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Software Architecture with Kotlin

You're reading from   Software Architecture with Kotlin Analyze, combine, and terraform various architecture styles for sustainable and scalable software

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835461860
Length
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Mr. Jason Chow Mr. Jason Chow
Author Profile Icon Mr. Jason Chow
Mr. Jason Chow
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: The Essence of Software Architecture 2. Chapter 2: Principles of Software Architecture FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Polymorphism and Alternatives 4. Chapter 4: Peer-to-Peer and Client-Server Architecture 5. Chapter 5: Exploring MVC, MVP, and MVVM 6. Chapter 6: Microservices, Serverless, and Microfrontends 7. Chapter 7: Modular and Layered Architectures 8. Chapter 8: Domain-Driven Design (DDD) 9. Chapter 9: Event Sourcing and CQRS 10. Chapter 10: Idempotency, Replication, and Recovery Models 11. Chapter 11: Auditing and Monitoring Models 12. Chapter 12: Performance and Scalability 13. Chapter 13: Testing 14. Chapter 14: Security 15. Chapter 15: Beyond Architecture 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

P2P architecture

P2P architecture is rooted in the idea of the absence of a centralized authority for coordination. A P2P network is formed of numerous nodes (“peers”) that have equal roles in communicating with one another.

Each node can request resources or services from other nodes, while also providing resources or services to other nodes. This distributed nature of P2P networks enables efficient resource sharing and collaboration among participants.

There is no hard non-functional requirement on the computational power, storage, and network bandwidth for each node coming from the P2P architecture. However, consistency is a major non-functional concern in many P2P systems.

Consistency

There is no central authority or server that controls the data in a P2P system. Each node stores and manages its own data, and the nodes communicate directly with each other to share and synchronize information. This distributed nature of P2P systems brings several consistency...

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