The Minimum You Need to Know About Service Oriented Architecture

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Last edited by ImportBot
January 23, 2021 | History

The Minimum You Need to Know About Service Oriented Architecture

This is not your typical, dime-a-dozen SOA book.

Whereas many other books focus on the front-end of SOA, this book focuses on the backend. This is the book that tells developers how to actually connect to the Heritage data silo/application that other books just draw a box around and say, "Connect somehow."

This book addresses that problem.

The first five chapters of this book provides an eye-opening overview for Management. The
remaining seven chapters are for programmers.

What You'll Learn from the Book


  • Port FMS-based business applications
    to Intranet or Internet applications
    using ACMS

  • ACMS fundamentals

  • How to connect to the Heritage data
    silo/application

  • Service Oriented Architecture
    principles

Publish Date
Publisher
Logikal Solutions
Pages
375

Buy this book

Book Details


Table of Contents

1. Introduction
1.1. SOA – Where We Came From
1.2. The Disaster We Are Headed Toward
1.3. Why We Are Headed There
1.4. The Roots of SOA
1.5. Additional Reading
2. Clustering
2.1. What is Clustering
2.2. Distributed Transaction Management
2.3. Two-phase Commit
2.4. Shared Resources
3. What is Wrong Today
3.1. We Sold Modules
3.2. We Are Still Selling Modules
3.3. The End of Modules
3.4. How Do We Fix This?
3.5. Today's SOA Camps
3.6. Start Small
4. Green Screens on the Web
4.1. Obtaining a Web Server
4.2. Obtaining a Web Terminal
4.3. Is This SOA?
5. ACMS Fundamentals
5.1. Why Are You Only Hearing About ACMS Now?
5.2. Flow Description
5.3. General Principals
5.4. IO Routines
5.5. The Major Pieces
5.6. Which Type of ACMS Application?
5.7. Security
5.8. The March Forward
6. Our First Steps
6.1. Deciding on the Method
6.2. Direct Database Access via Remote Java
6.3. Some Thoughts on Editors
Illustration 6.1
Illustration 6.2
Illustration 6.3
Illustration 6.4
Illustration 6.5
6.4. Database Access via Java Applet
Illustration 6.6
Illustration 6.7
6.5. A Bit More on Shell Scripts
6.6. What About MySQL?
Illustration 6.8
6.7. What Have We Learned?
7. A Direct Port
7.1. Why This Method?
7.2. How Will We Proceed?
7.3. The Login Dialog
Illustration 7.1
Illustration 7.2
Illustration 7.3
Illustration 7.4
Illustration 7.5
Illustration 7.6
Illustration 7.7
Illustration 7.8
Illustration 7.9
7.4. Assignments
7.5. Experts
7.6. Too Much Time On Your Hands
7.7. Is this SOA?
8. Service Types
8.1. Different Types of Service
Illustration 8.1
8.2. Exposing RMS Files via Services
8.3. Assignments Part 1
8.4. Using Those Services
Illustration 8.2
Illustration 8.3
8.5. Assignments Part Two
8.6. Is This SOA?
8.7. What About Security?
8.8. Summary
9. Load Balancing and Fault Tolerance
9.1. Brute Force
9.2. Back-End Balancing
9.3. Warehousing Policy Effect on Load Balancing
9.4. How Do You Balance the Load?
9.5. How Do You Protect the Transaction?
9.6. Can I Use DECdtm Without ACMS?
9.7. How Much Fault Tolerance Does DECdtm Buy You?
Illustration 9.1
Illustration 9.2
9.8. Can I Use MQ Series Without ACMS?
9.9. Queue Trigger
9.10. Summary
10. An ACMS Example
10.1. Scope of Our Example
10.2. Our DTD
10.3. Our Files
10.4. ACMS Queues
10.5. The Interim Record Formats
10.6. Parsing XML on OpenVMS With Xerces
10.7. Parsing XML on OpenVMS With libXML2
10.8. Our Standalone XML Parser
10.9. One Last Bit About ACMS Queues
10.10. Standalone to Server
10.11. Authorizing, Installing, Starting, Stopping and Testing
10.12. Monitoring Your ACMS Application
10.13. Controlling Your ACMS Application
10.14. Our Port Service
10.15. Our Order Generator
10.16. Assignments
11. Whine and Snivel
11.1. But, but, but...
11.2. The Item Service
11.3. Our New Applet
Illustration 11.1
11.4. Summary
12. Observations and Incantations
12.1. Overview
12.2. The Future of SOA
12.3. Java, Write Once, Run a Few Places
12.4. Grade 8 Bolt Syndrome
12.5. In Closing

Edition Notes

Published in
USA

Classifications

Library of Congress
TK5105.5828 .H84 2007

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
375

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25663039M
Internet Archive
minimumyouneedto0000hugh
ISBN 13
9780977086665
LCCN
2012360122

Links outside Open Library

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
January 23, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
March 21, 2015 Edited by Roland Hughes Added this title
March 21, 2015 Created by Roland Hughes Added new book.