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Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition

You're reading from   Microsoft Azure Development Cookbook Second Edition Over 70 advanced recipes for developing scalable services with the Microsoft Azure platform

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782170327
Length 422 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Developing Cloud Services for Microsoft Azure 2. Deploying Quickly with Azure Websites FREE CHAPTER 3. Getting Storage with Blobs in Azure 4. Going Relational with the Azure SQL Database 5. Going NoSQL with Azure Tables 6. Messaging and Queues with the Storage and Service Bus 7. Managing Azure Resources with the Azure Management Libraries 8. Going In-memory with Azure Cache Index

Using local cache and notifications


Distributed cache solves a series of critical issues when we develop distributed systems. In these systems, often made by many servers working in a pool, the state should be persisted somewhere out of process. In fact, in case of a scalable web application made by N identical stateless servers in parallel, no one can safely own the state of something either because it might fail or because the other servers cannot access the web application and they can't even know that something is stored into a peer's state.

So, distributed cache solves this big problem by keeping the state out of process, out of server, and sometimes out of datacenter. However, this comes at a price. First is the latency of networks due to the physical distance between the client (stateless application) and server (caching endpoint). Second, the network bandwidth is not infinite, and it is certainly slower than in-process memory operations. Therefore, we must reduce the number of cache...

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