies the version of an entity bean
  with container-managed persistence.
  
  The cmp-version element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<cmp-version>1.x</cmp-version>
  	<cmp-version>2.x</cmp-version>
  
  The default value of the cmp-version element is 2.x.
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cmp-version (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The cmr-field element describes the bean provider's view of a
  relationship. It consists of an optional description, and the name and
  the class type of a field in the source of a role of a
  relationship. The cmr-field-name element corresponds to the name used
  for the get and set accessor methods for the relationship. The
  cmr-field-type element is used only for collection-valued
  cmr-fields. It specifies the type of the collection that is used.
  
  Used in: ejb-relationship-role
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cmr-field (description?, cmr-field-name, cmr-field-type?)>
  
  <!--
  The cmr-field-name element specifies the name of a logical
  relationship field in the entity bean class. The name of the cmr-field
  must begin with a lowercase letter. This field is accessed by methods
  whose names consist of the name of the field specified by
  cmr-field-name in which the first letter is uppercased, prefixed by
  "get" or "set".
  
  Used in: cmr-field
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cmr-field-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The cmr-field-type element specifies the class of a
  collection-valued logical relationship field in the entity bean
  class. The value of the cmr-field-type element must be either:
  java.util.Collection or java.util.Set.
  
  Used in: cmr-field
  -->
  <!ELEMENT cmr-field-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The container-transaction element specifies how the container
  must manage transaction scopes for the enterprise bean's method
  invocations. The element consists of an optional description, a list
  of method elements, and a transaction attribute. The transaction
  attribute is to be applied to all the specified methods.
  
  Used in: assembly-descriptor
  -->
  <!ELEMENT container-transaction (description?, method+, trans-attribute)>
  
  <!--
  The description element is used to provide text describing the parent
  element.  The description element should include any information that
  the enterprise bean ejb-jar file producer wants to provide to the consumer of
  the enterprise bean ejb-jar file (i.e., to the Deployer). Typically, the tools
  used by the enterprise bean ejb-jar file consumer will display the description
  when processing the parent element that contains the description.
  
  Used in: cmp-field, cmr-field, container-transaction, ejb-jar,
  ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref, ejb-relation, ejb-relationship-role, entity,
  env-entry, exclude-list, message-driven, method, method-permission,
  query, relationship-role-source, relationships, resource-env-ref,
  resource-ref, run-as, security-identity, security-role,
  security-role-ref, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT description (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The destination-type element specifies the type of the JMS
  destination. The type is specified by the Java interface expected to
  be implemented by the destination.
  
  The destination-type element must be one of the two following:
  
  <destination-type>javax.jms.Queue</destination-type>
  <destination-type>javax.jms.Topic</destination-type>
  
  Used in: message-driven-destination
  -->
  <!ELEMENT destination-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The display-name element contains a short name that is intended to be
  displayed by tools.  The display name need not be unique.
  
  Used in: ejb-jar, entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
  <display-name>Employee Self Service</display-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT display-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-class element contains the fully-qualified name of the
  enterprise bean's class.
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-class>com.wombat.empl.EmployeeServiceBean</ejb-class>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-class (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The optional ejb-client-jar element specifies a JAR file that contains
  the class files necessary for a client program to access the
  enterprise beans in the ejb-jar file.
  
  Used in: ejb-jar
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-client-jar>employee_service_client.jar</ejb-client-jar>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-client-jar (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-link element is used in the ejb-ref or ejb-local-ref
  elements to specify that an EJB reference is linked to an
  enterprise bean.
  
  The value of the ejb-link element must be the ejb-name of an
  enterprise bean in the same ejb-jar file or in another ejb-jar
  file in the same J2EE application unit.
  
  Alternatively, the name in the ejb-link element may be composed of a
  path name specifying the ejb-jar containing the referenced enterprise
  bean with the ejb-name of the target bean appended and separated from
  the path name by "#".  The path name is relative to the ejb-jar file
  containing the enterprise bean that is referencing the enterprise bean.
  This allows multiple enterprise beans with the same ejb-name to be
  uniquely identified.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  
  Examples:
  
  	<ejb-link>EmployeeRecord</ejb-link>
  
  	<ejb-link>../products/product.jar#ProductEJB</ejb-link>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-link (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-local-ref element is used for the declaration of a reference to
  an enterprise bean's local home. The declaration consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- the EJB reference name used in the code of the enterprise bean
  	  that's referencing the enterprise bean
  	- the expected type of the referenced enterprise bean
  	- the expected local home and local interfaces of the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  	- optional ejb-link information, used to specify the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-local-ref (description?, ejb-ref-name, ejb-ref-type,
  		local-home, local, ejb-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-name element specifies an enterprise bean's name. This name is
  assigned by the ejb-jar file producer to name the enterprise bean in
  the ejb-jar file's deployment descriptor. The name must be unique
  among the names of the enterprise beans in the same ejb-jar file.
  
