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SOA with Java: Realizing Service-Orientation with Java Technologies

SOA with Java: Realizing Service-Orientation with Java Technologies

          
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About the Book

“An outstanding depth-and-breadth resource for IT architects and Java professionals to understand and apply the marriage of SOA and modern Java.” --Antonio Bruno, Enterprise Architecture and Strategy, digitalStrom “A great self-contained book on SOA using flexible Java implementations....” --Roger Stoffers, Hewlett Packard “Provides clarity on abstract concepts and is filled with concrete examples of implementing SOA principles in Java environments.” --Sanjay Singh, Certified SOA Architect “...provides a holistic, comprehensive view on leveraging SOA principles and architecture for building and deploying performant Java services.” --Suzanne D’Souza, KBACE Technologies “Thomas Erl’s series of books on services technology have shaped, influenced, and strengthened a whole community of enterprise and solution architects’ thinking and solution development, and the much awaited SOA with Java book is an excellent addition to the series. It is a must-read.” --Lalatendu Rath, Wipro Technologies The Definitive Guide to Building Service-Oriented Solutions with Lightweight and Mainstream Java Technologies Java has evolved into an exceptional platform for building Web-based enterprise services. In SOA with Java, Thomas Erl and several world-class experts guide you in mastering the principles, best practices, and Java technologies you need to design and deliver high-value services and service-oriented solutions. You’ll learn how to implement SOA with lightweight frameworks, mainstream Java services technologies, and contemporary specifications and standards. To demonstrate real-world examples, the authors present multiple case study scenarios. They further demystify complex concepts with a plain-English writing style. This book will be valuable to all developers, analysts, architects, and other IT professionals who want to design and implement Web-based service-oriented architectures and enterprise solutions with Java technologies. Topic Areas Applying modern service-orientation principles to modern Java technology platforms Leveraging Java infrastructure extensions relevant to service-oriented solutions Exploring key concepts associated with SOA and service-orientation within the context of Java Reviewing relevant Java platforms, technologies, and APIs Understanding the standards and conventions that REST and SOAP services are built upon in relation to Java implementations Building Java Web-based services with JAX-WS and JAX-RS Applying the eight key principles of service-orientation design using Java tools and technologies Creating Java utility services: architectural, design, and implementation issues Constructing effective entity services: service contracts, messages, data access, and processing Constructing task services, including detailed guidance on service composition Using ESBs to support infrastructure requirements in complex services ecosystems

