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In n-tier architecture the entire application is divided in several pieces. These pieces can be logical or physical. Each piece performs a specific task such as displaying user interface or data access. There can be any number of tiers or layers of such pieces. Hence, the name n-tier (Note that many times the terms tier and layer are used interchangeably). However, most commonly applications have 3 distinct tiers or layers. They are:
  • Presentation Layer
  • Business Logic Layer
  • Data Access Layer
As you can guess, presentation layer is nothing but a piece of software that deals with user interface of your application. Displaying data to the end user and allow them to interface with it is the core functionality of this layer.

In most of the cases the data entered by the end user needs some kind of validation or further processing. This is the responsibility of Business Logic Layer.

Finally, your application data needs to be stored and retrieved in some data store (RDBMS, XML etc.). This task is handled by Data Access Layer.

In short, the process works like this:

  • User requests for some application data.
  • The data access layer retrieves the data and is forwarded to the presentation layer via business logic layer. Sometimes data access layer gives this data directly to presentation layer.
  • Presentation layer receives the data to be displayed via business logic layer.
  • The user changes the data and initiates the appropriate action (such as insert, or update).
  • The business logic layer validates the data submitted by the user.
  • If the data is valid it is handed over to data access layer for updating into the database.
Advantages of N-Tier ArchitectureAt first glance this division of tasks may seem to be unnecessary. However, it gives following benefits:
  • The applications gets divided in logically isolated pieces reducing tight coupling between the UI, business processes and database.
  • Change in the underlying database and data access methods do not have any effect on the presentation layer or client application.
  • Client application no longer has SQL statements embedded in it. This makes it de-coupled from rest of the application.
  • Table and column names can be effectively eliminated from the client-side code.
  • The client application is unaware from where data comes (location transparency).
  • It becomes easier to modify or extend your application, without breaking or recompiling the client-side code.
The downside of n-tier architecture is that you need to create many isolated classes and pieces of software. However, benefits of n-tier applications will far outweigh its disadvantage.
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Tuesday, June 10, 2008
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Presentation (UI), Business (logic and underlying code) and Data (from storage or other sources).
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008
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An application made up of distinct components running in separate runtime environments, usually on different platforms

connected via a network. Typical distributed applications are two-tier (client-server), three-tier

(client-middleware-server), and multitier (client-multiple middleware-multiple servers).
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Tuesday, May 13, 2008
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A first-tier J2EE client component that executes in its own Java virtual machine. Application clients have access to some J2EE platform APIs.
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Monday, May 12, 2008
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It is the presentation, logic, backend
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Monday, April 28, 2008
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These are totally two different entities; ERP is an application and Distributed Computing is a framework.  Essentially, the distributed Computing framework is an extrapolation of the 3 tier client server architecture: Database, application and presentation layers.  The database stores information.  The application layer provides the business logic, brokers the inputoutput requests and the presentation layer presents the data via a GUI (program gui, Web-basedbrowser gui).  Each of these layers can run on separate computing systems and communicate via networking technologies and protocols (TCP/IP is the most common protocol).
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) is an application based on the Distributed computing framework which integrates the major functionality of the business enterprise.  You can find out more information at the following sites.
SAP is the major ERP application and the link listed below take you to there ERP help files.

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Saturday, March 15, 2008
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