The online computer book shop for UK & Europe                                   

   Books Home | About Us | Index | Next Record | Browse

 
  

Tel: 0121 706 6000 

Static Book Details Page - Computer Manuals Website

 Java Messaging
  

  Java Messaging by Bruno, Eric

  • Published by: CHARLES RIVER MEDIA
  • Author: Bruno, Eric
  • Page Count: 462
  • Group: JAVA 5/JAVA 2 PLATFORM
  • ISBN: 1584504188/9781584504184
  • Published: Dec 2005

Our Price: 25.59
Discount: 26%
RRP: 34.58 

For Latest Pricing and Availability Click Here
 

The online computer book shop for UK & Europe

Book store with some thing for everyone

Book Information and Description:

Java Messaging
LEARN TO USE JAVA MESSAGING SOFTWARE IN YOUR DISTRIBUTED APPLICATIONS!As software becomes more complex, and the Web is leveraged further, the need for messaging software continues to grow. Virtually all software written today requires at least one form of internal, and even external, communication. Java Messaging explores the various methods of intra-process and inter-process messaging for Java software, such as JavaBean events, JMS, JAX-RPC, JAXM, SOAP, and Web Services. Programmers will learn the basics of these APIs, as well as how, when, and why to use each one, including how to use them in combination, such as combining SOAP with JMS over a WAN. The book begins by walking the reader through simple intra-process communication using JavaBean events. A set of classes is constructed that extend JavaBean events beyond one JVM, transparently using JMS. The messaging paradigms of JMS are explained thoroughly, including in-depth discussions on the theory and mechanics of message queues. Design patterns and helper classes are also explored, which ultimately combine to form a generic messaging framework that helps programmers avoid common pitfalls. This framework, explained throughout the book, provides for the seamless integration of JMS with SOAP Web Services that is required to build distributed applications. Starting from the first chapter, a comprehensive sample application (an online stock trading system) is built using the framework and messaging paradigms discussed in the book. By the end of the book, programmers will not only understand the various messaging paradigms, but they will also understand how to architect complex distributed applications that use them together - with a framework that provides a running start.

CONTENTS:

Preface Chapter 1 Introduction: Messaging is Everywhere Chapter 2 JavaBean Events Chapter 3 Basic Java Messaging Chapter 4 Advanced Java Messaging Chapter 5 JMS Development, Deployment, and Support Chapter 6 Web Services and Messaging Chapter 7 Web Services Specifications Chapter 8 The Java Web Service Developer Pack (JWSDP) Chapter 9 Distributed Application Architecture Chapter 10 Grid Computing Appendix A UML Overview Appendix B About the CD-ROM References Index