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COM Beyond Microsoft

Designing and Implementing COM Servers on Compaq Platforms

  • 1st Edition - June 27, 2000
  • Latest edition
  • Authors: Terence Sherlock, Gene Cronin
  • Language: English

The first book to describe how Microsoft's Component Object Model (COM) can be supported on computer systems other than Windows.Drawing on Compaq's groundbreaking work of porting… Read more

Description

The first book to describe how Microsoft's Component Object Model (COM) can be supported on computer systems other than Windows.

Drawing on Compaq's groundbreaking work of porting COM/DCOM to its OpenVMS and Tru64 UNIX Alpha platforms, COM Beyond Microsoft explains how the COM standard can help enterprises integrate their applications across a heterogeneous computing environment. This book details the innovative COM support now native on Tru64 UNIX and OpenVMS and reveals how developers can exploit COM on OpenVMS and COM on Tru64 UNIX to create portable software components that run virtually unchanged on OpenVMS, Tru64 UNIX, Windows NT,
Windows 2000, and other major computing platforms.

COM Beyond Microsoft highlights the business and technical benefits of implementing distributed and portable COM applications, especially versus other strategies and technologies such as CORBA and Java. The book explains
the APIs, utilities, libraries and run-time environments developers must understand to create COM applications for OpenVMS and Tru64 UNIX. It also contains implementation and configuration techniques for running COM
programs on Tru64 UNIX and OpenVMS.

COM Beyond Microsoft uniquely explains a controversial topic of major interest to organizations and developers in an
enterprise computing context.

Key features

First book on a controversial topic critically important to many large organizations
Authors are among few in industry with relevant experience

Readership

Current developers, administrators, and IT managers at organizations using Compaq's OpenVMS and Tru64 UNIX operating systems; developers creating enterprise software for Windows NT; developers creating software for other UNIX and proprietary operating systems (such as Sun Solaris and Linux).

Table of contents

Overview: COM History, Benefits, and Controversy; Introduction; COM Servers Versus COM Clients; Interoperability; Encapsulating Existing Applications; Using COM and CORBA; COM APIs/Win32 APIs; Implementing a Registry; Implementing Events Logging; Security Considerations; Endpoint Mapping; Configuring the Platform; Choosing the Compilers; Creating an Application; COM+ and MTS; Plans for COM V1+; Appendices; Glossary

CD-ROM: Contains valuable COM-based sample applications, including a data warehouse, that can run on any operating system supporting COM

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: June 27, 2000
  • Language: English

About the authors

TS

Terence Sherlock

Affiliations and expertise
Principal Engineer in the OpenVMS group at Compaq Computer Corporation.

GC

Gene Cronin

Affiliations and expertise
Principal Writer in the Tru64 UNIX Group at Compaq Computer Corporation in Nashua, NH