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  • Oracle SOA Suite Developer’s Guide
  • Build Service Oriented Composite Applications with new Book on Oracle SOA Suite 11g
  • Oracle SOA Suite 11g Handbook
  • Getting Started With Oracle SOA Suite 11g R1 A Hands-On Tutorial
  • Building SOA-Based Composite Applications Using NetBeans IDE 6

WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA Composite Applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g

April 23, 2012 by BPELforum

WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA Composite Applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g

This book is a comprehensive guide that shows developers how to design and develop business processes in BPEL efficiently. Throughout the book, the authors discuss important concepts and show real-world examples covering Oracle SOA Suite 11g and related products. This book is aimed at SOA architects and developers involved in the design, implementation, and integration of composite applications and end-to-end business processes. The book provides comprehensive coverage of WS-BPEL 2.0 for impleme

List Price: $ 69.99

Price: $ 59.41

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Applications, composite, Oracle, Suite, WSBPEL

Untangling the Application Morass White Paper: Building Agile Composite Applications with SOA

May 2, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This White Paper is also available at The Jacada Web site.

Untangling the Application Morass White Paper: Building Agile Composite Applications with SOA

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Agile, Application, Applications, Building, composite, Composite Applications, Morass, Paper, Product Description, Untangling, Web Application, White

Building SOA-Based Composite Applications Using NetBeans IDE 6

May 1, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description

In Detail

Composite applications aid businesses by stitching together various componentized business capabilities. In the current enterprise scenario, empowering business users to react quickly to the rapidly changing business environment is the topmost priority. With the advent of composite applications the `reuse’ paradigm has moved from the technical aspect to the business aspect. You no longer re-use a service. You re-use a business process. Now enterprises can define their own behaviors optimized for their businesses through metadata and flows. This business process composition has become increasingly important for constructing business logic.

The ability of composite applications to share components between them nullifies the distinction between actual applications. Business users should be able to move between the activities they need to do without any actual awareness that they are moving from one domain to another.

The composite application design enables your company to combine multiple heterogeneous technologies into a single application, bringing key application capabilities within reach of your business user. Enterprises creating richer composite applications by leveraging existing interoperable components increase the organization’s ability to respond quickly and cost-effectively to emerging business requirements.

While there are many vendors offering various graphical tools to create composite applications, this book focuses on using the BPEL service engine from the OpenESB project for solving business integration problems. Project OpenESB implements an Enterprise Service Bus runtime using Java Business Integration (JBI) as the base. This allows easy integration of web services to create loosely coupled enterprise-class composite applications.

The objective of this book is to help enterprise application architects and developers to understand various SOA tools available as part of the NetBeans IDE that will enable them to build an enterprise-grade, scalable application in a short period using a single development interface. The NetBeans SOA tools form an open-source and freely available add-on to the NetBeans IDE that is targeted for enterprise application development. This pack contains open-sourced features from Sun’s Java Studio Enterprise and Java CAPS products, as well as all-new features for creating composite applications, BPEL-based web services, secure Java EE web services, and real-world XML artifacts like XML Schema and WSDL. Part of NetBeans Enterprise Pack is integrated with NetBeans 6.0, so you don’t need to download additional add-ons or plug-ins if you are using NetBeans version 6.0 or higher. However, not all OpenESB components are integrated with NetBeans 6.0. For instance you may not be able to create an Intelligent Event Processor using the standard NetBeans IDE; these components can be downloaded and installed into the NetBeans IDE.

What you will learn from this book?

  • Basic understanding of SOA and BPEL Processes
  • Setting up NetBeans IDE, OpenESB runtime, and BPEL engine
  • Designing BPEL processes
  • Packaging and deploying BPEL processes
  • JBI runtime and GlassFish Application Server.
  • Using the JBI service engine in NetBeans
  • OpenESB Binding Components, Service Engines, and other tools
  • Using the WSDL Editor for enterprise applications
  • Rapid development and testing with the XML schema designer
  • Working with the Intelligent Event Processor (IEP) module and the IEP Service Engine
  • Fault handling within a BPEL process

Approach

This book introduces basic SOA concepts and shows how you can use NetBeans and OpenESB tools to design and deploy composite applications. After introducing the SOA concepts, you are introduced to various NetBeans Editors and aids that you need to understand and work with for designing a composite application. For example you are introduced to a WSDL editor before dealing with web services. The last part of the book deals with a full-fledged incremental example on how you can build a complex composite application with key screenshots accompanied by the source code available on the website.

Who this book is written for?

This book is for enterprise developers and architects interested in using NetBeans IDE and OpenESB tools to build their SOA based applications.

Building SOA-Based Composite Applications Using NetBeans IDE 6

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Aid Businesses, Application Architects, Application Capabilities, Application Design, Applications, Building, Business Aspect, Business Capabilities, Business Logic, Business User, composite, Composite Application, Composite Applications, Enterprise Service, Graphical Tools, Integration Problems, Interoperable Components, Java Business, Jbi, NetBeans, Service Bus, SOAbased, Technical Aspect, Topmost Priority, using, Using Java

Build Service Oriented Composite Applications with new Book on Oracle SOA Suite 11g

April 27, 2010 by BPELforum

Getting Started With Oracle SOA Suite 11g R1 is a new book from Packt that helps develop service-oriented composite application using the much anticipated Oracle SOA Suite 11g. Written by Oracle SOA Suite Product Management team members, this book walks the reader through the development of a services-oriented applications based on a real-life scenario.

