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2005 IEEE International Conference on Web Services : (ICWS 2005) : proceedings : July 11-15, 2005, Orlando, Florida
2005 IEEE International Conference on Web Services : (ICWS 2005) : proceedings : July 11-15, 2005, Orlando, Florida
Pubbl/distr/stampa [Place of publication not identified], : IEEE Computer Society, 2005
Disciplina 005.2/76
Soggetto topico Web services
Telecommunications
Electrical & Computer Engineering
Engineering & Applied Sciences
ISBN 1-5386-0167-2
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNISA-996206221203316
[Place of publication not identified], : IEEE Computer Society, 2005
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. di Salerno
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
2005 IEEE International Conference on Web Services : (ICWS 2005) : proceedings : July 11-15, 2005, Orlando, Florida
2005 IEEE International Conference on Web Services : (ICWS 2005) : proceedings : July 11-15, 2005, Orlando, Florida
Pubbl/distr/stampa [Place of publication not identified], : IEEE Computer Society, 2005
Disciplina 005.2/76
Soggetto topico Web services
Telecommunications
Electrical & Computer Engineering
Engineering & Applied Sciences
ISBN 9781538601679
1538601672
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910142342803321
[Place of publication not identified], : IEEE Computer Society, 2005
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
AI and Microservices : Integrating AI into API Design and Distributed Microservice Architecture / / by Dileep Kumar Pandiya, Nilesh Charankar
AI and Microservices : Integrating AI into API Design and Distributed Microservice Architecture / / by Dileep Kumar Pandiya, Nilesh Charankar
Autore Pandiya Dileep Kumar
Edizione [1st ed. 2025.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Berkeley, CA : , : Apress : , : Imprint : Apress, , 2025
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (243 pages)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) CharankarNilesh
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Artificial intelligence
Software architecture
ISBN 979-88-6881-306-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Chapter 1 - Introduction to AI in Software Architecture -- Chapter 2 -Foundations of Microservices and APIs -- Chapter 3 - AI in Microservices Development -- Chapter 4 - Testing Strategies for Microservices and APIs -- Chapter 5 - Design Patterns and Best Practices for AI-Enhanced API and Microservices -- Chapter 6 - Security in AI-Enhanced Systems -- Chapter 7 - AI-Driven Performance Monitoring and Optimization -- Chapter 8 - Integrating with Other Technologies -- Chapter 9 - Case Studies -- Chapter 10 - Challenges and Considerations -- Chapter 11 The Future of AI-Enhanced Microservices and APIs Conclusion -- Appendix -- Glossary of Terms.
Record Nr. UNINA-9911015867803321
Pandiya Dileep Kumar  
Berkeley, CA : , : Apress : , : Imprint : Apress, , 2025
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Architecting enterprise solutions [[electronic resource] ] : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Architecting enterprise solutions [[electronic resource] ] : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Autore Dyson Paul
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (384 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) LongshawAndy
Collana Wiley Software Patterns Series
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Computer architecture
Computer systems
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 1-280-27034-9
9786610270347
0-470-85587-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Acknowledgements; An All-Too-Common Story; In the beginning ...; In the middle ...; In the end ...; Chapter 1 Introduction; What this Book is About; What this Book is Not About; Why Write this Book?; Who Should Read this Book?; Architects; Developers; Project Managers; Students and Trainees; The Structure of the Book; Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Reading the Book; PART 1 Architecture, Patterns and Internet Technology; Chapter 2 System Architecture; Architecture, Design and 'Goodness of Fit'; How does this Relate to System Architecture?
