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Node.js  Design Patterns

You're reading from   Node.js Design Patterns Master best practices to build modular and scalable server-side web applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785885587
Length 526 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Luciano Mammino Luciano Mammino
Author Profile Icon Luciano Mammino
Luciano Mammino
Mario Casciaro Mario Casciaro
Author Profile Icon Mario Casciaro
Mario Casciaro
Joel Purra Joel Purra
Author Profile Icon Joel Purra
Joel Purra
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Welcome to the Node.js Platform 2. Node.js Essential Patterns FREE CHAPTER 3. Asynchronous Control Flow Patterns with Callbacks 4. Asynchronous Control Flow Patterns with ES2015 and Beyond 5. Coding with Streams 6. Design Patterns 7. Wiring Modules 8. Universal JavaScript for Web Applications 9. Advanced Asynchronous Recipes 10. Scalability and Architectural Patterns 11. Messaging and Integration Patterns

Request/reply patterns


Dealing with a messaging system often means using a one-way asynchronous communication; publish/subscribe is a perfect example.

One-way communications can give us great advantages in terms of parallelism and efficiency, but alone they are not able to solve all our integration and communication problems. Sometimes, a good old request/reply pattern might just be the perfect tool for the job. Therefore, in all those situations where an asynchronous one-way channel is all that we have, it's important to know how to build an abstraction that allows us to exchange messages in a request/reply fashion. That's exactly what we are going to learn next.

Correlation identifier

The first request/reply pattern we are going to learn is called correlation identifier and it represents the basic block for building a request/reply abstraction on top of a one-way channel.

The pattern consists of marking each request with an identifier, which is then attached to the response by the receiver...

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