SeamFramework.orgCommunity Documentation
Web Beans is fully integrated into the Java EE environment. Web Beans have access to Java EE resources and JPA persistence contexts. They may be used in Unified EL expressions in JSF and JSP pages. They may even be injected into some objects, such as Servlets and Message-Driven Beans, which are not Web Beans.
All simple and enterprise Web Beans may take advantage of Java EE dependency 
    injection using @Resource, @EJB and 
    @PersistenceContext. We've already seen a couple of examples of 
    this, though we didn't pay much attention at the time:
@Transactional @Interceptor
public class TransactionInterceptor {
@Resource Transaction transaction;
@AroundInvoke public Object manageTransaction(InvocationContext ctx) { ... }
}
@SessionScoped
public class Login {
@Current Credentials credentials;
@PersistenceContext EntityManager userDatabase;
...
}
The Java EE @PostConstruct and 
    @PreDestroy callbacks are also supported for all simple
    and enterprise Web Beans. The @PostConstruct method is
    called after all injection has been performed.
There is one restriction to be aware of here: 
    @PersistenceContext(type=EXTENDED) is not supported
    for simple Web Beans.
It's easy to use a Web Bean from a Servlet in Java EE 6. Simply inject the Web Bean using Web Beans field or initializer method injection.
public class Login extends HttpServlet {
@Current Credentials credentials;
@Current Login login;
@Override
public void service(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws ServletException, IOException {
credentials.setUsername( request.getAttribute("username") ):
credentials.setPassword( request.getAttribute("password") ):
login.login();
if ( login.isLoggedIn() ) {
response.sendRedirect("/home.jsp");
}
else {
response.sendRedirect("/loginError.jsp");
}
}
}
The Web Beans client proxy takes care of routing method invocations from
    the Servlet to the correct instances of Credentials and
    Login for the current request and HTTP session.
Web Beans injection applies to all EJBs, even when they aren't under the
    control of the Web Bean manager (if they were obtained by direct JNDI lookup,
    or injection using @EJB, for example. In particular, you can 
    use Web Beans injection in Message-Driven Beans, which are not considered Web
    Beans because you can't inject them.
You can even use Web Beans interceptor bindings for Message-Driven Beans.
@Transactional @MessageDriven
public class ProcessOrder implements MessageListener {
@Current Inventory inventory;
@PersistenceContext EntityManager em;
public void onMessage(Message message) {
...
}
}
Thus, receiving messages is super-easy in a Web Beans environment. But 
    beware that there is no session or conversation context available when a message
    is delivered to a Message-Driven Bean. Only @RequestScoped and
    @ApplicationScoped Web Beans are available.
It's also easy to send messages using Web Beans.
Sending messages using JMS can be quite complex, because of the number of
    different objects you need to deal with. For queues we have Queue, 
    QueueConnectionFactory, QueueConnection, 
    QueueSession and QueueSender. For topics we
    have Topic, TopicConnectionFactory, 
    TopicConnection, TopicSession and 
    TopicPublisher. Each of these objects has its own lifecycle and 
    threading model that we need to worry about.
Web Beans takes care of all this for us. All we need to do is declare the
    queue or topic in web-beans.xml, specifying an associated
    binding type and connection factory.
<Queue>
<destination>java:comp/env/jms/OrderQueue</destination>
<connectionFactory>java:comp/env/jms/QueueConnectionFactory</connectionFactory>
<myapp:OrderProcessor/>
</Queue>
<Topic>
<destination>java:comp/env/jms/StockPrices</destination>
<connectionFactory>java:comp/env/jms/TopicConnectionFactory</connectionFactory>
<myapp:StockPrices/>
</Topic>
Now we can just inject the Queue, 
    QueueConnection, QueueSession or 
    QueueSender for a queue, or the Topic, 
    TopicConnection, TopicSession or 
    TopicPublisher for a topic.
@OrderProcessor QueueSender orderSender;
@OrderProcessor QueueSession orderSession;
public void sendMessage() {
MapMessage msg = orderSession.createMapMessage();
...
orderSender.send(msg);
}
@StockPrices TopicPublisher pricePublisher;
@StockPrices TopicSession priceSession;
public void sendMessage(String price) {
pricePublisher.send( priceSession.createTextMessage(price) );
}
The lifecycle of the injected JMS objects is completely controlled by the Web Bean manager.
Web Beans doesn't define any special deployment archive. You can package
    Web Beans in JARs, EJB-JARs or WARs  any deployment location in the application 
    classpath. However, each archive that contains Web Beans must include a file named 
    web-beans.xml in the META-INF or
    WEB-INF directory. The file may be empty. Web Beans deployed in 
    archives that do not have a web-beans.xml file will not be available 
    for use in the application.
For Java SE execution, Web Beans may be deployed in any location in which
    EJBs may be deployed for execution by the embeddable EJB Lite container. Again,
    each location must contain a web-beans.xml file.