What are the Non-functional Characteristics we Care About?Balancing the Non-functional Characteristics; Defining System Architectures; Why do we Care About System Architecture?; Summary; Chapter 3 Internet Technology Systems; Types of Internet Technology System; Why do we Build Systems Using Internet Technology?; Building Blocks of Internet Technology Systems; Why is it Difficult?; Summary; Chapter 4 Architectural Patterns for Internet Technology Systems; Patterns, Languages and Internet Technology; Why do we use Patterns?; Patterns vs Principles; Organization of the Patterns
Presentation of the Patterns Navigating the Language; Summary; Chapter 5 The GlobalTech System; The Business Case; The System Overview; Summary; PART 2 The Patterns; Chapter 6 Fundamental Patterns; Getting the Shape Right; APPLICATION SERVER ARCHITECTURE; PERIPHERAL SPECIALIST ELEMENTS; What makes these Patterns Fundamental?; Summary; Chapter 7 System Performance Patterns; I Feel the Need, the Need for Speed; Principles; ACTIVE-REDUNDANT ELEMENTS; LOAD-BALANCED ELEMENTS; SESSION FAILOVER; DEDICATED WEB AND APPLICATION SERVERS; COMMON PERSISTENT STORE; Why Tiers are not a Catastrophe
DATA REPLICATION CONNECTION LIMITATION; RESOURCE POOLING; LOCAL CACHE; OFFLINE REPORTING; Other Patterns; Chapter 8 System Control Patterns; Dangerous (adj.): Speed Without Control; Terminology; CONTINUAL STATUS REPORTING; OPERATIONAL MONITORING AND ALERTING; 3-CATEGORY LOGGING; SYSTEM OVERVIEW; DYNAMICALLY-ADJUSTABLE CONFIGURATION; DEMILITARIZED ZONE; INFORMATION OBSCURITY; SECURE CHANNELS; Secure Sockets Layer and SSL Acceleration; KNOWN PARTNERS; Other Patterns; Chapter 9 System Evolution Patterns; Plus Ça Change; Principles; DYNAMICALLY-DISCOVERABLE ELEMENTS; EXPANDABLE HARDWARE
VIRTUAL PLATFORM SWAPPABLE STAGING ENVIRONMENT; SEPARATE SYSTEM-MANAGED DATA; Other Patterns; PART 3 Application of the Patterns; Chapter 10 GlobalTech Revisited; Reviewing the Architecture; Architecting for System Performance; Architecting for System Control; Architecting for System Evolution; Summary; Chapter 11 Applying the Patterns; Not Quite the Simplest System that Could Work; Which Patterns to Apply; A Process for Applying the Patterns?; Examples of Applying the Patterns; Summary; Chapter 12 Moving on from Here; Technology; Tool Support; Development Process
An Evolutionary Approach to Architecture
Record Nr. UNINA-9910449876703321
Dyson Paul  
Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Architecting enterprise solutions [[electronic resource] ] : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Architecting enterprise solutions [[electronic resource] ] : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Autore Dyson Paul
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (384 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) LongshawAndy
Collana Wiley Software Patterns Series
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Computer architecture
Computer systems
ISBN 1-280-27034-9
9786610270347
0-470-85587-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Acknowledgements; An All-Too-Common Story; In the beginning ...; In the middle ...; In the end ...; Chapter 1 Introduction; What this Book is About; What this Book is Not About; Why Write this Book?; Who Should Read this Book?; Architects; Developers; Project Managers; Students and Trainees; The Structure of the Book; Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Reading the Book; PART 1 Architecture, Patterns and Internet Technology; Chapter 2 System Architecture; Architecture, Design and 'Goodness of Fit'; How does this Relate to System Architecture?
What are the Non-functional Characteristics we Care About?Balancing the Non-functional Characteristics; Defining System Architectures; Why do we Care About System Architecture?; Summary; Chapter 3 Internet Technology Systems; Types of Internet Technology System; Why do we Build Systems Using Internet Technology?; Building Blocks of Internet Technology Systems; Why is it Difficult?; Summary; Chapter 4 Architectural Patterns for Internet Technology Systems; Patterns, Languages and Internet Technology; Why do we use Patterns?; Patterns vs Principles; Organization of the Patterns
Presentation of the Patterns Navigating the Language; Summary; Chapter 5 The GlobalTech System; The Business Case; The System Overview; Summary; PART 2 The Patterns; Chapter 6 Fundamental Patterns; Getting the Shape Right; APPLICATION SERVER ARCHITECTURE; PERIPHERAL SPECIALIST ELEMENTS; What makes these Patterns Fundamental?; Summary; Chapter 7 System Performance Patterns; I Feel the Need, the Need for Speed; Principles; ACTIVE-REDUNDANT ELEMENTS; LOAD-BALANCED ELEMENTS; SESSION FAILOVER; DEDICATED WEB AND APPLICATION SERVERS; COMMON PERSISTENT STORE; Why Tiers are not a Catastrophe
