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Reliable Distributed Systems: Technologies, Web Services, and Applications

Reliable Distributed Systems: Technologies, Web Services, and Applications

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Manufacturer: Springer
Category: EBooks

List Price: $69.95
Buy New: $50.36
You Save: $19.59 (28%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 27924

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: 1
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 668

Dewey Decimal Number: 004.6
ASIN: B000QCS41O

Publication Date: March 25, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Java Concurrency in Practice
  • Pattern-Oriented Software Architecture Volume 4: A Pattern Language for Distributed Computing
  • Mythical Man-Month, The: Essays on Software Engineering, Anniversary Edition

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

An understanding of the techniques used to make distributed computing systems and networks reliable, fault-tolerant and secure will be crucial to those who design and deploy the next generation of mission-critical applications and Web Services.

Reliable Distributed Systems reviews and describes the key concepts, principles and applications of modern distributed computing systems and architectures. This self-contained book consists of five parts. The first covers introductory material, including the basic architecture of the Internet, simple protocols such as RPC and TCP, object oriented architectures, operating systems enhance-ments for high performance, and reliability issues. The second covers the Web, with a focus on Web Services technologies, Microsoft’s .NET and the Java Enterprise Edition. The last three parts look at a number of reliability and fault-tolerance issues and techniques, with an emphasis on replication applied in Web Services settings.

Topics and features:

* Explains fault-tolerance in clear, readily understood terms with concrete examples drawn from real-world settings

* A practical focus aimed at building "mission-critical" networked applications that keep working even when things go wrong

* Includes modern topics, such as Corba, Web Services, XML, .NET, J2EE, group communication, transactions, peer-to-peer systems, time-critical protocols, scalability and security

* Thorough coverage of fundamental mechanisms, with an emphasis on the idea of "consistent behavior" in systems that replicate critical components for availability

* Reviews more than 25 major research efforts, placing them in context with pointers to sources

* Includes 80 problems ranging from simple tests of understanding to challenging protocol and systems design topics suitable for semester-long projects

* Web-based materials for instructors, including a comprehensive slide set, available at: http://www.cs.cornell.edu/ken/book

With its well-focused approach and clarity of presentation, this new text is an excellent resource for both advanced students and practitioners in computer science, computer networks and distributed systems. Anyone seeking a solid background in distributed computing and Web Services architectures will find the book an essential and practical learning tool.




Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars A reasonable beginner text   August 31, 2008
If you tried Nancy Lynch's "Distributed Algorithms" and only care about web apps, this might be the book for you. It's readable, useful for people developing web back ends, and up to date. However, it doesn't try to cover the complexities of general fault-tolerant distributed systems. Besides Lynch's classic text, I recommend Gray and Reuter's "Transaction Processing," a seminal text that should give you a clear idea of how to compose arbitrarily reliable systems out of unreliable components.


5 out of 5 stars Most comprehensive review of the field, and future directions   November 2, 2007
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I have been doing a bit research of my own in this field, and you really have to be there to appreciate the value of this book, which by far provides the most comprehensive review of this "old" but yet challenging field, i.e. how to build reliable distributed systems that actually perform, among all the related topics.

The book covered the subject in both depth and breadth, and in a wide time and scope range. It clarified a lot this confusing area, for both researchers and professionals.



4 out of 5 stars interesting but the title does no really match content   June 9, 2007
 8 out of 9 found this review helpful

This book is neither a book in distributed applications neither a book about web services. It is true thta the author makes an introduction of both and in the case of the web services he takes a look to the latest standards related to reliability.
From my point of view, the book talks about how to enhace the reliability of a distributed software application using static and dynamic groups.
The author thinks that solving the life cycle problem of the nodes in a distributed aplication (create and destroy nodes, joint and leave groups, heart beat, and so on) is the necessary step towards a reliable distributed application.
I think it is an interesting point, however I am not convinced at all. Perhaps, I should read it again.

I really recommend it. For a more straight forward introduction to the subject perhaps is better to start with the classics Tanenbaum or Colouris books.



3 out of 5 stars no mention of BitTorrent?!   June 17, 2006
 9 out of 18 found this review helpful

Birman gives a lucid explanation of various ideas involved in making a distributed computing system. Some have been around for years, like CORBA. Yet he advises, correctly, that its industry implementations have many difficulties regarding ease of interoperability. Which has greatly constrained CORBA's success.

A lot of space in the book goes over Web Services. These take a radically different approach to making a distributed system. Where there is an emphasis on structured messages that are not in binary, like CORBA. And where the messages are written in XML. Still too early, but Web Services might well overtake CORBA.

Peer to peer networks also get attention in the book. Gnutella, Napster, Chord and others. Yet some like Chord, have mostly been theoretical formulations. Interesting potential, but little market acceptance. Surprisingly, for a book that came out in 2005, there is no mention of BitTorrent. Yet in 2006, BitTorrent is perhaps the most popular p2p network.



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