Book Image

Distributed Computing in Java 9

Book Image

Distributed Computing in Java 9

Overview of this book

Distributed computing is the concept with which a bigger computation process is accomplished by splitting it into multiple smaller logical activities and performed by diverse systems, resulting in maximized performance in lower infrastructure investment. This book will teach you how to improve the performance of traditional applications through the usage of parallelism and optimized resource utilization in Java 9. After a brief introduction to the fundamentals of distributed and parallel computing, the book moves on to explain different ways of communicating with remote systems/objects in a distributed architecture. You will learn about asynchronous messaging with enterprise integration and related patterns, and how to handle large amount of data using HPC and implement distributed computing for databases. Moving on, it explains how to deploy distributed applications on different cloud platforms and self-contained application development. You will also learn about big data technologies and understand how they contribute to distributed computing. The book concludes with the detailed coverage of testing, debugging, troubleshooting, and security aspects of distributed applications so the programs you build are robust, efficient, and secure.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Customer Feedback
2
Communication between Distributed Applications
3
RMI, CORBA, and JavaSpaces

Web services


The next generation application interaction after the message queue is an open standard protocol called web services. It allows applications to communicate based on XML/SOAP/HTTP methodologies for information exchange. A simple individual application can be converted into a web application interacting with other applications using web services.

A web service can be defined as a collection of open protocols and standards for exchanging information among systems or applications. Enterprise applications developed in diverse technologies and languages and executed on different platforms can make web services a common technology to exchange information across system networks (internet/intranet), a kind of interprocess communication within a single computer. This interoperability (for example, between .Net and Java or Linux and Windows) is possible by following open standards.

Not all services performed by an application can be described as a web service. A service can be treated as...