DATA REPLICATION CONNECTION LIMITATION; RESOURCE POOLING; LOCAL CACHE; OFFLINE REPORTING; Other Patterns; Chapter 8 System Control Patterns; Dangerous (adj.): Speed Without Control; Terminology; CONTINUAL STATUS REPORTING; OPERATIONAL MONITORING AND ALERTING; 3-CATEGORY LOGGING; SYSTEM OVERVIEW; DYNAMICALLY-ADJUSTABLE CONFIGURATION; DEMILITARIZED ZONE; INFORMATION OBSCURITY; SECURE CHANNELS; Secure Sockets Layer and SSL Acceleration; KNOWN PARTNERS; Other Patterns; Chapter 9 System Evolution Patterns; Plus Ça Change; Principles; DYNAMICALLY-DISCOVERABLE ELEMENTS; EXPANDABLE HARDWARE
VIRTUAL PLATFORM SWAPPABLE STAGING ENVIRONMENT; SEPARATE SYSTEM-MANAGED DATA; Other Patterns; PART 3 Application of the Patterns; Chapter 10 GlobalTech Revisited; Reviewing the Architecture; Architecting for System Performance; Architecting for System Control; Architecting for System Evolution; Summary; Chapter 11 Applying the Patterns; Not Quite the Simplest System that Could Work; Which Patterns to Apply; A Process for Applying the Patterns?; Examples of Applying the Patterns; Summary; Chapter 12 Moving on from Here; Technology; Tool Support; Development Process
An Evolutionary Approach to Architecture
Record Nr. UNINA-9910783399903321
Dyson Paul  
Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Architecting enterprise solutions : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Architecting enterprise solutions : patterns for high-capability Internet-based systems / / Paul Dyson, Andy Longshaw
Autore Dyson Paul
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (384 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) LongshawAndy
Collana Wiley Software Patterns Series
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Computer architecture
Computer systems
ISBN 9786610270347
9781280270345
1280270349
9780470855874
0470855878
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Contents; Acknowledgements; An All-Too-Common Story; In the beginning ...; In the middle ...; In the end ...; Chapter 1 Introduction; What this Book is About; What this Book is Not About; Why Write this Book?; Who Should Read this Book?; Architects; Developers; Project Managers; Students and Trainees; The Structure of the Book; Part 1; Part 2; Part 3; Reading the Book; PART 1 Architecture, Patterns and Internet Technology; Chapter 2 System Architecture; Architecture, Design and 'Goodness of Fit'; How does this Relate to System Architecture?
What are the Non-functional Characteristics we Care About?Balancing the Non-functional Characteristics; Defining System Architectures; Why do we Care About System Architecture?; Summary; Chapter 3 Internet Technology Systems; Types of Internet Technology System; Why do we Build Systems Using Internet Technology?; Building Blocks of Internet Technology Systems; Why is it Difficult?; Summary; Chapter 4 Architectural Patterns for Internet Technology Systems; Patterns, Languages and Internet Technology; Why do we use Patterns?; Patterns vs Principles; Organization of the Patterns
Presentation of the Patterns Navigating the Language; Summary; Chapter 5 The GlobalTech System; The Business Case; The System Overview; Summary; PART 2 The Patterns; Chapter 6 Fundamental Patterns; Getting the Shape Right; APPLICATION SERVER ARCHITECTURE; PERIPHERAL SPECIALIST ELEMENTS; What makes these Patterns Fundamental?; Summary; Chapter 7 System Performance Patterns; I Feel the Need, the Need for Speed; Principles; ACTIVE-REDUNDANT ELEMENTS; LOAD-BALANCED ELEMENTS; SESSION FAILOVER; DEDICATED WEB AND APPLICATION SERVERS; COMMON PERSISTENT STORE; Why Tiers are not a Catastrophe
DATA REPLICATION CONNECTION LIMITATION; RESOURCE POOLING; LOCAL CACHE; OFFLINE REPORTING; Other Patterns; Chapter 8 System Control Patterns; Dangerous (adj.): Speed Without Control; Terminology; CONTINUAL STATUS REPORTING; OPERATIONAL MONITORING AND ALERTING; 3-CATEGORY LOGGING; SYSTEM OVERVIEW; DYNAMICALLY-ADJUSTABLE CONFIGURATION; DEMILITARIZED ZONE; INFORMATION OBSCURITY; SECURE CHANNELS; Secure Sockets Layer and SSL Acceleration; KNOWN PARTNERS; Other Patterns; Chapter 9 System Evolution Patterns; Plus Ça Change; Principles; DYNAMICALLY-DISCOVERABLE ELEMENTS; EXPANDABLE HARDWARE
