redundancy and remoting objects
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gaz.khan@intelsat.com
Hello-

We are trying to write an n-tiered application in pure dotnet using remoting
for the business logic class. This business logic class will reside inside
our firewall on a server which accesses our internal databases. The aspx
pages are outside the firewall on our web servers. We are currently using 2
load balanced web servers, COM+ and MTS with Application Center 2000, and 2
servers in a Component Load Balanced Cluster behind our firewall.

The question is how will this setup integrate with dotnet remoting without
using COM and MTS?
Is there a way to load balance the remoted business class for redundancy?

Thanks,

Gaz

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Jason Hall
Couple questions.

You're using Com+ and MTS at the same time? /boggle.

anyways, you may want to look into writing your components using
the serviced component class. This provides you with a context from
Com+.

Then you can simply use your existing architecture.

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gaz.khan@intelsat.com
Thanks for the reply. I realize we can use the serviced component class but
we would like to move away from COM and go pure dotnet.

The question again is how can we load balance or provide redundancy for a
remoted object in case a server fails? Is MS working on a tool to achieve
this or is there a way to handle this programmatically.

Thanks,
Gaz

-----Original Message-----
From: Jason Hall [mailto:Click here to reveal e-mail address]
Sent: Monday, May 13, 2002 8:23 PM
To: ngfx-remoting
Subject: [ngfx-remoting] Re: redundancy and remoting objects

Couple questions.

You're using Com+ and MTS at the same time? /boggle.

anyways, you may want to look into writing your components using
the serviced component class. This provides you with a context from
Com+.

Then you can simply use your existing architecture.

[Original message clipped]

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Jason Hall
Com+, or component services is not going away. In fact it is as of now the
one and only way to manage distributed, multi-component transactions in the
Microsoft world.

Using enterprise services and serviced components from .NET
is a big part of "pure" .NET and has nothing to do with COM interop.

In future releases of component services (.NET Server)
it will be designed more with .NET in mind

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