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IceStorm : 45.2 Introduction
Copyright © 2003-2009 ZeroC, Inc.

45.2 Introduction

Applications often need to disseminate information to multiple recipients. For example, suppose we are developing a weather monitoring application in which we collect measurements such as wind speed and temperature from a meteorological tower and periodically distribute them to weather monitoring stations. We initially consider using the architecture shown in Figure 45.1.
Figure 45.1. Initial design for a weather monitoring application.
However, the primary disadvantage of this architecture is that it tightly couples the collector to its monitors, needlessly complicating the collector implementation by requiring it to manage the details of monitor registration, measurement delivery, and error recovery. We can rid ourselves of these mundane duties by incorporating IceStorm into our architecture, as shown in Figure 45.2.
Figure 45.2. A weather monitoring application using IceStorm.
IceStorm simplifies the collector implementation significantly by decoupling it from the monitors. As a publish/subscribe service, IceStorm acts as a mediator between the collector (the publisher) and the monitors (the subscribers), and offers several advantages:
• When the collector is ready to distribute a new set of measurements, it makes a single request to the IceStorm server. The IceStorm server takes responsibility for delivering the request to the monitors, including handling any exceptions caused by ill-behaved or missing subscribers. The collector no longer needs to be aware of its monitors, or whether it even has any monitors at that moment.
• Similarly, monitors interact with the IceStorm server to perform tasks such as subscribing and unsubscribing, thereby allowing the collector to focus on its application-specific responsibilities and not on administrative trivia.
• The collector and monitor applications require very few changes to incorporate IceStorm.
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