E-commerce systems
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Transcript E-commerce systems
EMTM 553: E-commerce Systems
Lecture 3: Software Building Blocks
Insup Lee
Department of Computer and Information Science
University of Pennsylvania
[email protected]
www.cis.upenn.edu/~lee
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Background
• Simple view of the original WWW
– Web servers stored pages coded in HTML in their file
systems.
– Pages retrieved by browsers using HTTP.
– The URL of a page was the hostname of the server plus
the filename of the document.
• Later, it was realized that
– HTML Web pages could be produced by programs as well
as stored as files.
– URL specifies the hostname of the server, the name of
the program to run, and arguments for that program.
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Static content
Web server fetch the page
http request
<html>
<B> This is a web page. </B>
</html>
server response
Browser interprets
html page
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This is a web page.
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Dynamic content
Web server fetch the page
<html>
<?php PHP code ?>
</html>
http request
Interpret php code
server response
Browser interprets
html page
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<html>
<B> Hello World.</B>
</html>
Hello World.
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Stateless vs. state
• Stateless server
– The user request a document, and then another
document, and so on.
– Natural for large number of browsers and small number
of servers.
• Why?
– If stateful, it can increase performance. However,
o On server crash, it looses all its volatile state
information
o On client crash, the server needs to know to claim
state space.
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Session
• User Session
– A delimited set of user clicks across one or more Web
servers (for multiple Web page requests)
• Server Session
– A collection of user clicks to a Web server during a user
session
• Why sessions are important?
– Complex pages require many connections
– High overhead for establishing a connection due to
privacy and authentication requirements
– E-commerce applications require a series of actions by
the user and the server.
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Where to keep state for client?
• How to identify sets of user requests as belong to
the same session and for passing state information
back and forth between client and server
– State is the application information itself
– A session id is a reference to state stored somewhere
else.
• Server-side vs. client-side
– Database on server
– Applications on server
– Cookie on client
• What are tradeoffs?
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Session and Client state mechanism
• Techniques
– Cookies
o Data sent by a Web server to a Web client, to be stored
locally by the client and sent back to the server on
subsequent requests
o Cookies are stored as small file in a client machine
– Date and time, user id, password, etc.
– Authentication mechanisms such as client certificate
o Used this to identify the user to the server on each
request to use state stored in application database
– Forms: state or session id can passed as hidden fields
– Applets: client scripting can be used to store session id or state
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Active Web Sites
• Allow the user to be sent customized pages
• Support dynamic browsing experience
• Built using with a combination of languages and
technologies
– Client-side technologies
o Used for detecting browser features, responding to
user actions, validating form data, displaying dialog
boxes.
o Adv: reduce network traffic, server load, almost
instant response to user actions
– Server-side technologies
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Client-side technologies
• ActiveX controls
– Self-contained program called components written in C++ or
Visual Basic can be called
– <object> tag: can used for bar charts, graphics, timers, client
authentication, database access
– Developed by microsoft
• Java Applets
– Advantage of Java: stand alone, cross plaform, safe.
• Client-side JavaScript and Dynamic HTML
– JavaScript supported by both IE and Netscape Navigator
– Dynamic HTML is like script plus abilities to animate pages and
position graphics.
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Java
• An object-oriented language developed by Sun
Microsystems
• Java programs are compiled into Java bytecode,
which are executed by JVM (Java virtual machine)
• Write-once run-anyway
• Security of Java applets is based on a sandbox
model
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Java Applets
Web-Server
HTTP-Request
Web-Server
Load File
File-System
HTML-page
Load Applet...
Java-Class Requests
File
Java-Classes
ServerProcess
Execute Applet...
Java Virtual
Machine (JVM)
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Java Applets
• Advantages
– Platform independent: works for every web-server and browser
supporting Java
– Secure
• Disadvantages
•
– Standalone Character:
o Entire session runs inside applet
o HTML forms are not used
– Slow: loading can take a long time
– Resource intensive: JVM
– Restrictive: can only communicate with server from which
applet was loaded
Server-Process can be written in any language
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Server-side technologies
•
•
•
•
CGI
Active Server Pages, Microsoft
Server-side JavaScript, Netscape
Java Servlets and JSP (Java Server Pages), Sun
Micro
• PHP, developed initially by Rasmus Lerdorf, 1994
to track visitors to his online resume.
