Book Image

Applied Architecture Patterns on the Microsoft Platform

Book Image

Applied Architecture Patterns on the Microsoft Platform

Overview of this book

Every day, architects and developers are asked to solve specific business problems in the most efficient way possible using a broad range of technologies. Packed with real-world examples of how to use the latest Microsoft technologies, this book tackles over a dozen specific use case patterns and provides an applied implementation with supporting code downloads for every chapter. In this book, we guide you through thirteen architectural patterns and provide detailed code samples for the following technologies: Windows Server AppFabric, Windows Azure Platform AppFabric, SQL Server (including Integration Services, Service Broker, and StreamInsight), BizTalk Server, Windows Communication Foundation (WCF), and Windows Workflow Foundation (WF). This book brings together – and simplifies – the information and methodology you need to make the right architectural decisions and use a broad range of the Microsoft platform to meet your requirements. Throughout the book, we will follow a consistent architectural decision framework which considers key business, organizational, and technology factors. The book is broken up into four sections. First, we define the techniques and methodologies used to make architectural decisions throughout the book. In Part I, we provide a set of primers designed to get you up to speed with each of the technologies demonstrated in the book. Part II looks at messaging patterns and includes use cases which highlight content-based routing, workflow, publish/subscribe, and distributed messaging. Part III digs into data processing patterns and looks at bulk data processing, complex events, multi-master synchronization, and more. Finally, Part IV covers performance-related patterns including low latency, failover to the cloud, and reference data caching.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
Applied Architecture Patterns on the Microsoft Platform
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
Preface

Example solution


In this section, we will walk through creating our very first BizTalk application.

On a machine with the BizTalk Development Tools and Visual Studio 2008 installed, open Visual Studio and select BizTalk Project|Empty BizTalk Server Project. The Solution Name should be AppliedArchitecture.Chapter4.BizTalk. The project name should be SimpleBizTalkSolution.

Note

If you are using BizTalk Server 2009 and get "Creating project project name"… "project creation failed" as an error message, there is a solution at:

http://blogs.msdn.com/biztalkcrt/archive/2009/08/21/visual-studio-2008-fails-to-create-open-biztalk-projects.aspx

We will create a Customer schema, by adding a new item to the project and selecting Schema; name it Customer.xsd.

Note

For a full overview of best practices for schema design, please read the book "SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009", Chapter 5 Schema and Endpoint Patterns, (Packt Publishing, 2009) by Richard Seroter.

Open the BizTalk editor by selecting the...