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Topics discussed in this section include:
Traditional enterprise applications are, for the most part, self-contained monolithic programs which have limited access to one another's procedures and data. They are usually cumbersome to build and expensive to maintain because even simple changes require the entire program to be recompiled and retested.
By contrast, applications built using distributed objects such as CORBA naturally lend themselves to a multitiered architecture, fostering a neat separation of concerns. A three-tiered application has a user interface code layer, a computation code (or business logic) layer, and a database access layer. All interaction between the layers occurs via the interfaces that all CORBA objects must publish. The diagram below illustrates the transition from monolithic applications to multi-tiered, modular applications.
The user-interface tier is the layer of user interaction. Its focus is on efficient
user interface design and accessibility throughout your organization.
The user interface tier can reside on the user's desktop, on your organization's
intranet, or on the World Wide Web (Internet). Several user interface
implementations
may be deployed which access the same server. The UI tier usually invokes
methods on the business logic tier and thus acts as a client of the
business logic servers.
Service (Server) Tier
The service, or business logic layer, is server-based code
with which the client code
interacts. The business logic layer is made up of business objects -
CORBA objects that perform logical business functions such as inventory
control, budget, sales orders, and billing. These objects invoke methods
on Data Store tier objects.
Data Store (Database) Tier
The data store layer is made up of objects that encapsulate database routines
and interact directly with
the DBMS product(s). For example, a hypothetical get_Sales_Sum
method might be implemented to obtain data from a relational
database via the appropriate SQL SELECT
statements.
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