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Windows Server AppFabric by Vahid 13. February 2011 05:15
if you have been involved in the enterprise application architecture and development, for sure you have also faced the memory constraint when designing the application. the thing is that as soon as you talk about enterprise application –I mean real enterprise application- you are talking about a huge amount of data being processed and traveling between systems. that’s when you say oops, I need to take care of this, user and my hardware cannot afford these expensive operations each and every time a request comes in. then you start thinking about caching the information somewhere. ok, some out of the box caching –i.e. ASP.net Caching- is there but we are talking about huge amount of data and keeping them on the same server as the application server would be out. and that’s the time you say Valla to keeping the data in a database. you go ahead and do it but as soon as you run the first load test with few thousand concurrent users the “sh..t” word comes out. you see the bottlenecks connecting to database, you see the performance degrade and you see that you have made your business owner to spend some good amount of money for the database licenses but you are not getting the result you were after. exactly at this point of time you would wish that there was a technology to help you out with the situation and if you have heard of Windows Server AppFabric and know it, than you feel how much you are blessed.
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