Open Source ESBs in Action: Example Implementations in Mule and ServiceMix
by Tijs Rademakers; Jos Dirksen
Pro Spring Dynamic Modules for OSGi™ Service Platforms
by Daniel Rubio
Head First Java, 2nd Edition
by Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Head First Design Patterns
by Eric Freeman; Elisabeth Robson; Kathy Sierra; Bert Bates
Effective Java™, Second Edition
by Joshua Bloch
Java Concurrency in Practice
by Brian Goetz; Tim Peierls; Joshua Bloch; Joseph Bowbeer; David Holmes; Doug Lea
Java Web Services: Up and Running, 1st Edition
by Martin Kalin
Get the definitive guide on all the fundamentals of Terracotta as well as user secrets, recipes, and prepackaged frameworks.
Written by Terracotta CTO Ari Zilka and his team, The Definitive Guide to Terracotta: Cluster the JVM for Spring, Hibernate and POJO Scalability covers the following:
High Availability (HA) nth degree scaling and clustering for traditional J2EE and Java EE 5 applications (using Seam or other application) as well as Spring-based enterprise applications
Everyday Terracotta using its prepackaged frameworks and integration recipes, including configuration and customization for your application tuning, no matter the scale
Power user secrets available, including config modules, customized advanced performance tuning, SDLC, Maven, and more
Average Amazon.com® Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Based on 7 Ratings
Excellent Book on an interesting concept - 2008-12-26
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Even if you don't want to utilize Terracotta, this book is still extremely informative about virtual heap, distributed caching and clustering concept. However, once you get to read what Terracotta is about and what problems it tries to solve, you will probably realize why and how to utilize this gem in your application. The book is an easy read, it's very informative, covers Hibernate and Spring integration, talks about HTTP session caching and more.
Adequate, but.. - 2009-06-13
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Adequate coverage of the Terracotta technology. Lackluster writing, poor examples. There are many many complications and minefields to using this wonderful technology in practice, and this book skips lightly over them.
The training courses at Terracotta offices are HIGHLY recommended, if you can afford them. You may then use this book and the online docs as a useful supplement. Be aware that much in the book or online docs is rapidly made obsolete or misleading given the quick evolution of the code.
Nicely-written, hands-on - 2009-03-09
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
If you're interested in using Terracotta to cluster your Java application, I'd recommend skipping the documentation on Terracotta's site and going straight to this book. Getting up and running is a challenge, but this book does everything possible to make the process straightforward, especially if you're an Eclipse user like myself.
Good even if you are not using Terracotta - 2008-10-03
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
This book goes into a lot of detail about how and why Terracotta was made. It goes into a lot of topics such as scaling, the jvm, synchronization, etc.
It talks about the philosophy of terracotta and goes through in detail about the choices that you have when for example, you have to scale, and the tradeoffs of each of those choices.
In short, this book is a good read, even if you are not going to be using terracotta just yet.
Great book! - 2008-07-31
Reviewer Rating: ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
This book is a must for anyone trying to understand and get real performance out of a custom terracotta deployment.
There is a lot of information in this book that is either not on the terracotta wiki or is scattered across many sites.
Top Level Categories:
Programming
Sub-Categories:
Programming > Aspect Oriented Programming(Java Spring framework)
Programming > Java
Some information on this page was provided using data from Amazon.com®. View at Amazon >