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Chapter 1: Introduction
Figure 1.1: J2EE and.NET equivalent components in an enterprise application environment
Figure 1.2: .NET Presentation tier linked to J2EE Business tier
Figure 1.3: Integrating .NET Business tier components into a J2EE architecture
Figure 1.4: Business tier to Data tier interoperability
Chapter 2: Understanding Enterprise Platforms
Figure 2.1: .NET Framework components showing reliance on CLR
Chapter 3: Interoperability Fundamentals
Figure 3.1: ASP.NET Presentation tier linked to J2EE Business tier
Chapter 4: Interoperability Technologies: Point to Point
Figure 4.1: A typical .NET Remoting implementation
Figure 4.2: Connecting Ja.NET to a VB.NET Server component
Figure 4.3: Connecting Ja.NET to a .NET component hosted on IIS
Figure 4.4: Connecting .NET Clients to an EJB using Ja.NET
Figure 4.5: Internal architecture of JNBridgePro Runtime Bridge
Figure 4.6: Java-side component in J2EE application server
Figure 4.7: Java-side component on the computer running the .NET Framework component
Figure 4.8: The five-layer model of the Web services stack
Figure 4.9: Typical architectural elements from a Web service
Figure 4.10: Web service client using a proxy class to communicate with a Web service
Chapter 5: Interoperability Technologies: Data Tier
Figure 5.1: .NET Framework and J2EE applications sharing a common database
Figure 5.2: The Data Access Logic Components abstract the database code from the Business tier
Figure 5.3: Sharing Data Access Logic Components between .NET Framework and Java applications
Figure 5.4: Example of a message queuing application
Figure 5.5: Message Queuing enabling asynchronous interoperability between .NET Framework and Java applications
Figure 5.6: Accessing Message Queuing through a Java-to-COM bridge
Figure 5.7: Accessing MSMQ using a Web service interface
Figure 5.8: Handling a transaction using a Web service
Figure 5.9: Publish/Subscribe domain in the JMS specification
Figure 5.10: A .NET Framework client using the WebSphere MQ Classes for .NET to connect to WebSphere MQ
Figure 5.11: Using a runtime bridge to access WebSphere MQ JMS functionality from .NET Framework clients
Figure 5.12: Using the MSMQ-MQSeries Bridge in HIS 2000 to enable asynchronous interoperability
Chapter 6: Implementing Interoperability Design Elements
Figure 6.1: .NET Framework application architecture best practice design
Figure 6.2: Application architecture for .NET Framework version of XBikes
Figure 6.3: Application architecture for J2EE version of XBikes
Figure 6.4: Simple connection point example
Figure 6.5: Interoperability points in multi-tiered applications
Figure 6.6: Programmatic elements for point to point interoperability
Figure 6.7: Linking interoperability elements into a multi-tiered application
Figure 6.8: XBikes on J2EE Presentation and business tiers with interoperability elements added
Figure 6.9: XBikes on J2EE Business and Data tiers with interoperability elements added
Figure 6.10: XBikes on .NET Framework Presentation and Business tiers with interoperability elements added
Figure 6.11: XBikes on .NET Framework Business and Data tiers with interoperability elements added
Chapter 7: Integrating .NET in the Presentation Tier
Figure 7.1: Implementing a service interface and service fa ade to link the J2EE Business tier to the .NET Presentation tier
Figure 7.2: Interoperability adapters connecting the ASP.NET application to the service interface
Figure 7.3: Using the Data Helper class in a Web service
Figure 7.4: Web service proxy operation with .NET Framework applications
Chapter 8: Integrating .NET in the Business Tier
Figure 8.1: Implementing a .NET Framework service interface for the .NET Framework business service fa ade
Figure 8.2: Web service proxy operation with J2EE applications
Figure 8.3: Implementing a custom .NET Framework service interface for the .NET Framework business service fa ade
Chapter 9: Implementing Asynchronous Interoperability
Figure 9.1: The role of service interfaces in asynchronous communications
Figure 9.2: The role of interoperability adapters in asynchronous communications
Figure 9.3: Logical representation of the MSMQ-MQSeries Bridge connecting MSMQ and MQ Series
Figure 9.4: The role of JNBridge in asynchronous communications
Figure 9.5: The role of Ja.NET in asynchronous communications
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Application Interoperability: Microsoft .NET and J2EE: Microsoft(r) .Net and J2ee (Patterns & Practices)
ISBN: 073561847X
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 104
Authors:
Microsoft Corporation
BUY ON AMAZON
Building Web Applications with UML (2nd Edition)
Discussion
Activities
Guidelines for Web Application Design
Summary
Analysis Model Collaborations
Network Security Architectures
Network Security Is a System
The Attack Process
Applied Knowledge Questions
Content
Medium Network Campus Security Design
Visual C# 2005 How to Program (2nd Edition)
Decision Making: Equality and Relational Operators
Locating Characters and Substrings in strings
Reading and Deserializing Data from a Sequential-Access Text File
Terminology
Summary
Junos Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
Setting Up SNMPv3 Traps
Setting the Routers Source Address
Filtering Traffic Using Unicast Reverse-Path Forwarding
Introduction
Configuring a BGP Session Between Routers in Two ASs
Oracle SQL*Plus: The Definitive Guide (Definitive Guides)
Executing the Statement in the Buffer
iSQL*Plus Command History
Taking Advantage of Unions
Extracting and Loading Data
Using AUTOTRACE
What is Lean Six Sigma
The Four Keys to Lean Six Sigma
Key #4: Base Decisions on Data and Facts
When Companies Start Using Lean Six Sigma
Making Improvements That Last: An Illustrated Guide to DMAIC and the Lean Six Sigma Toolkit
Six Things Managers Must Do: How to Support Lean Six Sigma
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