  There is no architected relationship between the ejb-name in the
  deployment descriptor and the JNDI name that the Deployer will assign
  to the enterprise bean's home.
  
  The name for an entity bean with cmp-version 2.x must conform to the
  lexical rules for an NMTOKEN. The name for an entity bean with
  cmp-version 2.x must not be a reserved literal in EJB QL.
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, method, relationship-role-source,
  session
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ql element contains the EJB QL query string that defines
  a finder or select query. This element is defined within the scope of
  a query element whose contents specify the finder or the select method
  that uses the query. The content must be a valid EJB QL query string
  for the entity bean for which the query is specified.
  
  The ejb-ql element must be specified for all queries that are
  expressible in EJB QL.
  
  Used in: query
  
  Example:
  <query>
      <query-method>
          <method-name>ejbSelectPendingLineitems</method-name>
          <method-params/>
      </query-method>
      <ejb-ql>SELECT OBJECT(l) FROM LineItems l WHERE l.shipped <> TRUE
      </ejb-ql>
  </query>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ql (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref element is used for the declaration of a reference to
  an enterprise bean's home. The declaration consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- the EJB reference name used in the code of
  	  the enterprise bean that's referencing the enterprise bean
  	- the expected type of the referenced enterprise bean
  	- the expected home and remote interfaces of the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  	- optional ejb-link information, used to specify the referenced
  	  enterprise bean
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref (description?, ejb-ref-name, ejb-ref-type,
  		home, remote, ejb-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref-name element contains the name of an EJB reference. The
  EJB reference is an entry in the enterprise bean's environment and is
  relative to the java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique
  within the enterprise bean.
  
  It is recommended that name is prefixed with "ejb/".
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-ref-name>ejb/Payroll</ejb-ref-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-ref-type element contains the expected type of the
  referenced enterprise bean.
  
  The ejb-ref-type element must be one of the following:
  
  	<ejb-ref-type>Entity</ejb-ref-type>
  	<ejb-ref-type>Session</ejb-ref-type>
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, ejb-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-ref-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The ejb-relation element describes a relationship between two
  entity beans with container-managed persistence.  An ejb-relation
  element contains a description; an optional ejb-relation-name element;
  and exactly two relationship role declarations, defined by the
  ejb-relationship-role elements. The name of the relationship, if
  specified, is unique within the ejb-jar file.
  
  Used in: relationships
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-relation (description?, ejb-relation-name?, ejb-relationship-role,
  ejb-relationship-role)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-relation-name element provides a unique name for a relationship.
  
  Used in: ejb-relation
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-relation-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-relationship-role element describes a role within a
  relationship. There are two roles in each relationship.
  
  The ejb-relationship-role element contains an optional description; an
  optional name for the relationship role; a specification of the
  multiplicity of the role; an optional specification of cascade-delete
  functionality for the role; the role source; and a declaration of the
  cmr-field, if any, by means of which the other side of the
  relationship is accessed from the perspective of the role source.
  
  The multiplicity and role-source element are mandatory.
  
  The relationship-role-source element designates an entity bean by
  means of an ejb-name element. For bidirectional relationships, both
  roles of a relationship must declare a relationship-role-source
  element that specifies a cmr-field in terms of which the relationship
  is accessed. The lack of a cmr-field element in an
  ejb-relationship-role specifies that the relationship is
  unidirectional in navigability and the entity bean that participates
  in the relationship is "not aware" of the relationship.
  
  Used in: ejb-relation
  
  Example:
  
  <ejb-relation>
      <ejb-relation-name>Product-LineItem</ejb-relation-name>
      <ejb-relationship-role>
          <ejb-relationship-role-name>product-has-lineitems
          </ejb-relationship-role-name>
          <multiplicity>One</multiplicity>
          <relationship-role-source>
          <ejb-name>ProductEJB</ejb-name>
          </relationship-role-source>
       </ejb-relationship-role>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-relationship-role (description?, ejb-relationship-role-name?,
  multiplicity, cascade-delete?, relationship-role-source, cmr-field?)>
  
  <!--
  The ejb-relationship-role-name element defines a name for a role that
  is unique within an ejb-relation. Different relationships can use the
  same name for a role.
  
