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Dynamic Web Application Development using XML and Java

May 5, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
Providing an end-to-end view of how modern web applications are built, Dynamic Web Applications takes a cohesive approach to building a software architecture from core components. It tells a development story through a running case study taking you through each phase – analysis, design and implementation – without straying into detail or trying to cover too many alternatives. Using Java server side frameworks and XML-based page generation with device-adaptive mark-up, this is a contemporary and well targeted coverage of important areas of web application development including Ajax, mobile Internet development, XML transformation, adaptive markup, web services and web application frameworks. It shows you how to build functionality into a website using standard patterns and technologies. These will work as a basic framework from which you will be able to explore more challenging developments such as porting applications to mobile devices and including Web 2.0 features. An ideal text for web programming courses, this book will help you whether you are a student or need to reskill and want a dependable and accessible self-study package.

Dynamic Web Application Development using XML and Java

Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Ajax, Application, Application Frameworks, Cohesive Approach, Core Components, development, Dynamic, Dynamic Web Application, Dynamic Web Applications, Internet Development, Java, Java Product, Java Server Side, Markup, Mobile Devices, Mobile Internet, Page Generation, Phase Analysis, Self Study, Software Architecture, using, Using Java, Web Application Development, Web Programming Courses, Xml Transformation

XML for the World Wide Web

April 30, 2010 by BPELforum

  • ISBN13: 9780201710984
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description
Web-maven Elizabeth Castro, who has penned Peachpit books on HTML, Perl and CGI, and Netscape, now tackles XML–an indispensable tool for creating personalized, updated content for each visitor on your site. Whether you build Web pages for a living or you’re taking on a new hobby, XML for the World Wide Web contains everything you need to create dynamic Web sites by writing XML code, developing custom XML applications with DTDs and schemas, transforming XML into personalized Web content through XSLT-based transformations, and professionally formatting XML documents with Cascading Style Sheets.

The real power of XML lies in combining information from various sources and generating personalized content for different visitors. Castro’s easy-to-follow graphics show exactly what XML looks like, and her real-world examples explain how to transform and streamline your Web-site creation process by automatically updating content.Amazon.com Review
The Visual QuickStart Guide series from Peachpit Press is known for boiling topics down to the essentials, and presenting them in an engaging and efficient way, to get the reader up to speed quickly. In applying this model to XML, author Elizabeth Castro had her work cut out for her.

Fortunately for her readers, Castro has identified successfully the core components of XML, and presented them in a streamlined way. This book doesn’t tackle any of the advanced elements of XML technology, such as SOAP, SAX, or integration with the Document Object Model (DOM). Instead, it focuses on teaching the basic nuts and bolts of creating XML documents, styling them, and defining their structure.

This book moves at a fast pace. Document Type Definitions (DTDs), for instance, get only 30 pages of coverage. This tight format comprises simple examples that illustrate commands and concepts, instead of pages of text. The pages are presented in a two-column format, so that code fragments can be placed (wisely) side by side with the step-by-step explanatory text. Each topic example is supplemented with one or more useful implementation tips.

For a true grasp of XML and all of its potential, you’ll need to follow up this introductory tutorial with more reading on the applications of the technology and case studies. But this little book is a great way to learn the basics of XML in a weekend. –Stephen W. Plain

Topics covered:

  • XML documents
  • Document Type Definitions (DTDs)
  • Schemas
  • Namespaces
  • XSLT and XPath
  • Cascading style sheets (CSS)
  • XLink
  • XPointer

XML for the World Wide Web

Filed Under: XML Books Tagged With: Amazon, Cascading Style Sheets, Core Components, Description Web, Document Object Model, Document Type Definitions, Dtds, Dynamic Web, Elizabeth Castro, Indispensable Tool, Netscape Xml, Nuts And Bolts, Remainder Mark, Soap Sax, Visual Quickstart Guide, Web Content, Web Maven, Web Site Creation, Wide, World, Xml Applications, Xml Documents

Event-Driven Architecture: How SOA Enables the Real-Time Enterprise

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

  • ISBN13: 9780321322111
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

Improving Business Agility with EDA

 

Going beyond SOA, enterprises can gain even greater agility by implementing event-driven architectures (EDAs) that automatically detect and react to significant business events. However, EDA planning and deployment is complex, and even experienced SOA architects and developers need expert guidance. In Event-Driven Architecture, four leading IT innovators present both the theory of EDA and practical, step-by-step guidance to implementing it successfully.

