70-569

exam name:UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 2
exam code:70-569
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[70-577] – TS: Microsoft Windows@ Embedded Standard 2009, Development
[70-569(VB)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 2
[70-569(CSharp)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 2
[70-568(VB)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 1
[70-568(CSharp)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 1
[70-567(VB)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Web Developer Skills to MCPD ASP.NET Developer 3.5
[70-567(CSharp)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Web Developer Skills to MCPD ASP.NET Developer 3.5
[70-566(VB)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Windows Developer Skills to MCPD Windows Developer 3.5
[70-566(CSharp)] – UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Windows Developer Skills to MCPD Windows Developer 3.5
[70-565(VB)] – PRO: Design & Develop Enterprise App Using MS.NET Frmwrk3.5
[70-565(CSharp)] – PRO: Design & Develop Enterprise App Using MS.NET Frmwrk3.5
[70-563(VB)] – PRO:Design & Dev Windows Apps Using the MS.NET Framework3.5
[70-563(CSharp)] – PRO:Design & Dev Windows Apps Using the MS.NET Framework3.5

About this Exam
This exam is the second part of a two-part upgrade process for candidates who are certified as an MCPD Enterprise Application Developer on the .NET Framework 2.0 and want to upgrade their certification to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer on the .NET Framework 3.5.
Audience Profile
Candidates for this exam use Microsoft Visual Studio in a team-based, medium to large development environment. Candidates should have at least two to three years’ experience developing Web-based applications by using Microsoft ASP.NET. Candidates should also have a minimum of one year of experience with the following:
Database access by using Microsoft ADO.NET classes in the .NET Framework
Web Services
State management
ASP.NET configuration
Monitoring Web applications
Debugging
Application and page life-cycle management
Security aspects such as Forms Authentication and membership and roles
ECMAScript (JavaScript, Microsoft JScript)
Internet Information Server (IIS)
Candidates should be very familiar with Visual Studio 2005 or later and the .NET Framework classes that are related to ASP.NET and ADO.NET. In addition, candidates should have a good grasp of ASP.NET AJAX.
Credit Toward Certification
Exam 70-569: UPGRADE: Transition your MCPD Enterprise Application Developer Skills to MCPD Enterprise Application Developer 3.5, Part 2: counts as credit toward the following certification(s):
MCPD: Enterprise Application Development 3.5
Note This preparation guide is subject to change at any time without prior notice and at the sole discretion of Microsoft. Microsoft exams might include adaptive testing technology and simulation items. Microsoft does not identify the format in which exams are presented. Please use this preparation guide to prepare for the exam, regardless of its format.

Skills Being Measured
This exam measures your ability to accomplish the technical tasks listed below.
The percentages indicate the relative weight of each major topic area on the exam.
Creating Services
Define Service contracts.

May include: change the namespace of the service; expose service metadata; create service callbacks; create and specify fault contracts; select XML serialization (data contract serializer versus XML serializer); define service contract hierarchy; ATOM/RSS syndication
Define Data contracts.

May include: change the namespace of the data contract; versioning; manage data contract hierarchy; use of XML serialization attributes; use of data contract serializer; use of required and order attributes on data members
Define Operation contracts.

May include: overloaded; configure to be consumed by an HTTP verb; customize the URI for the operation; message exchange patterns (one-way, request-reply, duplex); change SOAP action name; manage streaming
Define Message contracts.

May include: body; headers; message contract versus inject message inspector; specify protection levels on different message parts; encoding and format of message

Note: NOT data contracts
Process generic messages.

May include: create a catch-all contract; write the message and read the message; work with properties; work with headers
Exposing and Deploying Services
Create and configure service endpoints.

May include: by using declarative methods; by using the programming model; use different built-in bindings; expose the same service by using multiple bindings; expose service metadata; customize bindings with specific parameters (streaming, time-to-live (TTL), dead letter queues); create custom bindings by composing different binding elements (transaction flow, security, reliability, composite duplex, encoding, transport)
Manage consistency between life cycle, sessions, concurrency, and bindings.

May include: MSMQ and one-way services; duplex contract and dual bindings; consistency between transports and encoders
Host a service in a managed application.

May include: host in a console app, Windows service, or in process; configure the base address of the host
Host a service on a Web server.

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May include: host with Windows Activation Services (WAS), in an ASPX application; host by using *.svc file; point to service implementation; svc extension registration tool; deploy a service to a medium-trust environment; create a service host factory
Create custom behaviors.

May include: endpoint; operation; service; implement configuration support for custom behaviors; implement attribute support; add a custom error handler to the service sideMay include but is not limited to: StyleSheet controls; List controls; Container controls
Securing Services
Implement transport-level security.