  Used in: ejb-relationship-role
  -->
  <!ELEMENT ejb-relationship-role-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The enterprise-beans element contains the declarations of one or more
  enterprise beans.
  -->
  <!ELEMENT enterprise-beans (session | entity | message-driven)+>
  
  <!--
  The entity element declares an entity bean. The declaration
  consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- an optional display name
  	- an optional small icon file name
  	- an optional large icon file name
  	- a unique name assigned to the enterprise bean
  	  in the deployment descriptor
  	- the names of the entity bean's remote home and remote
            interfaces, if any
  	- the names of the entity bean's local home and local
  	  interfaces, if any
  	- the entity bean's implementation class
  	- the entity bean's persistence management type
  	- the entity bean's primary key class name
  	- an indication of the entity bean's reentrancy
  	- an optional specification of the entity bean's cmp-version
  	- an optional specification of the entity bean's abstract
  	  schema name
  	- an optional list of container-managed fields
  	- an optional specification of the primary key field
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's environment entries
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's local EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the security role references
  	- an optional declaration of the security identity
  	  to be used for the execution of the bean's methods
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's resource manager
            connection factory references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's
  	  resource environment references
  	- an optional set of query declarations
  	  for finder and select methods for an entity
  	  bean with cmp-version 2.x.
  
  The optional abstract-schema-name element must be specified for an
  entity bean with container-managed persistence and cmp-version 2.x.
  
  The optional primkey-field may be present in the descriptor if the
  entity's persistence-type is Container.
  
  The optional cmp-version element may be present in the descriptor if
  the entity's persistence-type is Container. If the persistence-type is
  Container and the cmp-version element is not specified, its value
  defaults to 2.x.
  
  The optional home and remote elements must be specified if the entity
  bean cmp-version is 1.x.
  
  The optional home and remote elements must be specified if the entity
  bean has a remote home and remote interface.
  
  The optional local-home and local elements must be specified if the
  entity bean has a local home and local interface.
  
  Either both the local-home and the local elements or both the
  home and the remote elements must be specified.
  
  The optional query elements must be present if the persistence-type is
  Container and the cmp-version is 2.x and query methods other than
  findByPrimaryKey have been defined for the entity bean.
  
  The other elements that are optional are "optional" in the sense that
  they are omitted if the lists represented by them are empty.
  
  At least one cmp-field element must be present in the descriptor if
  the entity's persistence-type is Container and the cmp-version is 1.x,
  and none must not be present if the entity's persistence-type is Bean.
  
  Used in: enterprise-beans
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT entity (description?, display-name?, small-icon?,
  		large-icon?, ejb-name, home?, remote?, local-home?,
  		local?, ejb-class, persistence-type, prim-key-class,
  		reentrant, cmp-version?, abstract-schema-name?,
  		cmp-field*, primkey-field?, env-entry*, ejb-ref*,
  		ejb-local-ref*, security-role-ref*, security-identity?,
  		resource-ref*, resource-env-ref*, query*)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry element contains the declaration of an enterprise bean's
  environment entry. The declaration consists of an optional
  description, the name of the environment entry, and an optional
  value.  If a value is not specified, one must be supplied
  during deployment.
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry (description?, env-entry-name, env-entry-type,
  		env-entry-value?)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-name element contains the name of an enterprise bean's
  environment entry.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique within an enterprise bean.
  
  Used in: env-entry
  
  Example:
  
  <env-entry-name>minAmount</env-entry-name>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-type element contains the fully-qualified Java type of
  the environment entry value that is expected by the enterprise bean's
  code.
  
  The following are the legal values of env-entry-type:
  
  	java.lang.Boolean
  	java.lang.Byte
  	java.lang.Character
  	java.lang.String
  	java.lang.Short
  	java.lang.Integer
  	java.lang.Long
  	java.lang.Float
  	java.lang.Double
  
  
  Used in: env-entry
  
  Example:
  
  <env-entry-type>java.lang.Boolean</env-entry-type>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The env-entry-value element contains the value of an enterprise bean's
  environment entry. The value must be a String that is valid for the
  constructor of the specified type that takes a single String
  parameter, or for java.lang.Character, a single character.
  
  Used in: env-entry
  
  Example:
  
  <env-entry-value>100.00</env-entry-value>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT env-entry-value (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The exclude list element specifies one or more methods which the
  Assembler marks to be uncallable.
  
  If the method permission relation contains methods that are in the
  exclude list, the Deployer should consider those methods to be
  uncallable.
  
  Used in: assembly-descriptor
  -->
  <!ELEMENT exclude-list (description?, method+)>
  
  <!--
  The field-name element specifies the name of a container managed
  field.
  
