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  • Atitit soa之道 艾提拉著作 SOA概念、技术与设计读书笔记 第3章 理解面向服务 10 第4章 理解面向服务架构 39 第5章 理解服务与微服务的层次 74 第6章 Web服务及微服务的

    Atitit soa之道 艾提拉著作 SOA概念、技术与设计读书笔记

     

     

    第3章 理解面向服务 10

    第4章 理解面向服务架构 39

    第5章 理解服务与微服务的层次 74

    第6章 Web服务及微服务的分析与建模 94

    第7章 REST服务及微服务的分析与建模 107

    Chapter 1 Introduction

    Chapter 2 Case Studies

    Chapter 3 Introducing SOA

    Chapter 4 The Evolution of SOA

    Chapter 5 Web Services and Primitive SOA

    Chapter 6 Web Services and Contemporary SOA(Part Ⅰ:Activity Management and Composition)

    Chapter 7 Web Services and Contemporary SOA(Part Ⅱ:Advanced Messaging,Metadata,and Security)

    Chapter 8 Principles of Service-Orientation

    Chapter 9 Service Layers

    Chapter 10 SOA Delivery Strategies

    Chapter 11 Service-Oriented Analysis(Part Ⅰ:Introduction)

    Chapter 12 Service-Oriented Analysis(Part Ⅱ:Service Modeling)

    Chapter 13 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅰ:Introduction)

    Chapter 14 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅱ:SOA Composition Guidelines)

    Chapter 15 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅲ:Service Design)

    Chapter 16 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅳ:Business Process Design)

    Chapter 17 Fundamental WS-* Extensions

    Chapter 18 SOA Platforms

     

     