Table of Contents:
Foreword   xix CHAPTER 1: Introduction   1 1.1 About This Book   2 Objectives of This Book   2 Who This Book Is For   2 What This Book Does Not Cover   3 1.2 Prerequisite Reading   3 How This Book Is Organized   4 1.3 How Principles and Patterns Are Used in This Book   7 1.4 Symbols and Figures   7 1.5 Additional Information   7 Updates, Errata, and Resources (www.servicetechbooks.com)    8 Referenced Specifications (www.servicetechspecs.com)    8 The Service Technology Magazine (www.servicetechmag.com)    8 Service-Orientation (www.serviceorientation.com)    8 What Is REST? (www.whatisrest.com)    8 What Is Cloud? (www.whatiscloud.com)    8 SOA and Cloud Computing Design Patterns (www.soapatterns.org, www.cloudpatterns.org)    8 SOA Certified (SOACP) Professional (www.soaschool.com)    9 Cloud Certified Professional (CCP) (www.cloudschool.com)    9 Big Data Science Certified Professional (BDSCP) (www.bigdatascienceschool.com)    9 Notification Service   9 CHAPTER 2: Case Study Examples   11 2.1 How Case Study Examples Are Used   12 Style Characteristics   12 Relationship to Abstract Content   12 Code Samples   12 2.2 Case Study Background: NovoBank   13 Technical Infrastructure   13 Automation Solutions   13 Business Obstacles and Goals   14 Future IT Roadmap   15 1. Build Reusable Business Services   15 2. Consolidate Information   16 3. Improve Channel Experience   16 4. Build Services Infrastructure   16 2.3 Case Study Background: SmartCredit Co   16 Technical Infrastructure   17 Automation Solutions   17 Business Goals   17 Future IT Roadmap   18 PART I: FUNDAMENTALS CHAPTER 3: Fundamental SOA Concepts   21 3.1 Basic Terminology and Concepts   22 Service-Oriented Computing   22 Service-Orientation   24 Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA)    27 SOA Manifesto   28 Services   29 Cloud Computing   29 IT Resources   30 Service Models   30 Agnostic Logic and Non-Agnostic Logic   31 Service Inventory   32 Service Portfolio   32 Service Candidate   33 Service Contract   33 Service-Related Granularity   34 Service Profiles   35 SOA Design Patterns   36 3.2 Further Reading   38 CHAPTER 4: Basic Java Distributed Technologies   39 4.1 Java Distributed Computing Basics   40 Java SE Architecture   41 Java EE Architecture   41 The Beginning of Java EE   41 Application Packaging and Deployment   44 Deployment Descriptors   44 Java EE Architectural Tiers   45 4.2 Java Distributed Technologies and APIs   46 Java SE APIs   46 RMI   46 RMI / IIOP   47 JNDI   48 JDBC   49 Java EE APIs   49 Contexts and Dependency Injection   49 JTA   50 Java EE Connector Architecture   51 EJB   51 Session EJBs   52 Persistence Entities   53 Service-Orientation Principles and the EJB Model   55 JMS   56 Message-Driven Beans   58 Security in Java EE   58 4.3 XML Standards and Java APIs   59 XML   59 XML Schema Definition   61 XSLT   63 JAXP   63 JAXB   64 4.4 Building Services with Java Components   64 Components as Services   65 Application Protocols   65 Service Contracts   68 Location   68 Operations   69 Messages   69 Further Considerations   70 Components as Services and Service-Orientation   71 Standardized Service Contract   71 Service Loose Coupling   71 Service Abstraction   72 Service Discoverability   72 4.5 Java Vendor Platforms   74 GlassFish Enterprise Server   74 IBM WebSphere Application Server   75 IBM WebSphere Application Server Community Edition   78 Oracle WebLogic Server   79 CHAPTER 5: Web-Based Service Technologies   81 5.1 SOAP-Based Web Services   82 Extensibility of Web Services Standards (WS-*)   88 WS-Addressing   89 SOAP with Attachments (SwA)    90 WS-ReliableMessaging   91 WS-Transaction   92 WS-Security   93 WS-Policy   94 Web Services Distributed Management   95 Common Web Services Middleware   95 Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)    95 Orchestration   97 Management and Monitoring   99 Registries and Repositories   99 Service Construction and Assembly   100 5.2 REST Services   101 HTTP Response Codes   102 Resources and Addresses   103 Service Request   104 Service Response   104 Service Request   104 Service Response   104 HTTP Methods   106 Resource Representations   108 The ACCEPT Header   109 CHAPTER 6: Building Web-Based Services with Java   111 6.1 JAX-WS   112 SAAJ   115 Handlers   118 Web Services Engines and Toolkits   119 JAXR   120 6.2 Java Implementations of WS-* Standards   122 Advanced Web Services Standards and Frameworks   122 Service Component Architecture   123 Spring-WS   124 6.3 JAX-RS   124 Implementing JAX-RS   125 Implementing REST Services   129 Scalability   130 Statelessness   131 Uniform Contract   131 Cacheability   131 Addressability   132 Security   132 REST Service Support   134 PART II: SERVICES CHAPTER 7: Service-Orientation Principles with Java Web-Based Services   139 7.1 Service Reusability   140 Agnostic Functional Contexts   140 Highly Generic Service Logic   141 Generic and Extensible Service Contracts   144 Concurrent Access to Service Logic   145 7.2 Standardized Service Contract   151 Top-Down vs. Bottom-Up   151 Mapping Between Java and WSDL   152 Wrapped Document/Literal Contracts   153 Implicit and Explicit Headers   154 Explicit Headers   154 Implicit Headers   157 No Headers   159 Data Mapping with REST   159 Conversion Between JSON and POJOs   161 Binary Data in Web Services   165 Binary Data in REST Services   170 Use of Industry Standards   175 7.3 Service Loose Coupling   176 Separation of Contract and Implementation   177 Independent Functional Contexts   179 Service Consumer Coupling   180 7.4 Service Abstraction   184 Abstracting Technology Details   185 Hiding Service Details   185 Document Constraints   188 7.5 Service Composability   189 Runtime Environment Efficiency   190 Service Contract Flexibility   192 Standards-Based Runtime   193 7.6 