 

The authors first establish a thorough and workable definition of EDA and explore how EDA can help solve many of today’s most difficult business and IT challenges. You’ll learn how EDAs work, what they can do today, and what they might be able to do as they mature. You’ll learn how to determine whether an EDA approach makes sense in your environment and how to overcome the difficult interoperability and integration issues associated with successful deployment. Finally, the authors present chapter-length case studies demonstrating how both full and partial EDA implementations can deliver exceptional business value. Coverage includes

 

  • How SOA and Web services can power event-driven architectures
  • The role of SOA infrastructure, governance, and security in EDA environments
  • EDA core components: event consumers and producers, message backbones, Web service transport, and more
  • EDA patterns, including simple event processing, event stream processing, and complex event processing
  • Designing flexible stateless events that can respond to unpredictable customers, suppliers, and business partners
  • Addressing technical and business challenges such as project management and communication
  • EDA at work: real-world applications across multiple verticals

 

Hugh Taylor is a social software evangelist for IBM Lotus Software. He coauthored Understanding Enterprise SOA and has written extensively on Web services and SOA. He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School. Angela Yochem is an executive in a multinational technology company and is a recognized thought leader in architecture and large-scale technology management. Les Phillips, VP, enterprise architecture, at SunTrust Banks Inc., is responsible for defining the strategic and business IT foundation for many areas of the enterprise. Frank Martinez, EVP, product strategy, at SOA Software, is a recognized expert on distributed, enterprise application, and infrastructure platforms. He has served as senior operating executive for several venture-backed firms and helped build Intershop Communications into a multibillion-dollar public company.

 

Foreword     xi

Preface     xii

Introduction      1

Event-Driven Architecture: A Working Definition     1

The “New” Era of Interoperability Dawns     6

The ETA for Your EDA     9

Endnotes     9

 

PART I THE THEORY OF EDA

Chapter 1 EDA: Opportunities and Obstacles     13

The Vortex     13

EDA: A Working Systemic Definition     14

The (Not So Smooth) Path to EDA     24

Defining Interoperability     26

Drivers of Interoperability     28

Application Integration: A Means to Interoperate     29

Interoperation and Business Process Management     31

Is There a Diet for All This Spaghetti?      35

How Architecture Promotes Integration     37

Management and Governance     39

Chapter Summary     43

Endnote     45

 

Chapter 2 SOA: The Building Blocks of EDA     47

Making You an Offer You Can’t Understand     47

SOA: The Big Picture     48

Defining Service     49

Service-Based Integration     50

Web Services     51

What Is SOA?      59

Loose Coupling in the SOA     60

Chapter Summary     61

 

Chapter 3 Characteristics of EDA     63

Firing Up the Corporate Neurons     63

Revisiting the Enterprise Nervous System     63

The Ideal EDA     78

BAM–A Related Concept     86

Chapter Summary     87

Endnotes     89

 

Chapter 4 The Potential of EDA     91

Introduction     91

EDA’s Potential in Enterprise Computing     91

EDA and Enterprise Agility     100

EDA and Society’s Computing Needs     102

EDA and Compliance     107

Chapter Summary     108

 

Chapter 5 The SOA-EDA Connection     111

Getting Real     111

Event Services     112

The Service Network     114

Implementing the SOA and Service Network     116

How to Design an SOA     122

The Real “Bottom Line”      134

Chapter Summary     137

 

PART II EDA IN PRACTICE

Chapter 6 Thinking EDA     141

A Novel Mind-Set     141

Reducing Central Control     142

Thinking about EDA Implementation     148

When EDA Is Not the Answer     151

An EDA Product Examined     153

Chapter Summary     157

Endnotes     158

 

Chapter 7 Case Study: Airline Flight Control     159

Learning Objectives     160

Business Context: Airline Crunch Time     160

The Ideal Airline Flight Control EDA     167

What FEDA Might Look Like in Real Life     176

Program Success     197

Chapter Summary     206

Endnotes     207

 

Chapter 8 Case Study: Anti-Money Laundering     209

Learning Objectives     210

Cracking a Trillion Dollar, Global Crime Wave     210

IT Aspects of Anti-Money Laundering     216

EDA as a Weapon in the War on Money Laundering     221

Chapter Summary     259

Endnotes     260

 