    Preface
    Chapter 1 Introduction
    1.1 Why this book is important
    1.1.1 The false SOA
    1.1.2 The ideal SOA
    1.1.3 The real SOA
    1.2 Objectives of this book
    1.2.1 Understanding SOA,service-orientation,and Web services
    1.2.2 Learning how to build SOA with Web services
    1.3 Who this book is for
    1.4 What this book does not cover
    1.5 How this book is organized
    1.5.1 Part Ⅰ:SOA and Web Services Fundamentals
    1.5.2 Part Ⅱ:SOA and WS-* Extensions
    1.5.3 Part Ⅲ:SOA and Service-Orientation
    1.5.4 Part Ⅳ:Building SOA(Planning and Analysis)
    1.5.5 Part Ⅴ:Building SOA(Technology and Design)
    1.5.6 Conventions
    1.6 Additional information
    1.6.1 The XML & Web Services Integration Framework(XWIF)
    1.6.2 www.serviceoriented.ws
    1.6.3 Contact the Author
    Chapter 2 Case Studies
    2.1 How case studies are used
    2.1.1 Style characteristics
    2.1.2 Relationship to abstract content
    2.1.3 Code samples
    2.2 Case #1 background:RailCo Ltd.
    2.2.1 History
    2.2.2 Technical infrastructure
    2.2.3 Automation solutions
    2.2.4 Business goals and obstacles
    2.3 Case #2 background:Transit Line Systems Inc
    2.3.1 History
    2.3.2 Technical infrastructure
    2.3.3 Automation solutions
    2.3.4 Business goals and obstacles
    Part Ⅰ SOA and Web Services Fundamentals
    Chapter 3 Introducing SOA
    3.1 Fundamental SOA
    3.1.1 A service-oriented analogy
    3.1.2 How services encapsulate logic
    3.1.3 How services relate
    3.1.4 How services communicate
    3.1.5 How services are designed
    3.1.6 How services are built
    3.1.7 Primitive SOA
    3.2 Common characteristics of contemporary SOA
    3.2.1 Contemporary SOA is at the core of the service-oriented computing platform
    3.2.2 Contemporary SOA increases quality of service
    3.2.3 Contemporary SOA is fundamentally autonomous
    3.2.4 Contemporary SOA is based on open standards
    3.2.5 Contemporary SOA supports vendor diversity
    3.2.6 Contemporary SOA promotes discovery
    3.2.7 Contemporary SOA fosters intrinsic interoperability
    3.2.8 Contemporary SOA promotes federation
    3.2.9 Contemporary SOA promotes architectural composability
    3.2.10 Contemporary SOA fosters inherent reusability
    3.2.11 Contemporary SOA emphasizes extensibility
    3.2.12 Contemporary SOA supports a service-oriented business modeling paradigm
    3.2.13 Contemporary SOA implements layers of abstraction
    3.2.14 Contemporary SOA promotes loose coupling throughout the enterprise
    3.2.15 Contemporary SOA promotes organizational agility
    3.2.16 Contemporary SOA is a building block
    3.2.17 Contemporary SOA is an evolution
    3.2.18 Contemporary SOA is still maturing
    3.2.19 Contemporary SOA is an achievable ideal
    3.2.20 Defining SOA
    3.2.21 Separating concrete characteristics
    3.3 Common misperceptions about SOA
    3.3.1 "An application that uses Web services is service-oriented."
    3.3.2 "SOA is just a marketing term used to re-brand Web services."
    3.3.3 "SOA is just a marketing term used to re-brand distributed computing with Web services."
    3.3.4 "SOA simplifies distributed computing."
    3.3.5 "An application with Web services that uses WS-* extensions is service-oriented."
    3.3.6 "If you understand Web services you won?t have a problem building SOA."
    3.3.7 "Once you go SOA,everything becomes interoperable."
    3.4 Common tangible benefits of SOA
    3.4.1 Improved integration(and intrinsic interoperability)
    3.4.2 Inherent reuse
    3.4.3 Streamlined architectures and solutions
    3.4.4 Leveraging the legacy investment
    3.4.5 Establishing standardized XML data representation
    3.4.6 Focused investment on communications infrastructure
    3.4.7 "Best-of-breed" alternatives
    3.4.8 Organizational agility
    3.5 Common pitfalls of adopting SOA
    3.5.1 Building service-oriented architectures like traditional distributed architectures
    3.5.2 Not standardizing SOA
    3.5.3 Not creating a transition plan
    3.5.4 Not starting with an XML foundation architecture
    3.5.5 Not understanding SOA performance requirements
    3.5.6 Not understanding Web services security
    3.5.7 Not keeping in touch with product platforms and standards development
    Chapter 4 The Evolution of SOA
