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The challenges of designing, building, and maintaining large-scale, distributed enterprise systems are truly daunting. Written by and for IT professionals, IT Architectures and Middleware, Second Edition, will help you rise above the conflicts of new business objectives, new technologies, and vendor wars, allowing you to think clearly and productively about the particular challenges you face.
This book focuses on the essential principles and priorities of system design and emphasizes the new requirements emerging from the rise of e-commerce and distributed, integrated systems. It offers a concise overview of middleware technology alternatives and distributed systems. Numerous increasingly complex examples are incorporated throughout, and the book concludes with some short case studies.
Topics covered include:
In this new edition, with updates throughout, coverage has been expanded to include:
Can IT Solve All Business Problems?
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Middleware: A History of Objects, Components, and the Web
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Figures.
Boxes.
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
1. The Problem.
Example: Moving to e-business.
What is IT architecture?
Why is this different from what we did before?
Rewrite or evolve?
Who develops the architecture?
Summary.
Early days.
Preliminaries.
Remote procedure calls.
Remote database access.
Distributed transaction processing.
Message queuing.
Message queuing versus distributed transaction processing.
What happened to all this technology?
Summary.
Using object middleware.
Transactional component middleware.
COM_.
EJB.
Final comments on TCM.
Internet Applications.
Summary.
Service concepts.
Web services.
Using Web services: A pragmatic approach.
Summary.
Middleware elements.
The communications link.
The middleware protocol.
The programmatic interface.
Data presentation.
Server control.
Naming and directory services.
Security.
System management.
Comments on Web services.
Vendor architectures.
Vendor platform architectures.
Vendor-distributed architectures.
Using vendor architectures.
Positioning.
Strawman for user target architecture.
Marketing.
Implicit architectures.
Middleware interoperability.
Summary.
What is middleware for?
Support for business processes.
Information retrieval.
Collaboration.
Tiers.
The presentation tier.
The processing tier.
The data tier.
Services versus tiers.
Architectural choices.
Middleware bus architectures.
Hub architectures.
Web services architectures.
Loosely coupled versus tightly coupled.
Summary.
Using backup servers.
Detecting failure.
Cleanup work in progress.
Activating the application.
Reprocessing "lost" messages.
Dual active.
Applying resiliency techniques.
System software failure.
Planned downtime.
Application software failure.
Developing a resiliency strategy.
Summary.
The un-slippery slope.
Transaction processing.
Object interfaces.
Transactional component containers.
Two-phase commit.
Message queuing.
Using remote database access for real-time transactions.
Conclusions about real time.
Batch.
Is distribution an alternative?
Load balancing.
Business intelligence systems.
Ad hoc database queries.
Data replication.
Backups and recovery.
Web services.
Design for scalability and performance.
Summary.
Functions and users.
Functional categories.
Inter-relationships and organization.
From silos to distributed environments.
Systems management technology.
Putting it together.
Summary.
What security is needed.
Traditional distributed system security.
Web services security.
Architecture and security.
Summary.
Problems with today's design approaches.
Design up front or as needed?
The role of business rules.
Existing systems.
Reuse.
Silo and monolithic development.
The role of architecture.
Levels of design.
Reconciling design approaches.
Summary.
What is a process?
Business processes.
Information and processes.
Architecture process patterns.
Clarification and analysis.
Error Handling.
Timing.
Migration.
Flexibility.
Summary.
The context for integration design.
Recovery and long transactions.
How to do integration design.
What makes a good integration design?
Summary.
Information access.
Basic process information.
Process management.
Process improvement.
Customer view.
Marketing and strategic business analysis.
Summary of requirements for information access.
Information accuracy.
Shared data or controlled duplication.
Shared data.
Controlled duplication.
Hybrid strategy.
Creating consistency in existing databases.
The technical problem.
The data migration problem.
The business process problem.
The information controller.
Summary.
Creating a presentation layer.
Screen-scraping task.
Interface size mismatch.
Turning existing applications into services.
Wrapping.
Building a middle tier.
Business processing change with new interfaces.
Changing the middleware between transaction servers.
Batch.
Summary.
Case studies.
Case 1: Providing an integration infrastructure.
Case 2: Creating a service-oriented architecture.
Case 3: Developing a new application.
Remarks on common mistakes.
What does the future hold?
The key points to remember.
Middleware technology alternatives.
IT architecture guidelines.
Distributed systems technology principles.
Distributed systems implementation design.
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