VIRTUAL PLATFORM SWAPPABLE STAGING ENVIRONMENT; SEPARATE SYSTEM-MANAGED DATA; Other Patterns; PART 3 Application of the Patterns; Chapter 10 GlobalTech Revisited; Reviewing the Architecture; Architecting for System Performance; Architecting for System Control; Architecting for System Evolution; Summary; Chapter 11 Applying the Patterns; Not Quite the Simplest System that Could Work; Which Patterns to Apply; A Process for Applying the Patterns?; Examples of Applying the Patterns; Summary; Chapter 12 Moving on from Here; Technology; Tool Support; Development Process
An Evolutionary Approach to Architecture
Record Nr. UNINA-9910974050403321
Dyson Paul  
Hoboken, N.J., : John Wiley & Sons, 2004
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development [[electronic resource] ] : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development [[electronic resource] ] : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
Autore Christianson Curt
Pubbl/distr/stampa Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (284 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) CochranJeff
Collana From technologies to solutions
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Microsoft .NET
Web sites - Design
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 9786612172328
1-282-17232-8
1-84719-362-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Planning and Building your First Content Management System; What a Content Management System is; Web Content Management Systems; Why use ASP.NET; ASP.NET membership and profiles; ASP.NET Master Pages and Themes; ASP.NET 3.5; Setting up your environment; Installing IIS; Operating systems and IIS versions; Installing IIS in Windows XP Pro; Installing IIS in Windows Vista; Installing ASP.NET 3.5; Installing Visual Web Developer Express 2008; Configuring and testing your setup; Configuring IIS on Windows XP; Configuring IIS on Windows Vista
Setting NTFS permissionsTesting IIS; Writing a simple content management application; Default.aspx; Content.txt; FCKEditor; Edit.aspx; Summary; Chapter 2: Adding a Database to a Content Management System; Why use a database; Why use SQL Server Express; Installing and configuring SQL Server 2005 Express; Installing SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Running SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Creating a database for our simple Content Management System; Creating a new database with Management Studio Express; Windows authentication vs. SQL server authentication
Configuring an SQL user accountConfiguring the database to use the SQL Server account; Creating a database table with Management Studio Express; Using the SimpleCMS database in Visual Web Developer; Using the SimpleCMS database in the CMS application; Creating a new Default.aspx file; Configuring the data source; Binding the Data Source to a Repeater control; Creating a new Edit.aspx; Creating multiple content pages; Altering the database table; Adding data to the new column; Altering the SqlDataSource code; Understanding SQL Server commands; SQL query syntax; SELECT queries; WHERE clause
TOPALL | DISTINCT; COUNT; GROUP BY clause; ORDER BY clause; INSERT queries; UPDATE queries; DELETE queries; Other queries; Entities and relationships in brief; Entities; Entity relationships; SQL injection; Preventing SQL injection; Changing the database user account; Summary; Chapter 3: Content Management System Architecture; Multi-tier architecture; The data store; The Pages table; The Panes table; The Articles table; The data access layer; Creating the typed dataset; Filtering data from the dataset; Insert method; Update and delete methods; The business logic layer; The ArticlesBLL class
The presentation layerBuilding the Master Page; Summary; Chapter 4: Adding Security and Membership to a Content Management System; ASP.NET membership; Configuring and using forms authentication; Creating a new application; Creating the home page; Create the Master Page; Enabling forms authentication; Creating the membership database; Configuring the SqlMembershipProvider; Creating the login page; Creating a user account with the ASP.NET configuration tool; Creating a login; Adding forms authentication to our CMS; Preparing an existing SQL database; The aspnet_regsql.exe tool; User accounts
Membership roles
Record Nr. UNINA-9910456657003321
Christianson Curt  
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development [[electronic resource] ] : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development [[electronic resource] ] : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
Autore Christianson Curt
Pubbl/distr/stampa Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (284 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) CochranJeff
Collana From technologies to solutions
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Microsoft .NET
Web sites - Design
