Linux Journal July 2008

Page 40

NEW PRODUCTS

Plat’Home’s OpenMicroServer Although Plat’Home Co., Ltd., has been serving up Linux to the Japanese market since 1992, the company is just now bringing its OpenMicroServer product to North American shores via its US subsidiary. OpenMicroServer is a small, tough, easy-to-use, easy-to-configure, low-cost Linux server solution. It provides high reliability to customers who do not have much extra room and are likely to ignore the machine for weeks or months after installation. Key features include compact design (9"x4"x1.3"), integrated Power over Ethernet, stable long-term operation up to 122°F when using PoE functionality (based on a 625-day endurance test), 400MHz AMD Alchemy (MIPS) processor, two Gigabit Ethernet ports, one 100MBit Ethernet (PoE capable) port, two USB 2.0 ports and two serial ports. Plat’Home is proud of its product’s “Japanese characteristics”, meaning it doesn’t stand out, and it doesn’t complain. It just gets the job done. www.plathome.com

Deepal Jayasinghe’s Apache Axis2 (Packt Publishing) Quicker than most to find a new and interesting open-source topic, Packt Publishing has released Deepal Jayasinghe’s new book Apache Axis2. Apache Axis2 is a core engine for Web services with two different implementations: Apache Axis2/Java and Apache Axis2/C. This book takes readers through the basics of Web services and Axis2, as well as details of Axis’ architecture. It is a step-bystep practical guide that uses many real-life examples. Some of the topics covered include installation, AXIOM, pipes and interceptors, module concepts, session management and more. The book assumes familiarity with Web standards, such as SOAP, WSDL and XML parsing. www.packtpub.com

Edward Benson’s The Art of Rails (Wrox) Author Edward Benson’s intent with his new book The Art of Rails, published by Wrox, is to pick up where the API leaves off and explain how to turn good Rails code into beautiful Rails code: simple, effective, reusable and evolvable. Benson wants you to think like a Rails developer with quality, elegance and maintainability in mind. The Art of Rails blends design and programming, identifying and describing the very latest in design patterns, programming abstractions and development methodologies that have emerged for the modern Web. Readers will learn topics such as techniques for organizing code between and within Model, View and Controller; how to think like a REST-based developer and use Rails 2.0 to translate these thoughts into code; advanced Ruby and meta-programming; design patterns for AJAX, Web APIs, HTML decomposition and schema development; and behavior-driven development. The book is designed to advance the skills of developers already familiar with Rails. www.wrox.com

FreeIPA Version 1.0 of the FreeIPA Project is now official. FreeIPA is an integrated security information management solution that combines Linux (currently Fedora, Fedora Directory Server, MIT Kerberos and NTP), with a Web interface and command-line administration tools. Currently, FreeIPA supports identity management, and plans to support policy and auditing management will follow in future releases. The project developers state that the use of standard protocols, such as LDAP and Kerberos, allows for easy integration of other OSes into an IPA realm for centralized identity management. The developers also encourage testing and deployment of FreeIPA and are seeking feedback from the field. www.freeipa.org

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