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Architectural Patterns

Architectural Patterns

By : Murali, Pethuru Raj, J, Pethuru Raj Chelliah
2.4 (5)
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Architectural Patterns

Architectural Patterns

2.4 (5)
By: Murali, Pethuru Raj, J, Pethuru Raj Chelliah

Overview of this book

Enterprise Architecture (EA) is typically an aggregate of the business, application, data, and infrastructure architectures of any forward-looking enterprise. Due to constant changes and rising complexities in the business and technology landscapes, producing sophisticated architectures is on the rise. Architectural patterns are gaining a lot of attention these days. The book is divided in three modules. You'll learn about the patterns associated with object-oriented, component-based, client-server, and cloud architectures. The second module covers Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) patterns and how they are architected using various tools and patterns. You will come across patterns for Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), Event-Driven Architecture (EDA), Resource-Oriented Architecture (ROA), big data analytics architecture, and Microservices Architecture (MSA). The final module talks about advanced topics such as Docker containers, high performance, and reliable application architectures. The key takeaways include understanding what architectures are, why they're used, and how and where architecture, design, and integration patterns are being leveraged to build better and bigger systems.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
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Summary

In this chapter, we have learned about what SOA is, and its fundamental characteristics such as service interconnectivity, event-driven and messaging, flexible, service evolution, along with a few other common characteristics. In later sections, we covered SOA principles such as service contract standards, interoperability abstraction, service autonomy, service composability, reusability, and statelessness in detail.

We also learned about the most common SOA design patterns and where those patterns can be applied so that one can build SOA-compliant services. The patterns that we touched upon are service messaging, message screening, agnostic services, atomic service transaction, authentication broker, message origin authentication, service façade, multiple service contract, service callback, event-driven messaging, service refactoring, and metadata centralization...

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