CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, 2017. — 689 p. — ISBN13: 978-1-4987-5407-1.
Introduction to Middleware: Web Services, Object Components, and Cloud Computing provides a comparison of different middleware technologies and the overarching middleware concepts they are based on. The various major paradigms of middleware are introduced and their pros and cons are discussed. This includes modern cloud interfaces, including the utility of Service Oriented Architectures. The text discusses pros and cons of RESTful vs. non-RESTful web services, and also compares these to older but still heavily used distributed object/component middleware. The text guides readers to select an appropriate middleware technology to use for any given task, and to learn new middleware technologies as they appear over time without being greatly overwhelmed by any new concept.
The book begins with an introduction to different distributed computing paradigms, and a review of the different kinds of architectures, architectural styles/patterns, and properties that various researchers have used in the past to examine distributed applications and determine the quality of distributed applications. Then it includes appropriate background material in networking and the web, security, and encoding necessary to understand detailed discussion in this area. The major middleware paradigms are compared, and a comparison methodology is developed. Readers will learn how to select a paradigm and technology for a particular task, after reading this text.
Detailed middleware technology review sections allow students or industry practitioners working to expand their knowledge to achieve practical skills based on real projects so as to become well-functional in that technology in industry. Major technologies examined include: RESTful web services (RESTful cloud interfaces such as OpenStack, AWS EC2 interface, CloudStack; AJAX, JAX-RS, ASP.NET MVC and ASP.NET Core), non-RESTful (SOAP and WSDL-based) web services (JAX-WS, Windows Communication Foundation), distributed objects/ components (Enterprise Java Beans, .NET Remoting, CORBA).
The book presents two projects that can be used to illustrate the practical use of middleware, and provides implementations of these projects over different technologies.
This versatile and class-tested textbook is suitable (depending on chapters selected) for undergraduate or first-year graduate courses on client server architectures, middleware, and cloud computing, web services, and web programming.
The Different ParadigmsSoftware Architectural Styles/Patterns for Middleware
Enabling Technologies for MiddlewareIntroduction to Internet Technologies
Introduction to World Wide Web Technologies
Security Basics
Microsoft Technologies Basics
Cloud Technologies Basics
Middleware Using Distributed Object-Oriented ComponentsDistributed Object-Oriented Components
Middleware Using Web ServicesWeb Services Architectures
Non-RESTful Web Services
RESTful Web Services
RESTful Web Services in .NET
Middleware for the CloudIntroduction to the Cloud and Introduction to the OpenStack Cloud
Introduction to Amazon Web Services and Introduction to the CloudStack Cloud
Message-Oriented MiddlewareIntroduction to Message-Oriented Middleware
Comparison of MiddlewaresIntroduction to Comparing Middlewares