Book Image

Windows Azure programming patterns for Start-ups

By : Riccardo Becker
Book Image

Windows Azure programming patterns for Start-ups

By: Riccardo Becker

Overview of this book

Leverage different Windows Azure components together with your existing Microsoft .NET skills to fully take advantage of the power of Windows Azure. Use this book to start small and end big by creating and using storage, cloud services, sql databases, networking, caching and other innovative technology to realize your first top-class Windows Azure service! "Windows Azure for Start-ups" is an incremental guide that will take you from the essentials of the Windows Azure platform up to the realization of your own cloud services running on the platform. You will learn how to apply different technologies of the Windows Azure platform with the help of examples all focusing on one single fictitious start-up scenario. This book is centred around a fictitious company called Geotopia that wants to build a brand new social network by using the Windows Azure platform. It will take the reader from the theory and rationale behind Windows Azure right to building services and coding C#. The books starts by outlining the concepts of Windows Azure. It then demonstrates how to set up a development environment and how to build your application by using different storage mechanisms, applying different features from the Windows Azure platform and ending with the newest features explained from the latest release. Windows Azure for Startups will help you take full advantage of the Windows Azure platform and bring your new service online as quickly as possible.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Windows Azure Programming Patterns for Start-ups
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


In this chapter, we saw that AppFabric offers some very interesting features. We also saw how to set up Service Bus queuing and how to send and receive messages to and from it. In addition, topics and subscriptions were explained, together with some code snippets.

We learned how we can add caching capabilities to our application quickly and how to fine-tune this. We demonstrated the configuration of Windows Azure caching and saw how to programmatically use caching features.

The next subject covered was the Windows Azure Connect feature. This is an interesting method to build hybrid cloud solutions that mix web and worker roles together with local, on-premise servers, virtual machines, or anything else that has an IP address.

We also covered the Access Control Service that is part of AppFabric and we saw how to build a claims-aware application and how to integrate our solution with an Identity Provider, such as Facebook.

Finally, we went through the Windows Azure Traffic Manager and...