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E-raamat: Enterprise Software Architecture and Design - Entities, Services, and Resources: Entities, Services, and Resources [Wiley Online]

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"This book fills a gap between high-level overview texts that are often too general and low-level detail oriented technical handbooks that lose sight the "big picture". This book discusses SOA from the low-level perspective of middleware, various XML-based technologies, and basic service design. It also examines broader implications of SOA, particularly where it intersects with business process management and process modeling. Concrete overviews will be provided of the methodologies in those fields, so that students will have a hands-on grasp of how they may be used in the context of SOA"--

Duggan (computer science, Stevens Institute of Technology) sets out the principles underlying the enterprise software systems that he says will play an increasing part in the lives of organizations of all kinds and of individuals. He describes some of the software packages currently in wide use, but mainly to illustrate the principles that will probably still be in effect when today's crop of products is replaced by another. His topics are middleware, data modeling, data processing, domain-driven architecture, service-oriented architecture, and resource-oriented architecture. The material is from two courses he taught, one on software architecture for enterprise applications, and the other on distributed systems with an emphasis on cloud computing. He promises a second volume to deal with more advanced matters. Annotation ©2012 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

This book fills a gap between high-level overview texts that are often too general and low-level detail oriented technical handbooks that lose sight the "big picture". This book discusses SOA from the low-level perspective of middleware, various XML-based technologies, and basic service design. It also examines broader implications of SOA, particularly where it intersects with business process management and process modeling. Concrete overviews will be provided of the methodologies in those fields, so that students will have a hands-on grasp of how they may be used in the context of SOA.
List of Figures xv

Acknowledgements xxiii

1. Introduction 1

References / 6

2. Middleware 7

2.1 Enterprise Information Systems / 7

2.2 Communication / 12

2.3 System and Failure Models / 21

2.4 Remote Procedure Call / 34

2.5 Message-Oriented Middleware / 42

2.6 Web Services and Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) / 46

2.7 Cloud Computing / 52

2.8 Naming and Discovery / 55

2.9 Further Reading / 56

References / 57

3. Data Modeling 59

3.1 Entities and Relationships / 60

3.1.1 Concepts and Entities / 60

3.1.2 Attributes and Relationships / 61

3.1.3 Properties of Relationship Types / 65

3.1.4 Special Relationship Types / 69

3.2 XML Schemas / 74

3.3 Defining New Types / 79

3.3.1 Defining Simple Types / 79

3.3.2 Defining Complex Types / 82

3.4 Derived Types / 85

3.4.1 Derived Simple Types / 86

3.4.2 Derived Complex Types / 87

3.5 Document Hierarchies / 94

3.6 Relationship Types in XML Schemas / 98

3.7 Metaschemas and Metamodels / 100

3.8 Further Reading / 102

References / 102

4. Data Processing 104

4.1 Processing XML Data / 104

4.1.1 Tree Processing / 105

4.1.2 Schema Binding / 109

4.1.3 Stream Processing / 114

4.1.4 External Processing / 119

4.2 Query Languages and XQuery / 122

4.3 XML Databases / 134

4.3.1 Storage as Relational Tables / 135

4.3.2 Storage as Large Strings / 137

4.3.3 Native XML Storage / 137

4.4 Web Services / 138

4.4.1 SOAP: (not so) Simple Object Access Protocol / 139

4.4.2 WSDL: Web Services Description Language / 145

4.4.3 Web Service Policy / 155

4.5 Presentation Layer: JSON and JQUERY / 159

References / 166

5. Domain-Driven Architecture 167

5.1 Software Architecture / 167

5.2 Domain-Driven Design / 168

5.3 Application Frameworks / 175

5.4 Domain-Specific Languages (DSLs) / 180

5.5 An Example API for Persistent Domain Objects / 188

5.6 Domain-Driven Architecture / 197

5.7 Further Reading / 205

References / 205

6. Service-Oriented Architecture 207

6.1 Services and Procedures / 207

6.2 Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) / 211

6.3 Service Design Principles / 216

6.4 Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA) Governance / 218

6.5 Standardized Service Contract / 221

6.5.1 Operations Contract / 222

6.5.2 Data Contract / 223

6.5.3 Policy Contract / 224

6.5.4 Binding Contract / 226

6.5.5 Contract Versioning / 231

6.6 Service Loose Coupling / 237

6.6.1 Motivation for Loose Coupling / 237

6.6.2 Contract Development / 239

6.6.3 Loose Coupling Patterns / 242

6.6.4 Cost of Loose Coupling / 246

6.7 Service Abstraction / 248

6.7.1 Platform Abstraction / 248

6.7.2 Protocol Abstraction / 249

6.7.3 Procedural Abstraction / 261

6.7.4 State Abstraction / 264

6.7.5 Data Abstraction / 269

6.7.6 Endpoint Abstraction / 278

6.8 Service Reusability / 278

6.8.1 Parameterization and Bounded Polymorphism / 279

6.8.2 Subtyping, Inheritance, and Contracts / 284

6.8.3 Does Service-Oriented Architecture Require Subtyping? / 289

6.8.4 Patterns for Service Reusability / 292

6.9 Service Autonomy / 299

6.9.1 Replicating Computation / 300

6.9.2 Replicating State / 303

6.9.3 Sources of Errors and Rejuvenation / 308

6.9.4 Caching / 313

6.10 Service Statelessness / 323

6.10.1 Contexts and Dependency Injection / 331

6.11 Service Discoverability / 336

6.11.1 Global Discovery / 336

6.11.2 Local Discovery / 337

6.11.3 Layered Naming / 347

6.12 Further Patterns / 351

6.13 Further Reading / 352

References / 352

7. Resource-Oriented Architecture 359

7.1 Representational State Transfer / 359

7.2 RESTful Web Services / 369

7.3 Resource-Oriented Architecture (ROA) / 379

7.4 Interface Description Languages / 387

7.4.1 Web Services Description Language (WSDL) / 387

7.4.2 Web Application Description Language (WADL) / 390

7.5 An Example Application Program Interface (API) for Resource-Oriented Web Services / 396

7.6 Hypermedia Control and Contract Conformance / 406

7.7 Concluding Remarks / 412

7.8 Further Reading / 414

References / 414

Appendix A: Introduction to Haskell 416

A.1 Types and Functions / 416

A.2 Type Classes and Functors / 425

A.3 Monads / 431

A.4 Further Reading / 436

References / 436

Appendix B: Time in Distributed Systems 437

B.1 What Time Is It? / 437

B.2 Time and Causality / 443

B.3 Applications of Logical and Vector Time / 450

B.3.1 Mutual Exclusion / 450

B.3.2 Quorum Consensus / 451

B.3.3 Distributed Logging / 456

B.3.4 Causal Message Delivery / 458

B.3.5 Distributed Snapshots / 463

B.4 Virtual Time / 468

B.5 Further Reading / 470

References / 470

Index 473

Dominic Duggan, PhD, is a faculty member in the Department of Computer Science at Stevens Institute of Technology. His research interests are in the design and development of secure and reliable software systems. His publications have appeared in leading journals and conferences.