Module 24229 (2011)
Syllabus page 2011/2012
06-24229
Enterprise Systems
Level 4/M
Links | Outline | Aims | Outcomes | Prerequisites | Teaching | Assessment | Books | Detailed Syllabus
The Module Description is a strict subset of this Syllabus Page. (The University module description has not yet been checked against the School's.)
Relevant Links
Outline
Building on students' prior knowledge of imperative programming, the module introduces specific technologies and toolkits for building Enterprise systems. Through lectures and extensive practical work, the module prepares students, with good programming skills, to make an effective contribution to building large internet-based systems as professional software engineers.
Aims
The aims of this module are to:
- introduce modern technologies for enterprise level database driven systems
- develop skills for designing and implementing software using such technologies
Learning Outcomes
| On successful completion of this module, the student should be able to: | Assessed by: | |
| 1 | Employ technologies for implementing enterprise level database driven applications. | Exercises |
| 2 | Demonstrate an understanding of the principles behind the above mentioned technologies including Object Relational Mapping and Aspect Oriented Programming and Dependency Injection. | Exercises |
| 3 | Integrate these technologies with on a number of front end technologies such as web services, web applications or rich desktop applications. | Mini project |
Restrictions, Prerequisites and Corequisites
Restrictions:
None.
Prerequisites:
06-02525 (Databases 2) or equivalent. Good proficiency with Object Oriented programming (ideally Java).
Co-requisites:
None.
Teaching
Teaching Methods:
Lectures, lab sessions
Contact Hours:
Assessment
- Sessional: 100% coursework (consisting of 70% exercises, 30% mini project).
- Supplementary (where allowed): By repeat only.
Recommended Books
| Title | Author(s) | Publisher, Date |
| Java Persistence with Hibernate | Christian Bauer and Gavin King | |
| Spring in Action | Craig Walls and Ryan Breidenbach | |
| Pro Apache Log4j | Samudra Gupta | |
| Perspectives on Web Services: Applying SOAP, WSDL and UDDI to Real-World Projects | Olaf Zimmermann and Mark R. Tomlinson and Stefan Peuser | |
| Business Process Execution Language for Web Services | Matjas B Juric |
Detailed Syllabus
-
Server-side application design (JDBC)
- State handling, session tracking
- Connection pools
- transactions
- Hibernate
- Object Relational Mapping
- Use of Logs
- equality and use of sessions
- Hibernate Querying
- transactions
- mapping and Cascading persistence
- Spring
- Dependency Injection
- beans and their wiring
- Aspect oriented Programming
- transactions
- introduction to Spring security
- Web services
- Principals of Service oriented Architectures
- Web services
- Business Process Modelling Languages
Last updated: 1 September 2011
Source file: /internal/modules/COMSCI/2011/xml/24229.xml
Links | Outline | Aims | Outcomes | Prerequisites | Teaching | Assessment | Books | Detailed Syllabus