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Benefits of server-side processing
• Minimizes network traffic by limiting the need for
the browser and server to talk back and forth to
each other
• Quickens loading time since, in the end, only the
actual page is downloaded
• Avoids browser-compatibility problems
• Can provide the client with data that does not
reside at the client
• Provides improved security measures, since one
can code things that cannot be viewed from the
browser
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The Common Gateway Interface (CGI)
• CGI defines an interface between a Web server
and an independent application program.
• CGI are used to create “gateways” between the
Web and an existing application.
• CGI also serve as the interface for new
applications designed for the Web, not integrated
directly into a Web server (as in plug-ins).
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CGI (Common Gateway Interface)
Web Server
CGI
Program
Program
Environment Vars
Environment Vars
Runtime Environment
Runtime Environment
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Server API for CGI
•
•
•
•
•
•
Starting and stopping application
Passing data from the client to the application
Passing data from the application to the client
Status and error reporting
Passing configuration information to the
application
Passing client and environment information to the
application
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CGI Example
<HTML>
<HEAD>
<TITLE>Favorite Pet!</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY BGCOLOR="white">
<H1>Favorite Pet</H1>
<B>What is your favorite pet?</B>
<FORM METHOD="GET" ACTION="cgi-bin/pet.pl">
<TABLE>
<TR>
<TD>Name:</TD>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="TEXT" NAME="name"></TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD>Email:</TD>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="TEXT" NAME="email"></TD>
</TR>
<TR>
<TD>Favorite Pet:</TD>
<TD><INPUT TYPE="TEXT" NAME="pet"></TD>
</TD>
</TABLE>
<P><INPUT TYPE="SUBMIT“ VALUE=“Submit Query”>
<INPUT TYPE="RESET"></P>
</FORM>
</BODY>
</HTML>
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CGI Example (GET)
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use CGI qw(:standard);
print "Content-type: text/html", "\n\n";
@pairs = split('&', $ENV{'QUERY_STRING'});
foreach $pair (@pairs) {
($name, $value) = split('=', $pair);
$value =~ tr/+/ /;
$value =~ s/%([a-fA-F0-9][a-fA-F0-9])/
pack("C". hex($1))/eg;
$info{$name} = $value;
}
print "<HTML>","\n";
print "<BODY><H1>Thank you</H1>","\n";
print "<B>Name:</B>",$info{name},"<BR>","\n";
print "<B>Email:</B>", $info{email},"<BR>","\n";
print "<B>Favorite Pet:</B>",$info{pet},"<BR>","\n";
print "</BODY></HTML>";
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CGI Example (POST)
#!/usr/bin/perl -w
use CGI qw(:standard);
print "Content-type: text/html", "\n\n";
read(STDIN, $buffer,
$ENV{'CONTENT_LENGTH'});
@pairs = split('&', $buffer);
foreach $pair (@pairs) {
($name, $value) = split('=', $pair);
$value =~ tr/+/ /;
$value =~ s/%([a-fA-F0-9][a-fA-F0-9])/
pack("C". hex($1))/eg;
$info{$name} = $value;
}
print "<HTML>","\n";
print "<BODY><H1>Thank you</H1>","\n";
print "<B>Name:</B> ",$info{name},"<BR>","\n";
print "<B>Email:</B> ",$info{email},"<BR>","\n";
print "<B>Favorite Pet:</B> ",$info{pet},"<BR>","\n";
print "</BODY></HTML>";
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CGI Environment Variables
Variable Name
Value
HTTP_HOST
The hostname of your server
HTTP_USER_AGENT
The browser type of the visitor
HTTPS
“on” if the script is being called through a secure server
QUERY_STRING
The query string
REMOTE_ADDR
The IP address of the visitor
REMOTE_HOST
The hostname of the visitor
REMOTE_PORT
The port the visitor is connected to on the web server
REQUEST_METHOD
GET or POST
SERVER_NAME
The server’s domain name
SERVER_PORT
The port number the server is listening on
SERVER_SOFTWARE
The server software used (e.g. Apache 1.3.12)
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Evaluation of CGI
• Advantages of CGI
– General: the application is completely decoupled from the
Web server
– Standard: works with every sever and browser
– Flexible: any language (C++, Perl, Java, …) can be used
• Disadvantages of CGI
– Inefficient: the application must be launched/forked
independently for each request
– Stateless: the application exits after a request, there is
no place to remember state between Web requests
– Security: CGI programmer is responsible for security.