  The name of the cmp-field of an entity bean with cmp-version 2.x must
  begin with a lowercase letter. This field is accessed by methods whose
  names consists of the name of the field specified by field-name in
  which the first letter is uppercased, prefixed by "get" or "set".
  
  The name of the cmp-field of an entity bean with cmp-version 1.x must
  denote a public field of the enterprise bean class or one of its
  superclasses.
  
  Used in: cmp-field
  
  Example:
  
  
  	<field-name>firstName</field-Name>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT field-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The home element contains the fully-qualified name of the enterprise
  bean's home interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-ref, entity, session
  
  Example:
  
  <home>com.aardvark.payroll.PayrollHome</home>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT home (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The large-icon element contains the name of a file
  containing a large (32 x 32) icon image. The file
  name is a relative path within the enterprise bean's
  ejb-jar file.
  
  The image may be either in the JPEG or GIF format.
  The icon can be used by tools.
  
  Used in: ejb-jar, entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
  <large-icon>employee-service-icon32x32.jpg</large-icon>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT large-icon (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The local element contains the fully-qualified name of the
  enterprise bean's local interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, entity, session
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT local (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The local-home element contains the fully-qualified name of the
  enterprise bean's local home interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-local-ref, entity, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT local-home (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The message-driven element declares a message-driven bean. The
  declaration consists of:
  
  	- an optional description
  	- an optional display name
  	- an optional small icon file name
  	- an optional large icon file name
  	- a name assigned to the enterprise bean in
  	  the deployment descriptor
  	- the message-driven bean's implementation class
  	- the message-driven bean's transaction management type
  	- an optional declaration of the message-driven bean's
  	  message selector
  	- an optional declaration of the
  	  acknowledgment mode for the message-driven bean
  	  if bean-managed transaction demarcation is used
  	- an optional declaration of the
  	  intended destination type of the message-driven bean
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's environment entries
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's local EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the security
  	  identity to be used for the execution of the bean's methods
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's resource manager
  	  connection factory references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's resource
            environment references.
  
  Used in: enterprise-beans
  -->
  <!ELEMENT message-driven (description?, display-name?, small-icon?,
  		large-icon?, ejb-name, ejb-class, transaction-type,
  		message-selector?, acknowledge-mode?,
  		message-driven-destination?, env-entry*, ejb-ref*,
  		ejb-local-ref*, security-identity?, resource-ref*,
  		resource-env-ref*)>
  
  <!--
  The message-driven-destination element provides advice to the Deployer
  as to whether a message-driven bean is intended for a Queue or a
  Topic. The declaration consists of: the type of the message-driven
  bean's intended destination and an optional declaration of whether a
  durable or non-durable subscription should be used if the
  destination-type is javax.jms.Topic.
  
  Used in: message-driven
  -->
  <!ELEMENT message-driven-destination (destination-type,
  subscription-durability?)>
  
  <!--
  The message-selector element is used to specify the JMS message
  selector to be used in determining which messages a message-driven
  bean is to receive.
  
  Example:
  <message-selector>JMSType = `car' AND color = `blue' AND weight &gt; 2500
  </message-selector>
  
  Used in: message-driven
  -->
  <!ELEMENT message-selector (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The method element is used to denote a method of an enterprise
  bean's home or component interface, or, in the case of a message-driven
  bean, the bean's onMessage method, or a set of methods. The ejb-name
  element must be the name of one of the enterprise beans declared in
  the deployment descriptor; the optional method-intf element allows to
  distinguish between a method with the same signature that is multiply
  defined across in both the home and component interfaces; the
  method-name element specifies the method name; and the optional
  method-params elements identify a single method among multiple methods
  with an overloaded method name.
  
  There are three possible styles of the method element syntax:
  
  1.
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EJBNAME</ejb-name>
      <method-name>*</method-name>
  </method>
  
     This style is used to refer to all the methods of the specified
     enterprise bean's home and component interfaces.
  
  2.
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EJBNAME</ejb-name>
      <method-name>METHOD</method-name>
  </method>>
  
     This style is used to refer to the specified method of the
     specified enterprise bean. If there are multiple methods with
     the same overloaded name, the element of this style refers to
     all the methods with the overloaded name.
  
  
  3.
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EJBNAME</ejb-name>
      <method-name>METHOD</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>PARAM-1</method-param>
          <method-param>PARAM-2</method-param>
          ...
          <method-param>PARAM-n</method-param>
      </method-params>
  <method>
  
  
     This style is used to refer to a single method within a set of
     methods with an overloaded name. PARAM-1 through PARAM-n are the
     fully-qualified Java types of the method's input parameters (if
     the method has no input arguments, the method-params element
     contains no method-param elements). Arrays are specified by the
     array element's type, followed by one or more pair of square
     brackets (e.g. int[][]). If there are multiple methods with the
     same overloaded name, this style refers to all of the overloaded
     methods.
  