ISBN 9786612172328
1-282-17232-8
1-84719-362-5
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Planning and Building your First Content Management System; What a Content Management System is; Web Content Management Systems; Why use ASP.NET; ASP.NET membership and profiles; ASP.NET Master Pages and Themes; ASP.NET 3.5; Setting up your environment; Installing IIS; Operating systems and IIS versions; Installing IIS in Windows XP Pro; Installing IIS in Windows Vista; Installing ASP.NET 3.5; Installing Visual Web Developer Express 2008; Configuring and testing your setup; Configuring IIS on Windows XP; Configuring IIS on Windows Vista
Setting NTFS permissionsTesting IIS; Writing a simple content management application; Default.aspx; Content.txt; FCKEditor; Edit.aspx; Summary; Chapter 2: Adding a Database to a Content Management System; Why use a database; Why use SQL Server Express; Installing and configuring SQL Server 2005 Express; Installing SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Running SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Creating a database for our simple Content Management System; Creating a new database with Management Studio Express; Windows authentication vs. SQL server authentication
Configuring an SQL user accountConfiguring the database to use the SQL Server account; Creating a database table with Management Studio Express; Using the SimpleCMS database in Visual Web Developer; Using the SimpleCMS database in the CMS application; Creating a new Default.aspx file; Configuring the data source; Binding the Data Source to a Repeater control; Creating a new Edit.aspx; Creating multiple content pages; Altering the database table; Adding data to the new column; Altering the SqlDataSource code; Understanding SQL Server commands; SQL query syntax; SELECT queries; WHERE clause
TOPALL | DISTINCT; COUNT; GROUP BY clause; ORDER BY clause; INSERT queries; UPDATE queries; DELETE queries; Other queries; Entities and relationships in brief; Entities; Entity relationships; SQL injection; Preventing SQL injection; Changing the database user account; Summary; Chapter 3: Content Management System Architecture; Multi-tier architecture; The data store; The Pages table; The Panes table; The Articles table; The data access layer; Creating the typed dataset; Filtering data from the dataset; Insert method; Update and delete methods; The business logic layer; The ArticlesBLL class
The presentation layerBuilding the Master Page; Summary; Chapter 4: Adding Security and Membership to a Content Management System; ASP.NET membership; Configuring and using forms authentication; Creating a new application; Creating the home page; Create the Master Page; Enabling forms authentication; Creating the membership database; Configuring the SqlMembershipProvider; Creating the login page; Creating a user account with the ASP.NET configuration tool; Creating a login; Adding forms authentication to our CMS; Preparing an existing SQL database; The aspnet_regsql.exe tool; User accounts
Membership roles
Record Nr. UNINA-9910780784003321
Christianson Curt  
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
ASP.NET 3.5 content management system development : build, manage, and extend your own content management system / / Curt Christianson, Jeff Cochran
Autore Christianson Curt
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (284 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Altri autori (Persone) CochranJeff
Collana From technologies to solutions
Soggetto topico Internet programming
Microsoft .NET Framework
Web sites - Design
ISBN 9786612172328
9781282172326
1282172328
9781847193629
1847193625
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Planning and Building your First Content Management System; What a Content Management System is; Web Content Management Systems; Why use ASP.NET; ASP.NET membership and profiles; ASP.NET Master Pages and Themes; ASP.NET 3.5; Setting up your environment; Installing IIS; Operating systems and IIS versions; Installing IIS in Windows XP Pro; Installing IIS in Windows Vista; Installing ASP.NET 3.5; Installing Visual Web Developer Express 2008; Configuring and testing your setup; Configuring IIS on Windows XP; Configuring IIS on Windows Vista
Setting NTFS permissionsTesting IIS; Writing a simple content management application; Default.aspx; Content.txt; FCKEditor; Edit.aspx; Summary; Chapter 2: Adding a Database to a Content Management System; Why use a database; Why use SQL Server Express; Installing and configuring SQL Server 2005 Express; Installing SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Running SQL Server 2005 Management Studio Express; Creating a database for our simple Content Management System; Creating a new database with Management Studio Express; Windows authentication vs. SQL server authentication
