Course Description
This three-day instructor-led workshop provides students with the
knowledge and skills to develop distributed applications by using the
Microsoft( .NET Framework and Microsoft Visual Studio( 2005. The
workshop focuses on building distributed applications by using Web
services, remoting, Microsoft Message Queuing, and serviced components.
Agenda
Unit 1 Building and Consuming a Simple XML Web Service
This unit describes how you can create a simple Web service and client application by using the .NET Framework. It also explains how you can configure client proxies, and debug and deploy Web services.
Lessons
Technical Context of Web Services
Components of Web Service Technology
Lab 1: Building and Consuming a Simple Web Services
Exercise 1. Creating a Web Service and Client
Exercise 2. Working with the Client Proxy
Exercise 3. Deploying a Web Service and Configuring a Client
Exercise 4. Debugging and Exception Handling in Web Services
Exercise 5. Determining Web Service Connectivity
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Explain the technical context for Web services.
Understand key components of Web service technology.
Create a Web service and client.
Configure a Web service client and proxy.
Deploy and use a Web service.
Debug a Web service.
Determine Web service connectivity.
Unit 2 Configuring and Customizing a Web Service
This unit introduces a number of important configuration and customization options for Web services. It describes how to control the way in which complex parameters to Web methods are serialized. This unit also shows how to use configuration files to control the way in which a Web service operates.
Lessons
XML Serialization
How to Use Complex Data Types in Web Services
How to Use Attributes to Control Serialization
How to Use Service Configuration Attributes
Configuration Files
Lab 2: Configuring and Customizing a Web Service
Exercise 1. Creating and Using Custom Data Types
Exercise 2. Customizing the Web Service
Exercise 3. Configuring the Web Service Using the Web.config File
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Explain XML serialization of user-defined classes.
Pass complex data types between a Web service and a client.
Configure XML serialization.
Configure SOAP formatting options.
Configure the namespace and binding for a Web service.
Configure a Web service by using the Web.config file.
Unit 3 Calling Web Methods Asynchronously
This unit explains how to call a Web method asynchronously. It describes how to improve the responsiveness of client applications by avoiding the need to wait for Web methods to complete execution before continuing processing. This unit covers the different options available for calling Web methods asynchronously and it describes how to create one-way methods.
Lessons
The Need for Asynchronous Calls
Options for Making Asynchronous Calls
One-Way Methods
Lab 3: Calling Web Methods Asynchronously
Exercise 1. Using a One-Way Method
Exercise 2. Calling a Web Method Asynchronously
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Explain why asynchronous calls are needed by Web service clients.
Create and invoke one-way methods.
Call methods in a Web service asynchronously.
Unit 4 Building a Remoting Client and Server
This unit describes key remoting concepts, and shows how to create a remoting server and client. This unit describes how to use remoting to call methods in remote objects, and how to pass data across remoting boundaries. This unit also shows how to configure and deploy remoting applications.
Lessons
Technical Context of Remoting
Remoting Servers and Clients
Important Components of Remoting
Lab 4: Building a Remoting Client and Server
Exercise 1. Implementing a Simple Remoting Client and Server
Exercise 2. Passing Data by Value
Exercise 3. Configuring Remoting Channels and Activation Modes Programmatically
Exercise 4. Configuring Remoting Channels and Activation Modes with Configuration Files
Exercise 5. Deploying and Debugging Remotable Classes
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Describe the technical context of remoting.
Implement a simple remoting server and client.
Pass data by value across a remoting boundary.
Configure remoting channels.
Use different activation modes.
Configure a remoting service by using a configuration file.
Deploy and host remotable types.
Debug a remotable type.
Unit 5 Creating and Serializing Remotable Types
This unit describes how to transfer complex data values across remoting boundaries, and the issues involved in doing so. It compares and contrasts the marshal by value and marshal by reference mechanisms for accessing remote data. This unit also covers version compatibility issues between clients and servers using different versions of a class, and the special requirements for remoting generic classes.
Lessons
Marshal by Value
Marshal by Reference
Version Compatibility for Remotable Types
Generic Classes
Lab 5: Creating and Serializing Remotable Types
Exercise 1. Using Serialization Formatters
Exercise 2. Using Marshal by Reference
Exercise 3. Using Version Tolerant Serialization
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Describe the differences between marshal by value and marshal by reference.
Describe the issues surrounding versioning and remoting.
Use version tolerant serialization.
Configure a communication channel to use different serialization formatters.
Create and marshal remotable objects by reference.
Unit 6 Performing Remoting Operations Asynchronously
This unit describes how to call a method asynchronously in the remoting environment. It covers the different techniques you can use and it explains how to raise events in a remoting server and handle them in a client.
Lessons
Asynchronous Methods
Calling Remote Methods Asynchronously
One-Way Methods
Using Events in Remoting Applications
Lab 6: Performing Remoting Operations Asynchronously
Exercise 1: Calling Remote Methods Asynchronously
Exercise 2: Raising and Handling Events in Remoting
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Call remoting methods asynchronously by using BeginInvoke.
Implement callbacks.
Create and call one-way methods.
Create and fire events in remote services.
Handle events in a client application.
Unit 7 Managing the Lifetime of Remote Objects
This unit describes the lifetime of remote objects and how you can control them. This unit introduces the concepts of remote object leases and sponsors. This unit shows how to initialize a remote object’s lease to a specific period, and how to renew an object’s lease when it expires by using a sponsor.
Lessons
Life Cycle of Remote Objects
Lifetime Sponsors
Lease Properties
Leases and Exception Handling
Lab 7: Managing the Lifetime of Remote Objects
Exercise 1: Initializing the Lifetime of Remote Objects
Exercise 2: Renewing the Lifetime of Remote Objects
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Initialize the lifetime of a remote object.
Renew the lifetime of a remote object.
Configure the renewal properties of a lease.
Handle exceptions caused by lease expiry.
Unit 8 Sending and Receiving Messages by Using Message Queuing
This unit describes how to use Microsoft Message Queuing to build distributed applications. It covers the essential aspects of building client and server applications that use message queues, how to create queues, how to send and receive messages, and how to handle replies to messages. This unit also describes how to access message queues across the Internet.
Lessons
Understanding Message Queuing
Creating a Message Queue and Sending a Message
Receiving a Message and Posting a Response
Using IIS with Message Queuing
Lab 8: Sending and Receiving Messages by Using Message Queuing
Exercise 1. Building a Simple Messaging Client and Server
Exercise 2. Using More Complex Data Types and Formatters
Exercise 3. Using Response Queues and Time-Outs
Exercise 4. Placing Messages on a Queue by Using IIS and HTTP
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Explain message queuing.
Create a message queue and send messages.
Receive a message and post a response.
Use Internet Information Services with message queuing.
Unit 9 Creating and Consuming Serviced Components
This unit explains how to build and access serviced components in a .NET Framework application. This unit describes the relationship between .NET Framework serviced components and COM+. It shows how to use the .NET Framework to implement a serviced component that you can register as a COM+ application and how you can write applications that use serviced components.
Lessons
COM+ Services
Implementing a Serviced Component
Registering a Serviced Component
Instantiating a Serviced Component
Lab 9: Creating and Consuming Serviced Components
Exercise 1. Creating and Using a Serviced Component
Exercise 2. Using Enterprise Services in a Serviced Component
After Completing This Goal, Students will be Able To
Understand the role of COM+ services.
Implement a serviced component.
Register a serviced component.
Instantiate a serviced component.
Audience
This workshop is intended for corporate and Independent software
vendor application developers who have a desire to learn more about
specific technology areas in distributed application development.