    4.1 An SOA timeline(from XML to Web services to SOA)
    4.1.1 XML:a brief history
    4.1.2 Web services:a brief history
    4.1.3 SOA:a brief history
    4.1.4 How SOA is re-shaping XML and Web services
    4.2 The continuing evolution of SOA(standards organizations and contributing vendors)
    4.2.1 "Standards" vs"Specifications" vs"Extensions"
    4.2.2 Standards organizations that contribute to SOA
    4.2.3 Major vendors that contribute to SOA
    4.3 The roots of SOA(comparing SOA to past architectures)
    4.3.1 What is architecture?
    4.3.2 SOA vsclient-server architecture
    4.3.3 SOA vsdistributed Internet architecture
    4.3.4 SOA vshybrid Web service architecture
    4.3.5 Service-orientation and object-orientation(Part Ⅰ)
    Chapter 5 Web Services and Primitive SOA
    5.1 The Web services framework
    5.2 Services(as Web services)
    5.2.1 Service roles
    5.2.2 Service models
    5.3 Service descriptions(with WSDL)
    5.3.1 Service endpoints and service descriptions
    5.3.2 Abstract description
    5.3.3 Concrete description
    5.3.4 Metadata and service contracts
    5.3.5 Semantic descriptions
    5.3.6 Service description advertisement and discovery
    5.4 Messaging(with SOAP)
    5.4.1 Messages
    5.4.2 Nodes
    5.4.3 Message paths
    Part Ⅱ SOA and WS-* Extensions
    What is "WS-*"?
    Chapter 6 Web Services and Contemporary SOA(Part Ⅰ:Activity Management and Composition)
    6.1 Message exchange patterns
    6.1.1 Primitive MEPs
    6.1.2 MEPs and SOAP
    6.1.3 MEPs and WSDL
    6.1.4 MEPs and SOA
    6.2 Service activity
    6.2.1 Primitive and complex service activities
    6.2.2 Service activities and SOA
    6.3 Coordination
    6.3.1 Coordinator composition
    6.3.2 Coordination types and coordination protocols
    6.3.3 Coordination contexts and coordination participants
    6.3.5 The activation and registration process
    6.3.5 The completion process
    6.3.6 Coordination and SOA
    6.4 Atomic transactions
    6.4.1 ACID transactions
    6.4.2 Atomic transaction protocols
    6.4.3 The atomic transaction coordinator
    6.4.4 The atomic transaction process
    6.4.5 Atomic transactions and SOA
    6.5 Business activities
    6.5.1 Business activity protocols
    6.5.2 The business activity coordinator
    6.5.3 Business activity states
    6.5.4 Business activities and atomic transactions
    6.5.5 Business activities and SOA
    6.6 Orchestration
    6.6.1 Business protocols and process definition
    6.6.2 Process services and partner services
    6.6.3 Basic activities and structured activities
    6.6.4 Sequences,flows,and links
    6.6.5 Orchestrations and activities
    6.6.6 Orchestration and coordination
    6.6.7 Orchestration and SOA
    6.7 Choreography
    6.7.1 Collaboration
    6.7.2 Roles and participants
    6.7.3 Relationships and channels
    6.7.4 Interactions and work units
    6.7.5 Reusability,composability,and modularity
    6.7.6 Orchestrations and choreographies
    6.7.7 Choreography and SOA
    Chapter 7 Web Services and Contemporary SOA(Part Ⅱ:Advanced Messaging,Metadata,and Security)
    7.1 Addressing
    7.1.1 Endpoint references
    7.1.2 Message information headers
    7.1.3 Addressing and transport protocol independence
    7.1.4 Addressing and SOA
    7.2 Reliable messaging
    7.2.1 RM Source,RM Destination,Application Source,and Application Destination
    7.2.2 Sequences
    7.2.3 Acknowledgements
    7.2.4 Delivery assurances
    7.2.5 Reliable messaging and addressing
    7.2.6 Reliable messaging and SOA
    7.3 Correlation
    7.3.1 Correlation in abstract
    7.3.2 Correlation in MEPs and activities
    7.3.3 Correlation in coordination
    7.3.4 Correlation in orchestration
    7.3.5 Correlation in addressing
    7.3.6 Correlation in reliable messaging
    7.3.7 Correlation and SOA
    7.4 Policies
    7.4.1 The WS-Policy framework
    7.4.2 Policy assertions and policy alternatives
    7.4.3 Policy assertion types and policy vocabularies
    7.4.4 Policy subjects and policy scopes
    7.4.5 Policy expressions and policy attachments
    7.4.6 What you really need to know
    7.4.7 Policies in coordination
    7.4.8 Policies in orchestration and choreography
    7.4.9 Policies in reliable messaging
    7.4.10 Policies and SOA
    7.5 Metadata exchange
    7.5.1 The WS-MetadataExchange specification
    7.5.2 Get Metadata request and response messages
    7.5.3 Get request and response messages
    7.5.4 Selective retrieval of metadata
    7.5.5 Metadata exchange and service description discovery
    7.5.6 Metadata exchange and version control
    7.5.7 Metadata exchange and SOA
    7.6 Security
    7.6.1 Identification,authentication,and authorization
    7.6.2 Single sign-on
    7.6.3 Confidentiality and integrity
    7.6.4 Transport-level security and message-level security
    7.6.5 Encryption and digital signatures
    7.6.6 Security and SOA
    7.7 Notification and eventing
    7.7.1 Publish-and-subscribe in abstract
    7.7.2 One concept,two specifications
    7.7.3 The WS-Notification Framework
    7.7.4 The WS-Eventing specification
    7.7.5 WS-Notification and WS-Eventing
    7.7.6 Notification,eventing,and SOA
    Part Ⅲ SOA and Service-Orientation
    Chapter 8 Principles of Service-Orientation
    8.1 Service-orientation and the enterprise
    8.2 Anatomy of a service-oriented architecture
    8.2.1 Logical components of the Web services framework
    8.2.2 Logical components of automation logic
    8.2.3 Components of an SOA
    8.2.4 How components in an SOA inter-relate
    8.3 Common principles of service-orientation
    8.3.1 Services are reusable
    8.3.2 Services share a formal contract
    8.3.3 Services are loosely coupled
    8.3.4 Services abstract underlying logic
    8.3.5 Services are composable
    8.3.6 Services are autonomous
    8.3.7 Services are stateless
    8.3.8 Services are discoverable
    8.4 How service-orientation principles inter-relate
    8.4.1 Service reusability
    8.4.2 Service contract
    8.4.3 Service loose coupling
    8.4.4 Service abstraction
    8.4.5 Service composability
    8.4.6 Service autonomy
    8.4.7 Service statelessness
    8.4.8 Service discoverability
    8.5 Service-orientation and object-orientation(Part Ⅱ)
    8.6 Native Web service support for service-orientation principles
    Chapter 9 Service Layers
    9.1 Service-orientation and contemporary SOA
    9.1.1 Mapping the origins and supporting sources of concrete SOA characteristics
    9.1.2 Unsupported SOA characteristics
    9.2 Service layer abstraction
    9.2.1 Problems solved by layering services
    9.3 Application service layer
    9.4 Business service layer
    9.5 Orchestration service layer
    9.6 Agnostic services
    9.7 Service layer configuration scenarios
    9.7.1 Scenario #1:Hybrid application services only
    9.7.2 Scenario #2:Hybrid and utility application services
    9.7.3 Scenario #3:Task-centric business services and utility application services
    9.7.4 Scenario #4:Task-centric business services,entity-centric business services,and utility application services
    9.7.5 Scenario #5:Process services,hybrid application services,and utility application services
    9.7.6 Scenario #6:Process services,task-centric business services,and utility application services
    9.7.7 Scenario #7:Process services,task-centric business services,entity-centric business services,and utility application services
    9.7.8 Scenario #8:Process services,entity-centric business services,and utility application services
    Part Ⅳ Building SOA(Planning and Analysis)
    Chapter 10 SOA Delivery Strategies
    10.1 SOA delivery lifecycle phases
    10.1.1 Basic phases of the SOA delivery lifecycle
    10.1.2 Service-oriented analysis
    10.1.3 Service-oriented design
    10.1.4 Service development
    10.1.5 Service testing
    10.1.6 Service deployment
    10.1.7 Service administration
    10.1.8 SOA delivery strategies
    10.2 The top-down strategy
    10.2.1 Process
    10.2.2 Pros and cons
    10.3 The bottom-up strategy
    10.3.1 Process
    10.3.2 Pros and cons
    10.4 The agile strategy
    10.4.1 Process
    10.4.2 Pros and cons
    Chapter 11 Service-Oriented Analysis(Part Ⅰ:Introduction)
    11.1 Introduction to service-oriented analysis
    11.1.1 Objectives of service-oriented analysis
    11.1.2 The service-oriented analysis process
    11.2 Benefits of a business-centric SOA
    11.2.1 Business services build agility into business models
    11.2.2 Business services prepare a process for orchestration
    11.2.3 Business services enable reuse
    11.2.4 Only business services can realize the service-oriented enterprise