  
  Used in: container-transaction, exclude-list, method-permission
  
  Examples:
  
  Style 1: The following method element refers to all the methods of
  the EmployeeService bean's home and component interfaces:
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-name>*</method-name>
  </method>
  
  Style 2: The following method element refers to all the create
  methods of the EmployeeService bean's home interface(s).
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-name>create</method-name>
  </method>
  
  
  Style 3: The following method element refers to the
  create(String firstName, String LastName) method of the
  EmployeeService bean's home interface(s).
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-name>create</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
      </method-params>
  </method>
  
  
  The following example illustrates a Style 3 element with
  more complex parameter types. The method
  foobar(char s, int i, int[] iar, mypackage.MyClass mycl,
  mypackage.MyClass[][] myclaar) would be specified as:
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-name>foobar</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>char</method-param>
          <method-param>int</method-param>
          <method-param>int[]</method-param>
          <method-param>mypackage.MyClass</method-param>
          <method-param>mypackage.MyClass[][]</method-param>
      </method-params>
  </method>
  
  
  The optional method-intf element can be used when it becomes necessary
  to differentiate between a method that is multiply defined across the
  enterprise bean's home and component interfaces with the same name and
  signature.
  
  
  For example, the method element
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-intf>Remote</method-intf>
      <method-name>create</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
      </method-params>
  </method>
  
  
  can be used to differentiate the create(String, String) method defined
  in the remote interface from the create(String, String) method defined
  in the remote home interface, which would be defined as
  
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-intf>Home</method-intf>
      <method-name>create</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
      </method-params>
  </method>
  
  and the create method that is defined in the local home interface
  which would be defined as
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-intf>LocalHome</method-intf>
      <method-name>create</method-name>
      <method-params>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
          <method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
      </method-params>
  </method>
  
  
  The method-intf element can be used with all three Styles of the
  method element usage. For example, the following method element
  example could be used to refer to all the methods of the
  EmployeeService bean's remote home interface.
  
  
  <method>
      <ejb-name>EmployeeService</ejb-name>
      <method-intf>Home</method-intf>
      <method-name>*</method-name>
  </method>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method (description?, ejb-name, method-intf?, method-name,
  method-params?)>
  
  <!--
  
  The method-intf element allows a method element to differentiate
  between the methods with the same name and signature that are multiply
  defined across the component and home interfaces (e.g, in both an
  enterprise bean's remote and local interfaces; in both an enterprise bean's
  home and remote interfaces, etc.)
  
  The method-intf element must be one of the following:
  
  	<method-intf>Home</method-intf>
  	<method-intf>Remote</method-intf>
  	<method-intf>LocalHome</method-intf>
  	<method-intf>Local</method-intf>
  
  Used in: method
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method-intf (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The method-name element contains a name of an enterprise bean method
  or the asterisk (*) character. The asterisk is used when the element
  denotes all the methods of an enterprise bean's component and home
  interfaces.
  
  Used in: method, query-method
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The method-param element contains the fully-qualified Java type name
  of a method parameter.
  
  Used in: method-params
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method-param (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The method-params element contains a list of the fully-qualified Java
  type names of the method parameters.
  
  Used in: method, query-method
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method-params (method-param*)>
  
  <!--
  
  The method-permission element specifies that one or more security
  roles are allowed to invoke one or more enterprise bean methods. The
  method-permission element consists of an optional description, a list
  of security role names or an indicator to state that the method is
  unchecked for authorization, and a list of method elements.
  
  The security roles used in the method-permission element must be
  defined in the security-role elements of the deployment descriptor,
  and the methods must be methods defined in the enterprise bean's
  component and/or home interfaces.
  
  
  Used in: assembly-descriptor
  -->
  <!ELEMENT method-permission (description?, (role-name+|unchecked), method+)>
  
  <!--
  The multiplicity element describes the multiplicity of the role that
  participates in a relation.
  
  The multiplicity element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<multiplicity>One</multiplicity>
  	<multiplicity>Many</multiplicity>
  
  Used in: ejb-relationship-role
  -->
  <!ELEMENT multiplicity (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The persistence-type element specifies an entity bean's persistence
  management type.
  
  The persistence-type element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<persistence-type>Bean</persistence-type>
  	<persistence-type>Container</persistence-type>
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT persistence-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The prim-key-class element contains the fully-qualified name of an
  entity bean's primary key class.
  
  If the definition of the primary key class is deferred to deployment
  time, the prim-key-class element should specify java.lang.Object.
  
  Used in: entity
  
  Examples:
  
  	<prim-key-class>java.lang.String</prim-key-class>
  
  	<prim-key-class>com.wombat.empl.EmployeeID</prim-key-class>
  
  	<prim-key-class>java.lang.Object</prim-key-class>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT prim-key-class (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The primkey-field element is used to specify the name of the primary
  key field for an entity with container-managed persistence.
  
  The primkey-field must be one of the fields declared in the cmp-field
  element, and the type of the field must be the same as the primary key
  type.
  
  The primkey-field element is not used if the primary key maps to
  multiple container-managed fields (i.e. the key is a compound key). In
  this case, the fields of the primary key class must be public, and
  their names must correspond to the field names of the entity bean
  class that comprise the key.
  
  Used in: entity
  
  Example:
  
  	<primkey-field>EmployeeId</primkey-field>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT primkey-field (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The query element is used to specify a finder or select query. It
  contains
  	- an optional description of the query
  	- the specification of the finder or select
  	  method it is used by
          - an optional specification of the result type mapping, if
            the query is for a select method and entity objects are
            returned.
      	- the EJB QL query string that defines the query.
  
  Queries that are expressible in EJB QL must use the ejb-ql element to
  specify the query. If a query is not expressible in EJB QL, the
  description element should be used to describe the semantics of the
  query and the ejb-ql element should be empty.
  
  The result-type-mapping is an optional element. It can only be present
  if the query-method specifies a select method that returns entity
  objects.  The default value for the result-type-mapping element is
  "Local".
  
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT query (description?, query-method, result-type-mapping?, ejb-ql)>
  
  <!--
  The query-method element is used to specify the method for a finder or
  select query.
  
  The method-name element specifies the name of a finder or select
  method in the entity bean's implementation class.
  
  Each method-param must be defined for a query-method using the
  method-params element.
  
  Used in: query
  
  Example:
  
  <query>
      <description>Method finds large orders</description>
      <query-method>
          <method-name>findLargeOrders</method-name>
          <method-params></method-params>
      </query-method>
      <ejb-ql>SELECT OBJECT(o) FROM Order o WHERE o.amount &gt; 1000</ejb-ql>
  </query>
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT query-method (method-name, method-params)>
  
  <!--
  The reentrant element specifies whether an entity bean is reentrant or
  not.
  
  The reentrant element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<reentrant>True</reentrant>
  	<reentrant>False</reentrant>
  
  Used in: entity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT reentrant (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  
  The relationship-role-source element designates the source of a role
  that participates in a relationship. A relationship-role-source
  element uniquely identifies an entity bean.
  
  Used in: ejb-relationship-role
  -->
  <!ELEMENT relationship-role-source (description?, ejb-name)>
  
  <!--
  The relationships element describes the relationships in which
  entity beans with container-managed persistence participate. The
  relationships element contains an optional description; and a list of
  ejb-relation elements, which specify the container managed
  relationships.
  
  
  Used in: ejb-jar
  -->
  <!ELEMENT relationships (description?, ejb-relation+)>
  
  <!--
  The remote element contains the fully-qualified name of the enterprise
  bean's remote interface.
  
  Used in: ejb-ref, entity, session
  
  Example:
  
  <remote>com.wombat.empl.EmployeeService</remote>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT remote (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-auth element specifies whether the enterprise bean code signs
  on programmatically to the resource manager, or whether the Container
  will sign on to the resource manager on behalf of the enterprise bean. In the
  latter case, the Container uses information that is supplied by the
  Deployer.
  
  The value of this element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<res-auth>Application</res-auth>
  	<res-auth>Container</res-auth>
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-auth (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-ref-name element specifies the name of a resource manager
  connection factory reference.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context.  The name must be unique within an enterprise bean.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-sharing-scope element specifies whether connections obtained
  through the given resource manager connection factory reference can be
  shared. The value of this element, if specified, must be one of the
  two following:
  
  	<res-sharing-scope>Shareable</res-sharing-scope>
  	<res-sharing-scope>Unshareable</res-sharing-scope>
  
  The default value is Shareable.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-sharing-scope (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The res-type element specifies the type of the data source. The type
  is specified by the fully qualified Java language class or interface
  expected to be implemented by the data source.
  
