Friday, May 2, 2008

Essential Windows Communication Foundation



Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) is the easiest way to produce and
consume Web services on the Microsoft platform. With .NET 3.5, WCF has
been extensively revamped--and Visual Studio 2008 gives developers
powerful new tools for utilizing it. Essential Windows Communication
Foundation shows developers exactly how to make the most of WCF with
.NET 3.5 and Visual Studio 2008.

Drawing on extensive experience working with early adopters, three
Microsoft insiders systematically address the topics developers ask
about WCF. The authors approach each subject with practical advice and
present best practices, tips, and tricks for solving problems.
Throughout, you�ll find detailed explanations, solutions for the �pain
points?of WCF development, and an extensive collection of reusable code
examples. Coverage includes
- Using WCF contracts to define complex structures and interfaces
- Understanding WCF�s channel stacks and channel model architecture
- Configuring the WCF communication stack to use only the protocols
you need
- Using standard and custom service behaviors to manage concurrency,
instances, transactions, and more
- Serializing data from .NET types to XML Infosets and representing
Infosets �on the wire?
- Hosting WCF services via IIS, managed .NET applications, and Windows
Activation Services
- WCF security, in depth: authentication; transport and message-level
security; and Internet and intranet scenarios
- Improving reliability: exception handling, diagnostics, and more
- Workflow services: new integration points between WCF 3.5 and
Windows Workflow Foundation
- Building client-to-client, peer network-based applications
- Utilizing WCF for non-SOAP Web services: AJAX and JSON examples and
.NET 3.5 hosting classes
Microsoft�s Steve Resnick, Richard Crane, and Chris Bowen are technology
experts at the Microsoft Technology Center in Boston. They specialize in
helping customers improve their technical agility by applying WCF and
related technologies. Resnick has specialized in Internet technologies
and distributed computing at Microsoft since 1995. He is a frequent
speaker at Microsoft events and is now technology director for the U.S.
Microsoft Technology Centers. Crane has more than 15 years of experience
in senior software development roles. He specializes in large-scale Web
sites, distributed computing, transactional systems, and performance
analysis. Bowen has been an architect and developer for more than 15
years at companies such as Monster.com and Staples and is co-author of
Professional Visual Studio 2005 Team System.

Download :
http://w16.easy-share.com/1700292734.html

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