    11.3 Deriving business services
    11.3.1 Sources from which business services can be derived
    11.3.2 Types of derived business services
    11.3.3 Business services and orchestration
    Chapter 12 Service-Oriented Analysis(Part Ⅱ:Service Modeling)
    12.1 Service modeling(a step-by-step process)
    12.1.1 "Services" versus "Service Candidates"
    12.1.2 Process description
    12.2 Service modeling guidelines
    12.2.1 Take into account potential cross-process reusability of logic being encapsulated(task-centric business service candidates)
    12.2.2 Consider potential intra-process reusability of logic being encapsulated(task-centric business service candidates)
    12.2.3 Factor in process-related dependencies(task-centric business service candidates)
    12.2.4 Model for cross-application reuse(application service candidates)
    12.2.5 Speculate on further decomposition requirements
    12.2.6 Identify logical units of work with explicit boundaries
    12.2.7 Prevent logic boundary creep
    12.2.8 Emulate process services when not using orchestration(task-centric business service candidates)
    12.2.9 Target a balanced model
    12.2.10 Classify service modeling logic
    12.2.11 Allocate appropriate modeling resources
    12.2.12 Create and publish business service modeling standards
    12.3 Classifying service model logic
    12.3.1 The SOE model
    12.3.2 The enterprise business model
    12.3.3 "Building Blocks" versus "Service Models"
    12.3.4 Basic modeling building blocks
    12.4 Contrasting service modeling approaches(an example)
    Part Ⅴ Building SOA(Technology and Design)
    Chapter 13 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅰ:Introduction)
    13.1 Introduction to service-oriented design
    13.1.1 Objectives of service-oriented design
    13.1.2 "Design standards" versus "Industry standards"
    13.1.3 The service-oriented design process
    13.1.4 Prerequisites
    13.2 WSDL-related XML Schema language basics
    13.2.1 The schema element
    13.2.2 The element element
    13.2.3 The complexType and simpleType elements
    13.2.4 The import and include elements
    13.2.5 Other important elements
    13.3 WSDL language basics
    13.3.1 The definitions element
    13.3.2 The types element
    13.3.3 The message and part elements
    13.3.4 The portType,interface,and operation elements
    13.3.5 The input and output elements(when used with operation)
    13.3.6 The binding element
    13.3.7 The input and output elements(when used with binding)
    13.3.8 The service,port,and endpoint elements
    13.3.9 The import element
    13.3.10 The documentation element
    13.4 SOAP language basics
    13.4.1 The Envelope element
    13.4.2 The Header element
    13.4.3 The Body element
    13.4.4 The Fault element
    13.5 Service interface design tools
    13.5.1 Auto-generation
    13.5.2 Design tools
    13.5.3 Hand coding
    Chapter 14 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅱ:SOA Composition Guidelines)
    14.1 Steps to composing SOA
    14.1.1 Step 1:Choose service layers
    14.1.2 Step 2:Position core standards
    14.1.3 Step 3:Choose SOA extensions
    14.2 Considerations for choosing service layers
    14.3 Considerations for positioning core SOA standards
    14.3.1 Industry standards and SOA
    14.3.2 XML and SOA
    14.3.3 The WS-I Basic Profile
    14.3.4 WSDL and SOA
    14.3.5 XML Schema and SOA
    14.3.6 SOAP and SOA
    14.3.7 Namespaces and SOA
    14.3.8 UDDI and SOA
    14.4 Considerations for choosing SOA extensions
    14.4.1 Choosing SOA characteristics
    14.4.2 Choosing WS-* specifications
    14.4.3 WS-BPEL and SOA
    Chapter 15 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅲ:Service Design)
    15.1 Service design overview
    15.1.1 Design standards
    15.1.2 About the process descriptions
    15.1.3 Prerequisites
    15.2 Entity-centric business service design(a step-by-step process)
    15.2.1 Process description
    15.3 Application service design(a step-by-step process)
    15.3.1 Process description
    15.4 Task-centric business service design(a step-by-step process)
    15.4.1 Process description
    15.5 Service design guidelines
    15.5.1 Apply naming standards
    15.5.2 Apply a suitable level of interface granularity
    15.5.3 Design service operations to be inherently extensible
    15.5.4 Identify known and potential service requestors
    15.5.5 Consider using modular WSDL documents
    15.5.6 Use namespaces carefully
    15.5.7 Use the SOAP document and literal attribute values
    15.5.8 Use WS-I Profiles even if WS-I compliance isn't required
    15.5.9 Document services with metadata
    Chapter 16 Service-Oriented Design(Part Ⅳ:Business Process Design)
    16.1 WS-BPEL language basics
    16.1.1 A brief history of BPEL4WS and WS-BPEL
    16.1.2 Prerequisites
    16.1.3 The process element
    16.1.4 The partnerLinks and partnerLink elements
    16.1.5 The partnerLinkType element
    16.1.6 The variables element
    16.1.7 The getVariableProperty and getVariableData functions
    16.1.8 The sequence element
    16.1.9 The invoke element
    16.1.10 The receive element
    16.1.11 The reply element
    16.1.12 The switch,case,and otherwise elements
    16.1.13 The assign,copy,from,and to elements
    16.1.14 faultHandlers,catch,and catchAll elements
    16.1.15 Other WS-BPEL elements
    16.2 WS-Coordination overview
    16.2.1 The CoordinationContext element
    16.2.2 The Identifier and Expires elements
    16.2.3 The CoordinationType element
    16.2.4 The RegistrationService element
    16.2.5 Designating the WS-BusinessActivity coordination type
    16.2.6 Designating the WS-AtomicTransaction coordination type
    16.3 Service-oriented business process design(a step-by-step process)
    16.3.1 Process description
    Chapter 17 Fundamental WS-* Extensions
    You mustUnderstand this
    17.1 WS-Addressing language basics
    17.1.1 The EndpointReference element
    17.1.2 Message information header elements
    17.1.3 WS-Addressing reusability
    17.2 WS-ReliableMessaging language basics
    17.2.1 The Sequence,MessageNumber,and LastMessage elements
    17.2.2 The SequenceAcknowledgement and AcknowledgementRange elements
    17.2.3 The Nack element
    17.2.4 The AckRequested element
    17.2.5 Other WS-ReliableMessaging elements
    17.3 WS-Policy language basics
    17.3.1 The Policy element and common policy assertions
    17.3.2 The ExactlyOne element
    17.3.3 The All element
    17.3.4 The Usage attribute
    17.3.5 The Preference attribute
    17.3.6 The PolicyReference element
    17.3.7 The PolicyURIs attribute
    17.3.8 The PolicyAttachment element
    17.3.9 Additional types of policy assertions
    17.4 WS-MetadataExchange language basics
    17.4.1 The GetMetadata element
    17.4.2 The Dialect element
    17.4.3 The Identifier element
    17.4.4 The Metadata,MetadataSection,and MetadataReference elements
    17.4.5 The Get message
    17.5 WS-Security language basics
    17.5.1 The Security element(WS-Security)
    17.5.2 The UsernameToken,Username,and Password elements(WS-Security)
    17.5.3 The BinarySecurityToken element(WS-Security)
    17.5.4 The SecurityTokenReference element(WS-Security)
    17.5.5 Composing Security element contents(WS-Security)
    17.5.6 The EncryptedData element(XML-Encryption)
    17.5.7 The CipherData,CipherValue,and CipherReference elements(XML-Encryption)
    17.5.8 XML-Signature elements
    Chapter 18 SOA Platforms
    18.1 SOA platform basics
    18.1.1 Basic platform building blocks
    18.1.2 Common SOA platform layers
    18.1.3 Relationship between SOA layers and technologies
    18.1.4 Fundamental service technology architecture
    18.1.5 Vendor platforms
    18.2 SOA support in J2EE
    18.2.1 Platform overview
    18.2.2 Primitive SOA support
    18.2.3 Support for service-orientation principles
    18.2.4 Contemporary SOA support
    18.3 SOA support in .NET
    18.3.1 Platform overview
    18.3.2 Primitive SOA support
    18.3.3 Support for service-orientation principles
    18.3.4 Contemporary SOA support
    18.4 Integration considerations
    Appendix A Case Studies:Conclusion
    A.1 RailCo Ltd
    A.2 Transit Line Systems Inc
    A.3 The Oasis Car Wash
    Appendix B Service Models Reference
    Glossary
    About the Author
    About the Photographs
    Index

     

     

    SOA之道:思想、技术、过程与实践_百度百科.html

    《SOA概念、技术与设计(影印版)》((美)艾尔)【简介_书评_在线阅读】 - 当当图书.html

    《SOA架构:服务和微服务分析及设计(原书第2版)》([美] 托马斯·埃尔(Thomas Erl))【简介_书评_在线阅读】 - 当当图书.html

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/attilax/p/15197407.html
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