Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 496 pages
- Published by: Addison-Wesley Professional September 20, 1996
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 0201634937
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-0201634938
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Book Dimensions:
9.5 x 7.6 x 1 inches
- Weighs: 2.2 pounds
Book Info
Provides a definitive, up-to-date, and comprehensive overview of TUXEDO, the leading
software system for On-Line Transaction Processing (OLTP). DLC: Transaction systems (Computer systems)
Back Cover Copy
book provides a definitive, up-to-date, and comprehensive overview of TUXEDO, the leading
software system for On-Line Transaction Processing (OLTP). Appropriate for anyone with an interest in distributed business applications - information systems managers,
software architects, and developers - the book includes a general introduction to distributed transaction processing technology, a broad overview of TUXEDO's features and operation, and a more detailed technical guide to TUXEDO applications development and administration.
You will learn about many of TUXEDO's state-of-the-art features, including ATMI, typed buffers (including FML), the EventBroker(tm), Transactional Remote Procedure Call (TxRPC), the Application Queuing System, TMIB-based administration, and more. In addition, an overall architectural view of a TUXEDO-based application gives you a concrete understanding of how these features and capabilities function in a working environment. You will come away from this book with an insider's view of the rationale behind many of TUXEDO's sophisticated features and an great understanding of how and why the TUXEDO System works. Current with the latest release, the book covers TUXEDO version 6.1.
0201634937B04062001
Reader ReviewsThere is a lot of information. Unfortunately there are hundreds of acronyms, most of them specific to Tuxedo programming. It becomes tedious boring reading as more later terms are described in older terms/acronyms. There are some diagrams but I did not find them particularly useful. Mostly architectural descriptions. Not a lot of working examples. Again, the reading is dry, but I'm not sure there is a better alternative out there on this topic.