Configuring an SQL user accountConfiguring the database to use the SQL Server account; Creating a database table with Management Studio Express; Using the SimpleCMS database in Visual Web Developer; Using the SimpleCMS database in the CMS application; Creating a new Default.aspx file; Configuring the data source; Binding the Data Source to a Repeater control; Creating a new Edit.aspx; Creating multiple content pages; Altering the database table; Adding data to the new column; Altering the SqlDataSource code; Understanding SQL Server commands; SQL query syntax; SELECT queries; WHERE clause
TOPALL | DISTINCT; COUNT; GROUP BY clause; ORDER BY clause; INSERT queries; UPDATE queries; DELETE queries; Other queries; Entities and relationships in brief; Entities; Entity relationships; SQL injection; Preventing SQL injection; Changing the database user account; Summary; Chapter 3: Content Management System Architecture; Multi-tier architecture; The data store; The Pages table; The Panes table; The Articles table; The data access layer; Creating the typed dataset; Filtering data from the dataset; Insert method; Update and delete methods; The business logic layer; The ArticlesBLL class
The presentation layerBuilding the Master Page; Summary; Chapter 4: Adding Security and Membership to a Content Management System; ASP.NET membership; Configuring and using forms authentication; Creating a new application; Creating the home page; Create the Master Page; Enabling forms authentication; Creating the membership database; Configuring the SqlMembershipProvider; Creating the login page; Creating a user account with the ASP.NET configuration tool; Creating a login; Adding forms authentication to our CMS; Preparing an existing SQL database; The aspnet_regsql.exe tool; User accounts
Membership roles
Record Nr. UNINA-9910963295503321
Christianson Curt  
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Publishing Ltd., 2009
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
ASP.NET 3.5 for dummies [[electronic resource] /] / Ken Cox
ASP.NET 3.5 for dummies [[electronic resource] /] / Ken Cox
Autore Cox Ken
Edizione [1st edition]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Hoboken, N.J., : Wiley Pub., Inc., c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (434 p.)
Disciplina 005.2/76
Collana --For dummies
Soggetto topico Web servers
Soggetto genere / forma Electronic books.
ISBN 0-470-28854-X
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto ASP.NET 3.5 For Dummies; About the Author; Dedication; Author's Acknowledgments; Contents at a Glance; Table of Contents; Introduction; I Know Who I Am: Who Are You?; Less Code, More Productivity; How to Use This Book; How This Book Is Organized; What's on the Web Sites; Icons Used in This Book; Where to Go from Here; Part I: Getting to Know ASP.NET and Visual Web Developer; Chapter 1: Understanding Microsoft's Web Technologies; Chapter 2: Getting Up and Running; Chapter 3: Creating a Useful ASP. NET Site; Chapter 4: Managing Data and Other CRUD; Chapter 5: Handling User Input and Events
Part II: Immersing Yourself in DataChapter 6: Fetching and Presenting Data with SqlDataSource; Chapter 7: LINQ as a Data Language; Chapter 8: Using LINQ to SQL and the LinqDataSource; Chapter 9: Creating and Consuming Diverse Data; Part III: Enhancing the Interface and User Experience; Chapter 10: Common Elements: Style Sheets, Master Pages, and Skins; Chapter 11: Adding Navigation with TreeView, Menu, Breadcrumb, and SiteMap; Chapter 12: Web Standards, Page Layout, and Usability; Chapter 13: Designing the ListView and Other Templated Controls
Chapter 14: Dynamic Effects, Images, and RolloversChapter 15: Enhancing Pages with the AJAX Control Toolkit; Chapter 16: Creating and Displaying Rich Content; Part IV: Tracking Users, Controlling Access, and Implementing Security; Chapter 17: Site Security Using Authentication and Membership; Chapter 18: Creating a Shopping Cart with Profiles; Chapter 19: Validation in Depth; Part V: Getting the Bugs Out and Handling Runtime Errors; Chapter 20: Debugging and Tracing Pages; Chapter 21: Avoiding Crashes by Handling Exceptions; Part VI: The Part of Tens
Chapter 22: Ten Tips on Deploying Your Web ApplicationChapter 23: Ten Tips to Success with ASP.NET; Index
Record Nr. UNINA-9910451171903321
Cox Ken  
Hoboken, N.J., : Wiley Pub., Inc., c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui