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Start your free trialTegar Putra
5,820 Pointswhat exactly middleware?
i still confuse about middleware, anyone can explain that with the example ?
1 Answer
Kevin Gates
15,053 PointsA few official definitions, but MDN seems to be the simplest definition (at the bottom).
From Microsoft
Middleware is software that lies between an operating system and the applications running on it. Essentially functioning as hidden translation layer, middleware enables communication and data management for distributed applications. It’s sometimes called plumbing, as it connects two applications together so data and databases can be easily passed between the “pipe.” Using middleware allows users to perform such requests as submitting forms on a web browser, or allowing the web server to return dynamic web pages based on a user’s profile.
Common middleware examples include database middleware, application server middleware, message-oriented middleware, web middleware, and transaction-processing monitors. Each program typically provides messaging services so that different applications can communicate using messaging frameworks like simple object access protocol (SOAP), web services, representational state transfer (REST), and JavaScript object notation (JSON). While all middleware performs communication functions, the type a company chooses to use will depend on what service is being used and what type of information needs to be communicated. This can include security authentication, transaction management, message queues, applications servers, web servers, and directories. Middleware can also be used for distributed processing with actions occurring in real time rather than sending data back and forth.
Source: https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/overview/what-is-middleware/
From Redhat
This one has some great images to help you understand.
Analyst and system theorist Nick Gall said, “Middleware is software about software.” Middleware doesn’t offer the functions of a traditional app, it connects software to other software. Middleware is plumbing for your IT infrastructure because middleware allows data to flow from one app to another.
Source: https://www.redhat.com/en/topics/middleware/what-is-middleware
From Mozilla Developer Network(MDN)
Middleware is a (loosly defined) term for any software or service that enables the parts of a system to communicate and manage data. It is the software that handles communication between components and input/output, so developers can focus on the specific purpose of their application.
In server-side web application frameworks, the term is often more specifically used to refer to pre-built software components that can be added to the framework's request/response processing pipeline, to handle tasks such as database access.
Source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Glossary/Middleware
csr13
33,293 Pointscsr13
33,293 PointsA bunch of super pretty cool code that takes care of x functionality. For example, say --> the security
middleware
of Django (Python framework) takes care of the basic security events such as taking measures for events such as Cross Site Scripting, salting and un_salting user credentials, and much more.You can read the middleware code from any framework that you are interested in. Go to GitHub, find a framework that interests you and search through the contents of their code for middleware. Im sure you can find some great literature.