  Used in: resource-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT res-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref element contains a declaration of an enterprise bean's
  reference to an administered object associated with a resource
  in the enterprise bean's environment.  It consists of an optional
  description, the resource environment reference name, and an
  indication of the resource environment reference type expected by
  the enterprise bean code.
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
  <resource-env-ref>
      <resource-env-ref-name>jms/StockQueue</resource-env-ref-name>
      <resource-env-ref-type>javax.jms.Queue</resource-env-ref-type>
  </resource-env-ref>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref (description?, resource-env-ref-name,
  		resource-env-ref-type)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref-name element specifies the name of a resource
  environment reference; its value is the environment entry name used in
  the enterprise bean code.  The name is a JNDI name relative to the
  java:comp/env context and must be unique within an enterprise bean.
  
  Used in: resource-env-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-env-ref-type element specifies the type of a resource
  environment reference.  It is the fully qualified name of a Java
  language class or interface.
  
  Used in: resource-env-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-env-ref-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The resource-ref element contains a declaration of an enterprise bean's
  reference to an external resource. It consists of an optional
  description, the resource manager connection factory reference name,
  the indication of the resource manager connection factory type
  expected by the enterprise bean code, the type of authentication
  (Application or Container), and an optional specification of the
  shareability of connections obtained from the resource (Shareable or
  Unshareable).
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
      <resource-ref>
  	<res-ref-name>jdbc/EmployeeAppDB</res-ref-name>
  	<res-type>javax.sql.DataSource</res-type>
  	<res-auth>Container</res-auth>
  	<res-sharing-scope>Shareable</res-sharing-scope>
      </resource-ref>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT resource-ref (description?, res-ref-name, res-type, res-auth,
  		res-sharing-scope?)>
  
  <!--
  
  The result-type-mapping element is used in the query element to specify
  whether an abstract schema type returned by a query for a select method
  is to be mapped to an EJBLocalObject or EJBObject type.
  
  The result-type-mapping element must be one of the following:
  
          <result-type-mapping>Local</result-type-mapping>
          <result-type-mapping>Remote</result-type-mapping>
  
  Used in: query
  -->
  <!ELEMENT result-type-mapping (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The role-link element is a reference to a defined security role. The
  role-link element must contain the name of one of the security roles
  defined in the security-role elements.
  
  Used in: security-role-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT role-link (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The role-name element contains the name of a security role.
  
  The name must conform to the lexical rules for an NMTOKEN.
  
  Used in: method-permission, run-as, security-role, security-role-ref
  -->
  <!ELEMENT role-name (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The run-as element specifies the run-as identity to be used for the
  execution of the enterprise bean. It contains an optional description, and
  the name of a security role.
  
  Used in: security-identity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT run-as (description?, role-name)>
  
  <!--
  
  The security-identity element specifies whether the caller's
  security identity is to be used for the execution of the methods of
  the enterprise bean or whether a specific run-as identity is to be
  used. It contains an optional description and a specification of the
  security identity to be used.
  
  Used in: entity, message-driven, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-identity (description?, (use-caller-identity|run-as))>
  
  <!--
  The security-role element contains the definition of a security
  role. The definition consists of an optional description of the
  security role, and the security role name.
  
  Used in: assembly-descriptor
  
  Example:
  
      <security-role>
  	<description>
  	    This role includes all employees who are authorized
  	    to access the employee service application.
  	</description>
  	<role-name>employee</role-name>
      </security-role>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-role (description?, role-name)>
  
  <!--
  The security-role-ref element contains the declaration of a security
  role reference in the enterprise bean's code. The declaration consists
  of an optional description, the security role name used in the code,
  and an optional link to a security role. If the security role is not
  specified, the Deployer must choose an appropriate security role.
  
  The value of the role-name element must be the String used as the
  parameter to the EJBContext.isCallerInRole(String roleName) method
  or the HttpServletRequest.isUserInRole(String role) method.
  
  Used in: entity, session
  
  -->
  <!ELEMENT security-role-ref (description?, role-name, role-link?)>
  
  <!--
  The session element declares an session bean. The declaration consists
  of:
  	- an optional description
  	- an optional display name
  	- an optional small icon file name
  	- an optional large icon file name
  	- a name assigned to the enterprise bean
  	  in the deployment description
  	- the names of the session bean's remote home and
  	  remote interfaces, if any
  	- the names of the session bean's local home and
  	  local interfaces, if any
  	- the session bean's implementation class
  	- the session bean's state management type
  	- the session bean's transaction management type
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's environment entries
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's local EJB references
  	- an optional declaration of the security role references
  	- an optional declaration of the security identity to be
            used for the execution of the bean's methods
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's resource manager
  	  connection factory references
  	- an optional declaration of the bean's resource environment
  	  references.
  
  The elements that are optional are "optional" in the sense that they
  are omitted when if lists represented by them are empty.
  
