Architecture and Design of Distributed Enterprise Systems
Overview
Client/server, 3-tier and n-tier distributed systems and cloud computing open up new opportunities and ways to design systems and develop applications. They form the infrastructure for enterprise-wide core business, database, workflow and web applications. This course examines the process from architecture through to design of distributed enterprise systems and looks at many of the architecture and design choices that need to be made. The use of the three major component technologies in building flexible distributed computing architectures are also studied.
An object-oriented modelling approach is often used to describe business requirements, identify components, their interactions …
There are no frequently asked questions yet. If you have any more questions or need help, contact our customer service.
Overview
Client/server, 3-tier and n-tier distributed systems and cloud computing open up new opportunities and ways to design systems and develop applications. They form the infrastructure for enterprise-wide core business, database, workflow and web applications. This course examines the process from architecture through to design of distributed enterprise systems and looks at many of the architecture and design choices that need to be made. The use of the three major component technologies in building flexible distributed computing architectures are also studied.
An object-oriented modelling approach is often used to describe business requirements, identify components, their interactions and placement in a multi-tier environment. The course examines an OO model, the infrastructure necessary to support distributed applications and the trade-offs in cost, performance and scalability.Relational Database Management Systems (RDBMSs) still provide the core technology for implementing many distributed enterprise systems.
Throughout the course, architectural choices and considerations for distributed systems are presented and case studies are used.
Who Should Attend
Experienced IT professionals, such as system analysts, technical
architects, integrators, application designers and senior
developers wishing to gain a broad and pragmatic understanding of
the principles and technologies used to building robust distributed
enterprise architectures. Those delegates wishing to simply gain an
overview of Distributed Systems may be better served by attending
our Understanding Corporate Computing course.
Course Style
Design sessions and case studies will be used throughout the course.
Prerequisites
You will need a knowledge of client/server concepts and
technology, which can be gained by attending our Understanding
Distributed and Web Based Systems course. Knowledge of
object-oriented technology, OO and ER modelling and a programming
language would be an advantage, but are not essential.
Suggested Follow-on Courses
- Any of our distributed and component technology courses.
- Any of our implementation, design or support/administration courses in networking, databases, workflow, client/server development tools and object-oriented technology.
Delegates will learn how to
- Design client/server architectures and understand how components fit together with an emphasis on performance and scalability
- Articulate how the Internet, object technology, cloud computing and component technologies fit into client/server architectures
- Understand the structure of different database models and their limitations
- Map OO designs to relational databases
- Decide when TP monitors are required and understand their capabilities
- Choose between a variety of database, component and IPC middleware options and be able to make objective evaluations of them
Course Outline.
Enterprise Systems
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Enterprise systems; architectures; overview of inetgration technologies
Multi-tier Architectures
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Gartner model of Client/server; Microsoft architectures; CORBA model; J2EE model
Internet/Intranet Applications
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Client/server and the Internet; Types of applications; Database engines and the web; CGI and extensions; scripting, ASP.Net; Servlets and JSPs; Struts; Web Frameworks
Security
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Issues and solutions; Encryption; Authentication; Certification; Transactional Security; SSL, PCT, SET
Inter Process Communications
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Networked IPC; Synchronous/asynchronous IPC; RPC; Messaging and transactional messaging; other IPC methods; RPC middleware
Message Oriented Middleware
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Comparison with RPC; Architectures; JMS as provider; Types of payload; Typical uses; Performance criteria
Extensible Markup Language
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XML basics; Data exchange; XML grammars, basic XSLT
Database Technology
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Types of database; SQL database servers; Limits to procedures and triggers; Distributed data; Database middleware; design considerations
Data Replication
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Benefits and issues; Types of replication; Synchronisation; Lag; Refreshing data
Transaction Processing
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Types of transactions; OLTP systems; Rollback and undo; Design considerations; Distributed transactions; Transaction Managers
Cloud Computing
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Cloud computing model, IaaS, PaaS and SaaS
Object Analysis and Design
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OO methods; The UML; Use Cases; Scenarios and sequence diagrams; System design; Deployment diagram
Performance, Scaleability and Testing
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Measuring performance; Risk reduction; benchmarking; Stepwise and modular testing; early integration testing; Automated tools
Components and the Middle Tier
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Definition; Using components; Elements of the Component solution; Middle tier considerations; Application servers; State; Pooling
Common Systems Architecture
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OLTP; DSS; Datawarehousing; Data Marts; Message Oriented Middleware; Content Managements Systems; Search Engines
Common Enterprise Solutions
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Microsoft Transaction Server; COM ; The .NET Framework; JEE; ERPs; IBM MQSeries; Spring; Hibernate; EJBs
Web Service Protocols
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SOAP messages; WSDL structure; Overview of UDDI; Publishing an XML Web Service
Service Oriented Architectures
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Goals of an SOA; What are Services; Requirements of an SOA; Typical architectures
Integration options
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Heterogeneous environments; The Web as integrator; Using Web Services; MOM for EAI; Orchestration; Other techniques; Design considerations
Evaluating Architectures
- Methodologies; Choosing evaluation criteria; Documenting architectures; SDLCs
Case Studies
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Several real-life systems ranging in scale are examined
There are no frequently asked questions yet. If you have any more questions or need help, contact our customer service.
