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Distributed Computing in Java 9

You're reading from   Distributed Computing in Java 9 Leverage the latest features of Java 9 for distributed computing

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787126992
Length 304 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Raja Malleswara Rao Malleswara Rao Pattamsetti Raja Malleswara Rao Malleswara Rao Pattamsetti
Author Profile Icon Raja Malleswara Rao Malleswara Rao Pattamsetti
Raja Malleswara Rao Malleswara Rao Pattamsetti
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Quick Start to Distributed Computing 2. Communication between Distributed Applications FREE CHAPTER 3. RMI, CORBA, and JavaSpaces 4. Enterprise Messaging 5. HPC Cluster Computing 6. Distributed Databases 7. Cloud and Distributed Computing 8. Big Data Analytics 9. Testing, Debugging, and Troubleshooting 10. Security

JMS

Java's implementation of an EMS in the Application Programming Interface (API) format is known as JMS.

JMS allows distributed Java applications to communicate with applications developed in any other technology that understands messaging through asynchronous messages. JMS applications contain a provider, clients, messages, and administrated objects.

Before JMS, each MOM vendor provided application access to its product through its product-specific (proprietary) API, making it available to different programming languages, including Java. JMS changed this notion by providing a standard, portable way for Java programs to send/receive messages through a MOM product. Any application written in JMS can be executed on any MOM that implements the JMS API standards. The JMS API is specified as a set of interfaces as part of the Java API. Hence, all the products that intend to...

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