Description

Book Synopsis
When the web transitioned from a publishing to an interactive e--commerce medium, standardised web--browsers entered widespread use and developers were able to rely on a relatively stable client component.

Table of Contents

Preface xi

1 Introduction 1

1.1 Servers on the Internet 2

1.2 Serving static hypertext 6

1.3 Serving dynamically generated hypertext 8

1.4 Forms and CGI 11

1.5 A CGI program and examples 18

1.6 Client-side scripting 29

Exercises 32

Practical 32

Short answer questions 32

Explorations 33

2 HTTP 35

2.1 Requests and responses 36

2.1.1 Requests 38

2.1.2 Responses 40

2.2 Authorization 41

2.3 Negotiated content 43

2.4 State in a stateless protocol 44

Exercises 45

Short answer questions 45

Explorations 45

3 Apache 47

3.1 Apache’s processes 48

3.2 Apache’s modules 51

3.3 Access controls 54

3.4 Logs 58

3.5 Generation of dynamic pages 61

3.6 Apache: installation and configuration 64

3.6.1 Basic installation and testing 64

3.6.2 The httpd.conf configuration file 67

Exercises 71

Practical 71

Short answer questions 75

Explorations 76

4 IP and DNS 77

4.1 IP addresses 78

4.2 IP addresses and names 81

4.3 Name resolution 84

4.4 BIND 86

Exercises 89

Practical 89

Short answer questions 90

Explorations 90

5 Perl 91

5.1 Perl’s origins 92

5.2 Running Perl, and the inevitable ‘Hello World’ program 93

5.3 Perl language 94

5.3.1 Scalar variables 95

5.3.2 Control structures 98

5.4 Perl core functions 101

5.5 ’CS1’ revisited: simple Perl programs 103

5.5.1 Burgers 103

5.5.2 ls -l 105

5.6 Beyond CS1: lists and arrays 108

5.6.1 Basics of lists 108

5.6.2 Two simple list examples 112

5.7 Subroutines 118

5.8 Hashes 120

5.9 An example using a hash and a list 122

5.10 Files and formatting 123

5.11 Regular expression matching 126

5.11.1 Basics of regex patterns 128

5.11.2 Finding ‘what matched?’ and other advanced features 131

5.12 Perl and the OS 136

5.12.1 Manipulating files and directories 137

5.12.2 Perl: processes 140

5.12.3 A ‘systems programming’ example 143

5.13 Networking 150

5.14 Modules 153

5.15 Databases 154

5.15.1 Basics 154

5.15.2 Database example 158

5.16 Perl: CGI 163

5.16.1 ’Roll your own’ CGI code 164

5.16.2 Perl: CGI module(s) 171

5.16.3 Security issues and CGI 173

Exercises 174

Practical 174

Short answer questions 180

Explorations 181

6 PHP4 183

6.1 PHP4’s origins 183

6.2 PHP language 187

6.2.1 Simple variables and data types 187

6.2.2 Operators 191

6.2.3 Program structure and flow control 191

6.2.4 Functions 193

6.3 Simple examples 194

6.4 Multi-page forms 198

6.5 File uploads 207

6.6 Databases 216

6.7 GD graphics library 227

6.8 State 238

Exercises 248

Practical 248

Short answer questions 257

Explorations 257

7 Java Servlets 259

7.1 Servlet overview 259