Oracle’s SOA Suite 11g is an integrated, best-of-breed solution that helps build and manage large, highly demanding SOA projects. This book offers a hands-on approach to learning Oracle SOA Suite 11g and provides a comprehensive overview of the Oracle SOA Suite 11g Product Architecture.

This book provides an introduction to key SOA concepts, and emerging standards such as Service Component Architecture (SCA) and Services Data Object (SDO). Users will learn the fundamentals of Oracle SOA Suite 11g platform infrastructure, including; Web-Service Binding, Mediator and Database Adapter as well as understand the core components that make up the Oracle SOA Suite; namely BPEL, Human Workflow, Business Rules, and JMS Adapter.

Developers will learn to enhance their composite application with Policy-based Fault Handling, Business Events, Sensors, and Security policies. They will be shown how to enhance their project with Business Activity Monitoring (BAM) and B2B integration in addition to using the Oracle Service Bus for service virtualization. Additionally, developers learn to assemble services in order to build composite services and long-running business process.

This book is ideal for both new and experienced SOA developers looking for a hands-on approach to learning Oracle SOA Suite 11g will find this book useful. For more information, please visit: www.packtpub.com/getting-started-with-oracle-soa-suite-11g-r1/book

Heidi Buelow is a product manager with Oracle focusing on SOA technologies. Manas Deb is a senior director in the Fusion Middleware/SOA, BPM, Governance Suites Product Group at Oracle HQ. Jayaram Kasi is a product manager with Oracle, and focuses on SOA technologies. Demed L’Her is Director of Product Management at Oracle, where he is responsible for the Oracle SOA Suite. He has been with Oracle since 2006, focusing on ESB, JMS and next-generation SOA platforms.Prasen Palvankar is a Director of Product Management at Oracle and is responsible for outbound SOA Suite product related activities including field and partner enablement, training, and providing strategic support to Oracle’s SOA Suite current and prospective customers.

Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Applications, Book, Buelow, Build, Business Activity Monitoring, Business Rules, Component Architecture, composite, Composite Application, Composite Applications, Composite Services, Core Components, Life Scenario, Management Team Members, Manas, Oracle, Oracle Architecture, Oracle Service, Oriented, Oriented Applications, Packt, Platform Infrastructure, Product Architecture, Service, Service Bus, Service Component, SOA, Suite

BPEL Cookbook: Best Practices for SOA-based integration and composite applications development: Ten practical real-world case studies combining business … management and web services orchestration

April 27, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Ten practical real-world case studies combining business process management and web services orchestration

  • Real-world BPEL recipes for SOA integration and Composite Application development
  • Combining business process management and web services orchestration
  • Techniques and best practices with downloadable code samples from ten real-world case studies

In Detail
Service Oriented Architecture is generating a buzz across the whole IT industry. Propelled by standards-based technologies like XML, Web Services, and SOAP, SOA is quickly moving from pilot projects to mainstream applications critical to business operations. One of the key standards accelerating the adoption of SOA is Business Process Execution Language for Web Services (BPEL).

BPEL was created to enable effective composition of web services in a service-oriented environment. In the past two years, BPEL has become the most significant standard to elevate the visibility of SOA from IT to business level. BPEL is not only commoditizing the integration market, but it is also offering organizations a whole new level of agility – ability to rapidly change applications in response to the changing business landscape. BPEL enables organizations to automate their business processes by orchestrating services within and across the firewall. It forces organizations to think in terms of services. Existing functionality is exposed as services. New applications are composed using services. Communication with external vendors and partners is through services. Services are reused across different applications. Services are, or should be, everywhere!

What you will learn from this book?

In the Packt book Business Process Execution Language for Web Services by Matjaz Juric, we learnt about the building blocks and how these technologies could be used to build a simple SOA solution. As organizations increase their SOA footprint, IT Managers, Architects, and developers are starting to realize that the impact of SOA on IT and business operations can be immense. After having gained confidence with web services, they want to take it to the next level. However, adopters are challenged with some basic questions – How do I SOA-enable my existing integration investment? Can I build flexible and agile business processes? How can I administer my SOA environment without spending a fortune? There have been various best practices defined around SOA, but to date these have been somewhat abstract and lacking a real-world basis. The IT community is looking for real-world examples; examples of how other companies are embarking on an SOA initiative and how to apply that industry learning to their own projects.

What makes this a Cookbook? After you have been exposed to the different ingredients (BPEL, WSDL, and web services), this book takes the adventure to the next level by helping you cook new recipes (SOA applications) using efficient kitchen techniques (best practices). 10 SOA practitioners have gotten together to share their SOA best practices and provide practical viewpoints to tackle many of the common problems SOA promises to solve. Their recommendations are based on projects in production; their existing projects could be your next ones. Through this process you’ll learn the techniques and gain the confidence to create and deliver the recipe that’s right for your particular situation.

Who this book is written for?

This book is aimed at architects and developers building applications in Service Oriented Architecture. The book presumes knowledge of BPEL, SOA, XML, web services, and multi-tier architectures.

BPEL Cookbook: Best Practices for SOA-based integration and composite applications development: Ten practical real-world case studies combining business … management and web services orchestration

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Agility Ability, Applications, Applications Development, Applications Services, Best, Book Business, BPEL, Business, Business Landscape, Business Level, Business Process Execution Language, Business Process Management, case, combining, composite, Composite Application, Composite Applications, Cookbook, Detail Service, development, External Vendors, Integration, Integration Market, Juric, Mainstream Applications, management, Orchestration, Pilot Projects, practical, Practices, realworld, Service Oriented Architecture, services, SOAbased, studies, World Case, Xml Web Services

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