Book Image

Microsoft Windows Server AppFabric Cookbook

Book Image

Microsoft Windows Server AppFabric Cookbook

Overview of this book

Windows Server AppFabric provides a set of integrated capabilities that extend IIS and the Windows Server platform making it easier to build, scale and manage composite applications today. Windows Server AppFabric delivers the first wave of innovation within an exciting new middleware paradigm which brings performance, scalability and enhanced management capabilities to the platform for applications built on the .NET Framework using Windows Communication Foundation and Windows Workflow Foundation.'Microsoft Windows Server AppFabric Cookbook' shows you how to get the most from WCF and WF services using Windows Server AppFabric leveraging the capabilities for building composite solutions on the .NET platform. Packed with over 60 task-based and immediately reusable recipes, 'Microsoft Windows Server AppFabric Cookbook' starts by showing you how to set up your development environment to start using Windows Server AppFabric quickly. The book then moves on to provide comprehensive coverage of the most important capabilities provided by Windows Server AppFabric, diving right in to hands-on topics such as deploying WCF and WF applications to Windows Server AppFabric and leveraging the distributed caching, scalable hosting, persistence, monitoring and management capabilities that Windows Server AppFabric has to offer, with recipes covering a full spectrum of complexity from simple to intermediate and advanced.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Microsoft Windows Server AppFabric Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Initializing Cache Client using code


In the preceding chapter, we looked at the Client Libraries required for using Windows Server AppFabric's caching capabilities. Once these libraries are available, it is fairly straightforward to get started with common cache-related programming scenarios.

Windows Server AppFabric Caching Client needs connection settings to connect to a particular instance of a Cache Host. There are two ways a Cache Client can specify these settings:

  • Code based: Using Windows Server AppFabric's Cache Client API to specify connection details programmatically

  • Configuration based: Using the configuration file of a Cache Client to specify connection settings declaratively

In this recipe we will cover code-based configuration.

Note

To be able to program the AppFabric Cache Client, we need to make sure that AppFabric Caching Assemblies are available.

Getting ready

To be able to connect to Windows Server AppFabric Cache using the Client API, we need to ensure that the Cache Host...