John Wiley & Sons Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture Cover Software patterns are designs that can be reused and reapplied to new situations. They have revoluti.. Product #: 978-0-470-05902-9 Regular price: $46.64 $46.64 In Stock

Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture

A Pattern Language for Distributed Computing, Volume 4

Buschmann, Frank / Henney, Kevlin / Schmidt, Douglas C.

Wiley Series in Software Design Patterns

Cover

1. Edition March 2007
636 Pages, Hardcover
Practical Approach Book

ISBN: 978-0-470-05902-9
John Wiley & Sons

Short Description

Software patterns are designs that can be reused and reapplied to new situations. They have revolutionized the way developers think about the way software is designed, built, and documented. In Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture an international team of authors explain what pattern languages are, what they are not, and how to use them effectively. The book also looks beyond the language to reveal the past, present, and future state of patterns. With numerous examples, war stories, and diagrams, Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture provides a solid foundation for practitioners interested in gaining an in-depth understanding of the concepts underlying software patterns.

Further versions

mobipdf

The eagerly awaited Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture (POSA) Volume 4 is about a pattern language for distributed computing.


The authors will guide you through the best practices and introduce you to key areas of building distributed software systems. POSA 4 connects many stand-alone patterns, pattern collections and pattern languages from the existing body of literature found in the POSA series. Such patterns relate to and are useful for distributed computing to a single language.

* The panel of experts provides you with a consistent and coherent holistic view on the craft of building distributed systems.
* Includes a foreword by Martin Fowler
* A must read for practitioners who want practical advice to develop a comprehensive language integrating patterns from key literature.

Foreword.

About This Book.

About The Authors.

Guide To The Reader.

PART I. SOME CONCEPTS.

1. On Patterns and Pattern Languages.

2. On Distributed Systems.

3. On the Pattern Language.

PART. II A STORY.

4. Warehouse Management Process Control.

5. Base-line Architecture.

6. Communication Middleware.

7. Warehouse Topology.

8. The Story Behind The Pattern Story.

PART III. THE LANGUAGE.

9. From Mud To Structure.

Domain Model **.

Layers **.

Model-View-Controller **.

Presentation-Abstraction-Control.

Microkernel **.

Reflection *.

Pipes and Filters **.

Shared Repository **.

Blackboard.

Domain Object **.

10. Distribution Infrastructure.

Messaging **.

Message Channel **.

Message Endpoint **.

Message Translator **.

Message Router **.

Publisher-Subscriber **.

Broker **.

Client Proxy **.

Requestor **.

Invoker **.

Client Request Handler **.

Server Request Handler **.

11. Event Demultiplexing and Dispatching.

Reactor **.

Proactor.

Acceptor-Connector **.

Asynchronous Completion Token **.

12. Interface Partitioning.

Explicit Interface **.

Extension Interface **.

Introspective Interface **.

Dynamic Invocation Interface *.

Proxy **.

Business Delegate **.

Facade **.

Combined Method **.

Iterator **.

Enumeration Method **.

Batch Method **.

13. Component Partitioning.

Encapsulated Implementation **.

Whole-Part **.

Composite **.

Master-Slave *.

Half-Object plus Protocol **.

Replicated Component Group *.

14. Application Control.

Page Controller **.

Front Controller **.

Application Controller **.

Command Processor **.

Template View **.

Transform View **.

Firewall Proxy **.

Authorization **.

15. Concurrency.

Half-Sync/Half-Async **.

Leader/Followers **.

Active Object **.

Monitor Object **.

16. Synchronization.

Guarded Suspension **.

Future **.

Thread-Safe Interface *.

Double-Checked Locking.

Strategized Locking **.

Scoped Locking **.

Thread-Specific Storage.

Copied Value **.

Immutable Value **.

17. Object Interaction.

Observer **.

Double Dispatch **.

Mediator *.

Command **.

Memento **.

Context Object **.

Data Transfer Object **.

Message **.

18. Adaptation and Extension.

Bridge **.

Object Adapter **.

Chain of Responsibility *.

Interpreter.

Interceptor **.

Visitor **.

Decorator.

Execute-Around Object **.

Template Method *.

Strategy **.

Null Object **.

Wrapper Facade **.

Declarative Component Configuration *.

19. Modal Behavior.

Objects for States *.

Methods for States *.

Collections for States **.

20. Resource Management.

Container *.

Component Configurator *.

Object Manager **.

Lookup **.

Virtual Proxy **.

Lifecycle Callback **.

Task Coordinator *.

Resource Pool **.

Resource Cache **.

Lazy Acquisition **.

Eager Acquisition **.

Partial Acquisition *.

Activator **.

Evictor **.

Leasing **.

Automated Garbage Collection **.

Counting Handle **.

Abstract Factory **.

Builder *.

Factory Method **.

Disposal Method **.

21. Database Access.

Database Access Layer **.

Data Mapper **.

Row Data Gateway **.

Table Data Gateway **.

Active Record.

22. A Departing Thought.

Glossary.

References.

Index of Patterns.

Index of Names.

Index.
Frank Buschmann, Siemens AG, Germany

Kevlin Henney, Curbralan, Bristol, UK

Douglas C. Schmidt, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

F. Buschmann, Siemens AG,Germany; K. Henney, Curbralan, Bristol, UK; D. C. Schmidt, Vanderbilt University, Tennessee, USA