  Either both the local-home and the local elements or both the
  home and the remote elements must be specified for the session bean.
  
  Used in: enterprise-beans
  -->
  <!ELEMENT session (description?, display-name?, small-icon?,
  large-icon?, ejb-name, home?, remote?, local-home?, local?,
  ejb-class, session-type, transaction-type, env-entry*, ejb-ref*,
  ejb-local-ref*, security-role-ref*, security-identity?, resource-ref*,
  resource-env-ref*)>
  
  <!--
  The session-type element describes whether the session bean is a
  stateful session or stateless session.
  
  The session-type element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<session-type>Stateful</session-type>
  	<session-type>Stateless</session-type>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT session-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The small-icon element contains the name of a file
  containing a small (16 x 16) icon image. The file
  name is a relative path within the enterprise bean's
  ejb-jar file.
  
  The image may be either in the JPEG or GIF format.
  The icon can be used by tools.
  
  Used in: ejb-jar, entity, message-driven, session
  
  Example:
  
  <small-icon>employee-service-icon16x16.jpg</small-icon>
  -->
  <!ELEMENT small-icon (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The subscription-durability element specifies whether a JMS topic
  subscription is intended to be durable or nondurable.
  
  The subscription-durability element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<subscription-durability>Durable</subscription-durability>
  	<subscription-durability>NonDurable</subscription-durability>
  
  Used in: message-driven-destination
  -->
  <!ELEMENT subscription-durability (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The trans-attribute element specifies how the container must manage
  the transaction boundaries when delegating a method invocation to an
  enterprise bean's business method.
  
  The value of trans-attribute must be one of the following:
  
  
  	<trans-attribute>NotSupported</trans-attribute>
  	<trans-attribute>Supports</trans-attribute>
  	<trans-attribute>Required</trans-attribute>
  	<trans-attribute>RequiresNew</trans-attribute>
  	<trans-attribute>Mandatory</trans-attribute>
  	<trans-attribute>Never</trans-attribute>
  
  Used in: container-transaction
  -->
  <!ELEMENT trans-attribute (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The transaction-type element specifies an enterprise bean's
  transaction management type.
  
  The transaction-type element must be one of the two following:
  
  	<transaction-type>Bean</transaction-type>
  	<transaction-type>Container</transaction-type>
  
  Used in: message-driven, session
  -->
  <!ELEMENT transaction-type (#PCDATA)>
  
  <!--
  The unchecked element specifies that a method is not checked for authorization
  by the container prior to invocation of the method.
  
  Used in: method-permission
  -->
  <!ELEMENT unchecked EMPTY>
  
  <!--
  
  The use-caller-identity element specifies that the caller's security
  identity be used as the security identity for the execution of the
  enterprise bean's methods.
  
  Used in: security-identity
  -->
  <!ELEMENT use-caller-identity EMPTY>
  
  <!--
  The ID mechanism is to allow tools that produce additional deployment
  information (i.e., information beyond the standard deployment
  descriptor information) to store the non-standard information in a
  separate file, and easily refer from these tool-specific files to the
  information in the standard deployment descriptor.
  
  Tools are not allowed to add the non-standard information into the
  standard deployment descriptor.
  -->
  
  <!ATTLIST abstract-schema-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST acknowledge-mode id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST assembly-descriptor id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cascade-delete id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cmp-field id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cmp-version id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cmr-field id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cmr-field-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST cmr-field-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST container-transaction id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST description id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST destination-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST display-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-class id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-client-jar id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-jar id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-link id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-local-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ql id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-ref-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-relation id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-relation-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-relationship-role id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST ejb-relationship-role-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST enterprise-beans id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST entity id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST env-entry-value id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST exclude-list id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST field-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST home id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST large-icon id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST local id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST local-home id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST message-driven id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST message-driven-destination id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST message-selector id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method-intf id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method-param id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method-params id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST method-permission id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST multiplicity id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST persistence-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST prim-key-class id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST primkey-field id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST query id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST query-method id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST reentrant id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST relationship-role-source id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST relationships id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST remote id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-auth id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-sharing-scope id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST res-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-env-ref-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST resource-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST result-type-mapping id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST role-link id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST role-name id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST run-as id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-identity id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-role id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST security-role-ref id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST session id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST session-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST small-icon id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST subscription-durability id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST trans-attribute id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST transaction-type id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST unchecked id ID #IMPLIED>
  <!ATTLIST use-caller-identity id ID #IMPLIED>