No automatic system or language support.
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Market Shares of Top Servers
(Nov 1995 to Nov 2000)
Source: http://www.netcraft.com/survey/
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Apache HTTP Server
• Developed by Rob McCool at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in 1994
• Dominates the Web in numbers, largely because it’s free and
reliable
• Runs on many operating systems
– AIX, BSD/OS, FreeBSD, HP-UX, Irix, Linux, Microsoft NT,
QNS, SCO, Solaris
• Security is well thought out
– Password authentication
– Digital certificate authentication
– Access restrictions
• Application development tools support CGI and several
proprietary APIs
• Supports Active Server Pages (ASP) and Java servlets
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Microsoft Internet
Information Server
• Bundled (free) with Microsoft Windows NT
operating system
• Robust and capable, suitable for small sites up to
enterprise-class sites
• Runs only on Windows NT
• Central server management from any server on the
network
• Tightly integrated security with NT
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Microsoft Internet
Information Server
• Includes ASP support, along with its own Internet
Services API (ISAPI)
• Database support for ODBC (Open Database
Connectivity) and SQL
• Most popular server software for intranet web
servers, as reported by PC Magazine
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Netscape Enterprise Server
• High performance and scalibility
– Optimized caching, multiprocessor support
– HTTP 1.1
• Powerful development environment
– Link management, Web publishing, Agent services
• Information sharing and management
– embedded revision control system and Verity’s embedded
integrated search engine
– Management tools to add, delete, or change user information
• Password/challenge user and digital certificate
authentication
• Dynamic application development
– CGI, Netscape Server API (NSAPI), Java Servlet API
– LiveWire database service provides native database
connectivity to Oracle, Informix, IBM DB2, Sybase
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Server-side Scripting
• A middle ground between static content kept in
the file system and pages of dynamic content
created by a complete application
• Server-side scripting
– Embed a language interpreter in the Web server.
– Web pages stored in the file system contains scripts
that are interpreted on the fly.
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Server Extensions: The Basic Idea
Web-Server
Web-Server
HTTP-Request
Load File
HTML
HTML?
HTML-File
Output
File
Script?
Server Extension
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File-System
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I/O, Network, DB
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Server Extensions
• API depends on Server vendor:
– Apache Foundation Apache Server: Apache API
– Microsoft Internet Information Server: ISAPI
– Netscape Enterprise Server: NSAPI
• One can define it’s own server extension, e.g.,
– Authentication module
– Counter module
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Active Server Pages
• Active Server Pages (ASPs)
– Available in Microsoft web servers (IIS
and Personal Web Server)
– Based on VBScript, Jscript
– Modular Object Model
– Active Server Components
– Active Data Objects
HTTP-Request
(ADO) for Database
access
Web-Server
Load File
File-System
HTML
HTML-File
ASP-File
Output
ASP-Script
Active Server Page
Scripting Engine
I/O, Network, DB
Active Server
Components
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ColdFusion
Web-Server
Web-Server
HTTP-Request
HTML
Load File File-System
HTML?
HTML-File
File
HTML
CF Script?
Cold Fusion Server
Extension
Cold Fusion Application
Server
ODBC-Driver
Native
Email
Directories
DB
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DB
COM/CORBA
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PHP
Web-Server
Web-Server
HTTP-Request
Load File
File-System
HTML
HTML-File
PHP-File
Output
PHP-Script
PHP
Module
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Database APIs,
other APIs SNMP,
IMAP, POP3,
LDAP, ...
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How does PHP differ from
ASP and CF?
• Free, open source
• Many client libraries
integrated
• Runs on any web
server supporting CGIs
(MS Windows or Unix)
• Module version for
Apache
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Object Technology
• Advantages
–
–
–
–
Encapsulation, polymorphism, heterogeneous languages
Rapid application development
Distributed applications
Flexibility of deployment
• Technologies
– CORBA
– COM
– Java Beans/RMI
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Enterprise JavaBeans (EJB)
• Server-side component architecture
– Enable and simplify the building of distributed object in Java
– Allow rapid application development
– Support portability and reusability across vendors, I.e.,
platform and implementation independent
• EJB supports CTM (Component Transaction Monitoring)
– hybrid of traditional transaction processing and distributed
object request broker (ORB) services
– TP Monitor is an OS for business systems and manages the
entire environment that a business system runs, including
transactions, resource management,and fault tolerance.
