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Application server

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An application server is a server that hosts applications[1] or software that delivers a business application through a communication protocol.[2] For a typical web application, the application server sits behind the web servers.

An application server framework is a service layer model. It includes software components available to a software developer through an application programming interface. An application server may have features such as clustering, fail-over, and load-balancing. The goal is for developers to focus on the business logic.[3]

Java application servers

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Jakarta EE (formerly Java EE or J2EE) defines the core set of API and features of Java application servers.

The Jakarta EE infrastructure is partitioned into logical containers.

Microsoft

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Microsoft's .NET positions their middle-tier applications and services infrastructure in the Windows Server operating system and the .NET Framework technologies in the role of an application server.[4] The Windows Application Server role includes Internet Information Services (IIS) to provide web server support, the .NET Framework to provide application support, ASP.NET to provide server side scripting, COM+ for application component communication, Message Queuing for multithreaded processing, and the Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) for application communication.[5]

PHP application servers

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PHP application servers run and manage PHP applications.

  • Zend Server, built by Zend, provides application server functionality for the PHP-based applications.
  • RoadRunner, built by Spiral Scout is a high-performance PHP application server, load-balancer, and process manager written in Go.

Third-party

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  • Mono (a cross platform open-source implementation of .NET supporting nearly all its features, with the exception of Windows OS-specific features), sponsored by Microsoft and released under the MIT License

Mobile application servers

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Mobile application servers provide data delivery to mobile devices.

Mobile features

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Core capabilities of mobile application services include

  • Data routing– data is packaged in smaller (REST) objects with some business logic to minimize demands on bandwidth and battery
  • Orchestration– transactions and data integration across multiple sources
  • Authentication service– secure connectivity to back-end systems is managed by the mobile middleware
  • Off-line support– allows users to access and use data even though the device is not connected
  • Security– data encryption, device control, SSL, call logging

Mobile challenges

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Although most standards-based infrastructure (including SOAs) are designed to connect to any independent of any vendor, product or technology, most enterprises have trouble connecting back-end systems to mobile applications, because mobile devices add the following technological challenges:[6]

  • Limited resources – mobile devices have limited power and bandwidth
  • Intermittent connectivity – cellular service and wifi coverage is often not continuous
  • Difficult to secure[7] – mobility and BYOD practices make it hard to secure mobile devices

Deployment models

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An application server can be deployed:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ottinger, Joseph (1 September 2008). "What is an App Server?". TheServerSide.com. Retrieved 2022-02-06. an application server provides an environment where applications can run, no matter what the applications are or what they do
  2. ^ Sintes, Tony (2002-08-23). "App server, Web server: What's the difference?". JavaWorld. Retrieved 2022-06-14. [A]n application server exposes business logic to client applications through various protocols
  3. ^ Ceri, Stefano; Fraternali, Piero; Bongio, Aldo; Brambilla, Marco; Comai, Sara; Matella, Maristella (2003). Designing Data-Intensive Web Applications. Morgan Kaufmann. doi:10.1016/B978-1-55860-843-6.X5000-2. ISBN 1-55860-843-5.
  4. ^ TechNet: Application Server
  5. ^ TechNet: Application Server Role
  6. ^ Jaenicke, Coco (19 November 2014). "Why Mobile App Development Requires More than an SOA". App Developer Magazine. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  7. ^ Egan, Bob (April 11, 2014). "A Billion Smartphone Users May Be Affected by the Heartbleed Security Flaw". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-02-06.