7.2 A first servlet example 261

7.2.1 Form and servlet code 263

7.2.2 Installation, Compilation, Deployment 265

7.2.3 web.xml deployment files 268

7.3 Sun’s servlet-related classes 269

7.4 Web application example: ‘Membership’ 276

7.5 Client state and sessions 290

7.6 Images 304

7.7 Security features 306

Exercises 328

Practical 328

Short answer questions 336

Explorations 336

Contents vii

8 JSP: Java Server Pages 337

8.1 JSP overview 337

8.2 The ‘Guru’ – a JSP example 340

8.2.1 The scriptlet Guru 340

8.2.2 The tagged Guru 343

8.3 Membership example 344

8.4 JSP: page contents 352

8.4.1 JSP directives 354

8.4.2 jsp: tag library 355

8.5 Servlet, bean and JSP examples 356

8.6 Tag libraries 368

8.6.1 Defining a simple customized action tag 369

8.6.2 Using tag libraries 373

Exercises 375

Practical 375

Short answer questions 379

Explorations 380

9 XML 381

9.1 XML overview 381

9.2 XML and friends 384

9.3 XSL, XSLT and XML display 391

9.4 XML and XSL generating WML 403

9.5 Simple API for XML 412

9.6 DOM – the Document Object Model 422

Exercises 428

Practical 428

Short answer questions 432

Explorations 433

10 Enterprise Java 435

10.1 EJB background 437

10.1.1 Smart beans in smarter containers 437

10.1.2 Distributed objects 438

10.2 EJB basics 441

10.2.1 Servers, containers and beans 441

10.2.2 The life of a bean 444

10.2.3 Classes and interfaces 444

10.2.4 EJB clients and EJB deployment 446

10.3 Session bean examples 447

10.3.1 Stateless server 447

10.3.2 Stateful server 453

10.4 An Entity bean 456

10.5 Real-world EJB 470

Exercises 485

Practical 485

Short answer questions 485

Explorations 485

11 Future technologies? 487

11.1 (Lack of) Speed kills 487

11.2 Personal internet presence 489

11.3 Peer-to-peer 490

11.4 ... and on to ‘Web Services’ 492

11.4.1 The existing world of distributed objects 492

11.4.2 Steps towards a future world of distributed objects 495

11.4.3 UDDI, WSDL and SOAP 498

11.4.4 Web service promises 509

Exercises 512

Explorations 512

Appendices

A Minimalist guide to HTML and JavaScript 515

B Active Server Pages: ASP (scripting) 549

C .NET 573

Index 601

Web Server Programming

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    A Paperback / softback by Neil Gray

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      View other formats and editions of Web Server Programming by Neil Gray

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 15/04/2003
      ISBN13: 9780470850978, 978-0470850978
      ISBN10: 0470850973

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      When the web transitioned from a publishing to an interactive e--commerce medium, standardised web--browsers entered widespread use and developers were able to rely on a relatively stable client component.

      Table of Contents

      Preface xi

      1 Introduction 1

      1.1 Servers on the Internet 2

      1.2 Serving static hypertext 6

      1.3 Serving dynamically generated hypertext 8

      1.4 Forms and CGI 11

      1.5 A CGI program and examples 18

      1.6 Client-side scripting 29

      Exercises 32

      Practical 32

      Short answer questions 32

      Explorations 33

      2 HTTP 35

      2.1 Requests and responses 36

      2.1.1 Requests 38

      2.1.2 Responses 40

      2.2 Authorization 41

      2.3 Negotiated content 43

      2.4 State in a stateless protocol 44

      Exercises 45

      Short answer questions 45

      Explorations 45

      3 Apache 47

      3.1 Apache’s processes 48

      3.2 Apache’s modules 51

      3.3 Access controls 54

      3.4 Logs 58

      3.5 Generation of dynamic pages 61

      3.6 Apache: installation and configuration 64

      3.6.1 Basic installation and testing 64

      3.6.2 The httpd.conf configuration file 67

      Exercises 71

      Practical 71

      Short answer questions 75

      Explorations 76

      4 IP and DNS 77

      4.1 IP addresses 78

      4.2 IP addresses and names 81

      4.3 Name resolution 84

      4.4 BIND 86

      Exercises 89

      Practical 89

      Short answer questions 90

      Explorations 90

      5 Perl 91

      5.1 Perl’s origins 92

      5.2 Running Perl, and the inevitable ‘Hello World’ program 93

      5.3 Perl language 94

      5.3.1 Scalar variables 95

      5.3.2 Control structures 98

      5.4 Perl core functions 101

      5.5 ’CS1’ revisited: simple Perl programs 103

      5.5.1 Burgers 103

      5.5.2 ls -l 105

      5.6 Beyond CS1: lists and arrays 108

      5.6.1 Basics of lists 108

      5.6.2 Two simple list examples 112

      5.7 Subroutines 118

      5.8 Hashes 120

      5.9 An example using a hash and a list 122

      5.10 Files and formatting 123

      5.11 Regular expression matching 126

      5.11.1 Basics of regex patterns 128

      5.11.2 Finding ‘what matched?’ and other advanced features 131

      5.12 Perl and the OS 136

      5.12.1 Manipulating files and directories 137

      5.12.2 Perl: processes 140

      5.12.3 A ‘systems programming’ example 143

      5.13 Networking 150

      5.14 Modules 153

      5.15 Databases 154

      5.15.1 Basics 154

      5.15.2 Database example 158

      5.16 Perl: CGI 163

      5.16.1 ’Roll your own’ CGI code 164

      5.16.2 Perl: CGI module(s) 171

      5.16.3 Security issues and CGI 173

      Exercises 174

      Practical 174

      Short answer questions 180

      Explorations 181

      6 PHP4 183

      6.1 PHP4’s origins 183

      6.2 PHP language 187

      6.2.1 Simple variables and data types 187

      6.2.2 Operators 191

      6.2.3 Program structure and flow control 191

      6.2.4 Functions 193

      6.3 Simple examples 194

      6.4 Multi-page forms 198

      6.5 File uploads 207

      6.6 Databases 216

      6.7 GD graphics library 227

      6.8 State 238

      Exercises 248

      Practical 248

      Short answer questions 257

      Explorations 257

      7 Java Servlets 259

      7.1 Servlet overview 259

      7.2 A first servlet example 261

      7.2.1 Form and servlet code 263

      7.2.2 Installation, Compilation, Deployment 265

      7.2.3 web.xml deployment files 268

      7.3 Sun’s servlet-related classes 269

      7.4 Web application example: ‘Membership’ 276

      7.5 Client state and sessions 290

      7.6 Images 304

      7.7 Security features 306

      Exercises 328

      Practical 328

      Short answer questions 336

      Explorations 336

      Contents vii

      8 JSP: Java Server Pages 337

      8.1 JSP overview 337

      8.2 The ‘Guru’ – a JSP example 340

      8.2.1 The scriptlet Guru 340

      8.2.2 The tagged Guru 343

      8.3 Membership example 344

      8.4 JSP: page contents 352

      8.4.1 JSP directives 354

      8.4.2 jsp: tag library 355

      8.5 Servlet, bean and JSP examples 356

      8.6 Tag libraries 368

      8.6.1 Defining a simple customized action tag 369

      8.6.2 Using tag libraries 373

      Exercises 375

      Practical 375

      Short answer questions 379

      Explorations 380

      9 XML 381

      9.1 XML overview 381

      9.2 XML and friends 384

      9.3 XSL, XSLT and XML display 391

      9.4 XML and XSL generating WML 403

      9.5 Simple API for XML 412

      9.6 DOM – the Document Object Model 422

      Exercises 428

      Practical 428

      Short answer questions 432

      Explorations 433

      10 Enterprise Java 435

      10.1 EJB background 437

      10.1.1 Smart beans in smarter containers 437

      10.1.2 Distributed objects 438

      10.2 EJB basics 441

      10.2.1 Servers, containers and beans 441

      10.2.2 The life of a bean 444

      10.2.3 Classes and interfaces 444

      10.2.4 EJB clients and EJB deployment 446

      10.3 Session bean examples 447

      10.3.1 Stateless server 447

      10.3.2 Stateful server 453

      10.4 An Entity bean 456

      10.5 Real-world EJB 470

      Exercises 485

      Practical 485

      Short answer questions 485

      Explorations 485

      11 Future technologies? 487

      11.1 (Lack of) Speed kills 487

      11.2 Personal internet presence 489

      11.3 Peer-to-peer 490

      11.4 ... and on to ‘Web Services’ 492

      11.4.1 The existing world of distributed objects 492

      11.4.2 Steps towards a future world of distributed objects 495

      11.4.3 UDDI, WSDL and SOAP 498

      11.4.4 Web service promises 509

      Exercises 512

      Explorations 512

      Appendices

      A Minimalist guide to HTML and JavaScript 515

      B Active Server Pages: ASP (scripting) 549

      C .NET 573

      Index 601

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