Sunday, 15 May 2011

The web server

A Web server serves pages for viewing in web browser, application server provides exposes business logic for client applications through various protocols .Web server exclusively handles http requests.

A Web server handles the HTTP protocol. When the Web server receives an HTTP request, it responds with an HTTP response, such as sending back an HTML page. To process a request, a Web server may respond with a static HTML page or image, send a redirect, or delegate the dynamic response generation to some other program such as CGI scripts, JSPs (Java Server Pages), servlets, ASPs (Active Server Pages), server-side JavaScripts, or some other server-side technology.

Whatever their purpose, such server-side programs generate a response, most often in HTML, for viewing in a Web browser.

Understand that a Web server's delegation model is fairly simple. When a request comes into the Web server, the Web server simply passes the request to the program best able to handle it. The Web server doesn't provide any functionality beyond simply providing an environment in which the server-side program can execute and pass back the generated responses. The server-side program usually provides for itself such functions as transaction processing, database connectivity, and messaging.

While a Web server may not itself support transactions or database connection pooling, it may employ various strategies for fault tolerance and scalability such as load balancing, caching, and clustering—features oftentimes erroneously assigned as features reserved only for application servers.

Example of web servers

The Web Server are:

Apache HTTP Server, Apache Tomcat, IBM HTTP server, Oracle HTTP server, Sun Java System Web Server.

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