1st Edition

Application Servers for E-Business

By Lisa E. Lindgren Copyright 2001
    284 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
    by Auerbach Publications

    282 Pages
    by Auerbach Publications

    The modern application server is a complex platform that is the linchpin of an enterprise environment that includes a very wide range of technologies-web document formatting, web protocols, server-side scripts, servlets, applets, programming languages, distributed object technologies, security capabilities, directory and naming services, load balancing, system management, and others. As such, it can be a daunting task to try to comprehend these systems. Application Servers for E-Business helps you understand the use of application servers in e-business. The book presents a comprehensive overview of the technologies related to application servers in their facilitation of E-business. These technologies include CORBA, Java, Enterprise Java Beans, Java 2, web servers, and legacy systems. It explores the role these servers play in the modern enterprise IT infrastructure and the environment in which they operate. The material also includes implementation considerations for application servers, including security, scalability, load balancing, and fault tolerance.

    Chapter one provides an overview of application servers, the evolution of computing that took us from hierarchical, mainframe-centric environments to the web model of computing, and the rationale for E-commerce and E-business. Chapters two through five cover specific technologies, from web browsers and servers to applets and servlets. Chapter three provides an overview of Java technologies, and chapter four covers CORBA. Chapter five discusses application servers in detail. Since application servers are increasingly supporting the key mission-critical processes of an enterprise, it is critical that organizations deploying them build in "enterprise-class" facilities for security, scalability, load balancing, fault tolerance, and management. Chapter six discusses these deployment design issues. The book concludes with chapter seven, a chapter that presents several examples of the advantages of application servers in large enterprises. It also presents two case studies that illustrate the decision process, and an overview of seventeen application servers. The chapters are organized in a straightforward manner, with section and subsections clearly indicated so that they can be easily skimmed. The comprehensive coverage offered in this book makes it an ideal reference for IT management and staff responsible for specifying, designing, evaluating, and implementing electronic commerce solutions.

    Introduction
    The Evolution of Computing Architectures
    Electronic Commerce and Electronic Business
    What Is an Application Server?
    System Design Considerations
    Summary
    A Survey of Web Technologies
    Overview
    Web Server Applications
    Web Browser Protocols and Formats
    Active X and Java
    Web-to-Host Solutions
    Summary
    JAVA
    CORBA
    Application Servers
    A General Architecture
    The Client Side
    The Middle Tier
    The Back Ends
    Implementation and Packaging
    Related Products
    Related Products
    Summary
    Enterprise Deployment for E-Business
    Security
    Scalability
    Load Balancing
    Fault Tolerance
    Management
    Summary
    Putting It All Together
    Application Servers Within the Enterprise
    Case Study #1
    Case Study #2
    Conclusion
    Where to Go for More Information
    References
    Acronyms

    Biography

    Lindgren, Lisa E.