May include: select appropriate binding; use Windows credentials; configure certificates; use username/password credentials over HTTPS; when to implement transport security versus message security versus both versus mixed
Implement message-level security.
May include: select appropriate binding; use Windows credentials; configure certificates; use username/password credentials over HTTPS; when to implement message security versus transport security versus both versus mixed
Authenticate clients.

May include: federated authentication; membership providers; custom username/password validator; Windows authentication; X.509 certificates; extract caller identity on the service side; cardspace
Authorize clients.

May include: role-based authorization; role providers; Windows groups; access control checks; authorize with a principal (principal permission attribute); claims-based authorization; use authorization policies
Impersonate clients.

May include: Internet Information Services (IIS); configure impersonation level; declarative versus programmatic; operation-based versus service-based
Envisioning and Designing an Application
Analyze and refine the logical design of the application.
This objective may include but is not limited to: clarify logical design; evaluate the layers; evaluate application workflow; evaluate data flow diagrams; evaluate performance; evaluate maintainability; evaluate extensibility; evaluate availability; evaluate design against use cases; evaluate recoverability; evaluate data integrity
Analyze and refine the physical design of the application.
This objective may include but is not limited to: evaluate the tiers; evaluate migration strategy; clarify physical design; evaluate component specification; evaluate performance; evaluate maintainability; evaluate extensibility; evaluate scalability; evaluate availability; evaluate recoverability; evaluate data integrity
Analyze and refine the database design of the application.
This objective may include but is not limited to: evaluate stored procedure requirements; evaluate schema requirements; identify whether triggers are required; identify required data types
Analyze and refine the integration strategy.
This objective may include but is not limited to: evaluate integration of application with other systems; internal vs. external integration; enable future integration with other systems; evaluate WCF as an integration component
Identify the appropriate technology.
This objective may include but is not limited to: identify the technology and format for transport; identify the technology and format for messages; identify the technology and format for required client interoperability; choose a platform—Windows vs. Web; choose a communication technology—Windows Communication Foundation (WCF), Web services, Remoting, message queueing; define a component communication strategy; recommend build vs. buy; choose a platform—Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF), ASP.NET, AJAX, Windows Forms, Windows service
Analyze technical feasibility.
This objective may include but is not limited to: develop a proof of concept; perform a technical risk assessment; recommend changes to the design to meet the same technical goals; analyze feasibility of design in planned environment; determine whether the proposed design could integrate with other systems by using WCF
Analyze security requirements.
This objective may include but is not limited to: recommend an authentication method; recommend an authorization method; recommend a secure communication method
Designing and Developing an Application Framework
Choose an appropriate implementation approach for the application design logic.
This objective may include but is not limited to: choose data storage mechanisms; choose data flow structure; choose decision flow structure; state management techniques; security implementation; finalize component specification
Define the interaction between framework components.
This objective may include but is not limited to: determine types of clients that will access the application; define data APIs, security APIs, abstract classes, class interfaces, and data contracts; map data to object model; messaging and transport methods such as WCF, Remoting, Web services, MSMQ, Enterprise Services
Define a validation strategy.
This objective may include but is not limited to: define where in the framework each type of validation will happen; choose a validation method
Define an event-logging strategy.

This objective may include but is not limited to: choose a storage mechanism for logged events; choose a systemwide event logging method; decide logging levels based on severity or priority; define a reporting strategy
Define a monitoring strategy for specific characteristics or aspects of an application.
This objective may include but is not limited to: decide whether to monitor data; decide which characteristics to monitor; choose event monitoring mechanisms; decide monitoring levels based on requirements; choose a system-wide monitoring method from the available monitoring mechanisms; define a reporting strategy
Designing Application Components
Create the high-level design of a component.

This objective may include but is not limited to: establish the life cycle of a component; define user interface for each component; define interoperability requirements; identify and extract reusable components; document the design of a component by using pseudo code, class diagrams, sequence diagrams, activity diagrams, and state diagrams; decide whether to require constructor input
Define the internal architecture of a component.

This objective may include but is not limited to: decide whether existing functionality can be implemented or inherited; decide how to handle unmanaged and managed resources; decide which extensibility features are required; determine state management implementation; decide whether a component must be multithreaded; decide which functions to implement in the base class, abstract class, or sealed class
Define the data handling for a component.

This objective may include but is not limited to: define data access; analyze data relationships; analyze the data handling requirements of a component
Consume components.
This objective may include but is not limited to: identify reusable components; handle unmanaged components; identify whether a component needs to be extended; identify whether a component needs to be wrapped; identify whether any existing functionality needs to be hidden; test that reused components meet the specifications
Define a strategy for exceptions and other component feedback.
This objective may include but is not limited to: identify expected exceptions; decide how to deal with expected exceptions; decide how to deal with unhandled exceptions; decide how to deal with WCF faults; define other component feedback, such as events, callbacks, and messages; define a reporting strategy

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