Service Autonomy   194 Well-Defined Functional Boundary   194 Runtime Environment Control   195 High Concurrency   196 7.7 Service Statelessness   197 Orchestration Infrastructure   198 Session State   198 Storing State   199 7.8 Service Discoverability   204 Design-Time Discoverability   204 Runtime Discoverability   205 Service Registries   208 CHAPTER 8: Utility Services with Java   211 8.1 Inside the Java Utility Service   212 Architectural Considerations   212 Utility Service Taxonomy   220 8.2 Utility Service Design and Implementation   221 Utility Service Design   221 Utility Services and Java Editions   226 Utility Services in Java SE   226 Utility Services in Java EE   227 Utility Services and Open-Source Frameworks   229 Spring Framework   229 Transaction Management   229 Data Access Objects   230 Object-Relational Mapping   230 JMS   230 JMX   230 JCA   231 Spring MVC    231 Hibernate   231 Commons Logging and Log4J   231 Utility Services as Web-Based Services   231 Sending XML Data as a String   232 Utilizing   233 Provider-Style Web Service Logic in JAX-WS   234 Building REST Utility Services   236 Testing Considerations   238 Packaging Considerations   239 8.3 Utility Service Types   240 Omni Utility Services   240 Design Considerations   241 Service Implementation   241 Service Consumption   241 Resource Utility Services   248 Persistence/Data Access Resources   248 Messaging Resources   248 Transaction Resources   249 Design Considerations   249 Service Implementation   251 Service Consumption   251 Micro-Utility Services   253 Design Considerations   253 Service Implementation   253 Service Consumption   254 Wrapper Utility Services   257 Design Considerations   258 Service Implementation   259 Service Consumption   259 CHAPTER 9: Entity Services with Java   261 9.1 Inside the Java Entity Service   262 Architectural Considerations   263 Domain Entities vs. Message Entities   265 Data Aggregation   266 Data Access Modes   267 Change Notifications   268 9.2 Java Entity Service Design and Implementation   270 Entity Service Design   270 Designing Domain Entities and Message Entities   271 Designing Stateless Entity Services   272 Designing Business-Relevant Entity Services   273 Designing Generic Entity Services   273 Designing Aggregating Entity Services   275 Entity Service Implementation   278 Java Editions   278 Entity Services as Web-Based Services   282 Entity Web Services Using SOAP   283 REST Entity Services   291 Read-Only and Read-Write Resources   292 Resource Granularity   292 Resource Creation and Location   292 Request Message   292 Response Message   293 Resource Relationships   294 Request Message   294 Response Message   294 Request Message   295 Resource Collections   295 Request Message   295 Response Message   295 Aggregate Entities   297 Request Message   298 Response Message   298 Open-Source Frameworks   302 Testing Considerations   302 Java Packaging Considerations   303 PART III: SERVICE COMPOSITION AND INFRASTRUCTURE CHAPTER 10: Task Services with Java   307 10.1 Inside a Task Service   308 Performance Considerations   315 10.2 Building Task Services   316 Implementation Considerations   316 Web-Based Task Services   320 Task Services with SOAP and WSDL   320 Task Services with REST   324 Testing Considerations   332 Packaging Considerations   334 CHAPTER 11: Service Composition with Java   335 11.1 Inside Service Compositions   336 Service Composition Roles   336 Compositions and MEPs   337 Synchronous and Asynchronous Invocation   338 Service Level Agreements (SLAs)    339 11.2 Java Service Composition Design and Implementation   340 Composition Logic: Coding vs. Orchestration   340 REST Service Composition Considerations   341 Composition Member Endpoints   344 Error Handling   345 Schema Type Reuse   353 Web-Based Services vs. Java Components   359 Packaging, Testing and Deploying Composed Services   362 11.3 Service and Service Composition Performance Guidelines   368 Measuring Performance   368 Testing Performance   370 Caching   371 Data Grids   371 REST Caching   372 Scaling Out Services with State   374 Handling Failures   375 Parsing and Marshaling   376 CHAPTER 12: ESB as SOA Infrastructure   379 12.1 Basic Traditional Messaging Frameworks   380 RPC vs. Messaging   381 Technology Coupling   82 Spatial Coupling   382 Temporal Coupling   382 Message Producers and Message Consumers   385 12.2 Basic Service Messaging Frameworks   389 Basic Service Message Processing without ESBs   389 Message Routing without an ESB   390 Message Transformation without an ESB   391 Basic Service Message Processing with ESBs   392 Message Routing with an ESB   392 Message Transformation with an ESB   392 12.3 Common ESB Features Relevant to SOA   397 Service Lookup and Invocation   397 Service Processing   399 Service Composition Support    401 REST API Management Support   402 PART IV: APPENDICES APPENDIX A: Case Study Conclusion   405 A.1 NovoBank   406 A.2 SmartCredit Co.   407 APPENDIX B: Service-Orientation Principles Reference   409 APPENDIX C: SOA Design Patterns Reference   425 APPENDIX D: The Annotated SOA Manifesto   519 About the Authors   533 About the Foreword Contributor   535 About the Contributors   537 Index   539


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Product Details
  • ISBN-13: 9780133859034
  • Publisher: Pearson Education (US)
  • Publisher Imprint: Prentice Hall
  • Depth: 32
  • Language: English
  • Returnable: N
  • Spine Width: 36 mm
  • Weight: 1060 gr
  • ISBN-10: 0133859037
  • Publisher Date: 03 Jul 2014
  • Binding: Hardback
  • Height: 236 mm
  • No of Pages: 592
  • Series Title: The Prentice Hall Service Technology Series from Thomas Erl
  • Sub Title: Realizing Service-Orientation with Java Technologies
  • Width: 186 mm


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