– Distributed objects allow unique objects that have state and
identity to be distributed accrossa network so that they can be
accesses by other systems.
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Server-side component Architecture
• EJB server is responsible for
– Making a component a distributed object
– Managing services such as transactions, persistence,
concurrency, security
• Component Advantage
– Divides software into manageable, discrete chunk of logic
– Implements well-defined interfaces
– Enables reuse
o Components can be pieced together to solve larger
problems
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Example
• Pricing Component
– Functions:
o Base price
o Quantity Discount
o Bundle Discount
o Preferred customer Discount
o Overhead costs
o Etc.
– Note: This pricing engine can be used by different
businesses
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Example Cont.
Post Office
Pricing object
Dumb Terminal
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Legacy System
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Example Cont.
Car Quotes Web Site
Network
Pricing object
Web Server
Client
Browser
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Example Cont.
E-tailer Site
Pricing Object
Workflow
logic
Fulfillment
Object
Web Server
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Billing Object
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N-Tier Architecture
Using EJB
Presentation Layer
Presentation Logic
Tier Boundary
EJB object
EJB object
EJB object
EJB object
Business Logic Layer
(Application Server)
JDBC
Tier Boundary
Data Layer
Database
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Classes and Interfaces
• Remote interface
– The business methods that a bean present to the outside
world to do its work
• Home interface
– The bean’s life cycle methods for creating, removing and
finding beans
• Bean class
– Actual implementation of the bean’s business methods
• Primary key
– A pointer into the database.
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Acquiring a Bean
3: Create
New EJB object
Home Interface
Home Object
Client
5: Return EJB
Object Reference
6: Invoke
Business method
1: retrieve
Home Object
Reference
2: Return
Home Reference
4: Create EJB
Object
Remote Interface
EJB Object
Enterprise
Beans
7: Delegate request to object
JNDI
EJB Server
Naming
Service
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Enterprise Bean Objects
• Session Bean
–
–
–
–
Represents business logic
1 to 1 relationship to client
Stateless / Stateful
Short-lived
• Entity Bean
–
–
–
–
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Represents permanent business data
1 to many relationship to client
Stateful / Transactional
Long-lived
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The EJB Contract
•
Allows for the collaboration of SIX different parties
– Bean provider
o Component writer, provide reusable business logic
– Container provider
o Supplier of low-level runtime execution environment
– Server provider
o Supplier of Application server logic to manage the EJBs
o WebSphere (IBM ), WebLogic (BEA), Oracle8i
– Application assembler
o Application architect for a specific deployment
– Deployer
o Installs Bean components and Application servers
– System Administrator
o Oversees the deployed system
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Other features
• Search engines
– Crawl, index, search
• Push technologies
– Web channels
• Intelligent agents
– Locate sites, identify the best vendor, negotiate terms
of buying and selling, etc.
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Q&A
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EJB
• Application servers
–
–
–
–
JRun server by Allaire
WebLogic by BEA Systems
WebSphere by IBM
SynerJ/Server by Sun
• For more information
– www.javasoft.com/products/ejb
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EJB Interface
Examples
• Home Interface
•
•
•
•
•
public interface PricingSessionHome extends EJBHome
{
public PricingSession create() throws CreateException,
RemoteException;
}
Note: Calling this interface creates an EJB object, whose methods can be
invoked through the methods published in the Remote Interface
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EJB Interface
Examples
• Remote Interface
•
•
•
public interface PricingSession extends EJBObject
{
•
•
public float getPreferredCustomerPrice(String ProductID, String CutomerID) throws RemoteException;
public float applyBundleDiscount(String ProductID, Integer Quantity) throws RemoteException;
•
}
•
This is for the actual methods of a bean.
public float getBasePrice(String ProductID) throws RemoteException;
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Relationship between EJB
servers & container
Client: servlets, applets, etc.
EJB Server
EJB Container
EJB Container
EJB 1
EJB 3
EJB 2
EJB 4
Note: There is no concrete interface between EJB servers and
vendor’s
container will
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