Chapter 9 Case Study: Event-Driven Productivity Infrastructure     261

Learning Objectives     262

The Often Inadequate Human Link in the EDA     262

Overview of Productivity Infrastructure     264

Event-Driven Architecture: How SOA Enables the Real-Time Enterprise

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Architecture, Business Agility, Business Challenges, Business Events, Business Value, Core Components, Eda, Enables, Enterprise, EventDriven, Expert Guidance, Hugh Taylor, Innovators, Integration Issues, Lotus Software, Real Time Enterprise, RealTime, Remainder Mark, Service Transport, Social Software, Step Guidance, Value Coverage, Verticals, Workable Definition, World Applications

Oracle SOA Suite Developer’s Guide

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description

Design and build Service-Oriented Architecture Solutions with the Oracle SOA Suite 10gR3

  • A hands-on guide to using and applying the Oracle SOA Suite in the delivery of real-world SOA applications.
  • Detailed coverage of the Oracle Service Bus, BPEL Process Manager, Web Service Manager, Rules, Human Workflow, and Business Activity Monitoring.
  • Master the best way to combine / use each of these different components in the implementation of a SOA solution.
  • Illustrates key techniques and best practices using a working example of an online auction site (oBay).

In Detail

We are moving towards a standards-based Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), where IT infrastructure is continuously adapted to keep up with the pace of business change. Oracle is at the forefront of this vision, with the Oracle SOA Suite providing the most comprehensive, proven, and integrated tool kit for building SOA based applications.

Developers and Architects using the Oracle SOA Suite, whether working on integration projects, building composite applications, or specializing in implementations of Oracle Applications, need a hands-on guide on how best to harness and apply this technology.

This book will guide you on using and applying the Oracle SOA Suite to solve real-world problems, enabling you to quickly learn and master the technology and its applications.

The initial section of the book is aimed at providing you with a detailed hands-on tutorial to each of the core components that make up the Oracle SOA Suite; namely the Oracle Service Bus, BPEL Process Manager, Human Workflow, Business Rules, and Business Activity Monitoring. Once you are familiar with the various pieces of the SOA Suite and what they do, the next question will typically be: “What is the best way to combine / use all of these different components to implement a real-world SOA solution?”

Answering this question is the goal of the next section. Using a working example of an online auction site (oBay), it leads you through key SOA design considerations in implementing a robust solution that is designed for change. Though the examples in the book are based on Oracle SOA Suite 10.1.3.4 the book will still be extremely useful for anyone using 11g.

The final section addresses non-functional considerations and covers the packaging, deployment, and testing of SOA applications; it then details how to use Web Service Manager to secure and administer SOA applications.

What you will learn from this book?

  • Learn to use key technology adapters to service-enable existing systems
  • Build implementation-agnostic services using the Oracle Service Bus
  • Assemble services to build composite services and long-running business process using BPEL
  • Initiate and discover how business rules can be used to externalize “decision points” in a BPEL process
  • Incorporate Human Workflow into your processes and use Business Rules to provide greater agility
  • Design XML schemas and service contracts for improved agility, reuse, and interoperability
  • Examine different approaches either from scratch or by re-using existing logic for building new business services
  • Observe the protocols available in addition to SOAP over HTTP for invoking Web Services and the advantages they provide
  • Create, deploy, and run test cases that automate the testing of composite applications
  • Secure and administer SOA applications using Web Service Manager
  • Architect, design, and implement your overall SOA Solution
  • Design your Web Service contracts for interoperability and maintainability

Approach

This book is a comprehensive guide, split into three sections. The initial section of the book provides an introduction to the Oracle SOA Suite and its various components, and will give you a fast-paced hands-on introduction to each of the key components in turn. The next section illustrates the usage of the various components of the SOA Suite to implement a real-world SOA-based solution with the help of an example of an online auction site (oBay). The final section covers other considerations such as the packaging, deployment, testing, security, and administration of SOA applications.

Who this book is written for?

This book targets developers and technical architects who work in the SOA domain. The primary purpose of the book is to provide them with a “hands on” practical guide to using and applying the Oracle SOA Suite in the delivery of real-world composite applications.

It presumes basic understanding of the concepts of SOA, as well as some of the key standards in this space, including web services (SOAP, WSDL), XML Schemas, and XSLT (and XPath).

Oracle SOA Suite Developer’s Guide

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Business Activity Monitoring, Business Change, Business Rules, Composite Applications, Core Components, Description Design, Developers, Different Components, Guide, Initial Section, Integration Projects, Manager Web, Obay, Online Auction Site, Oracle, Oracle Applications, Oracle Developer, Oracle Service, Service Bus, Service Oriented Architecture, Service Oriented Architecture Soa, Suite, Tool Kit, Web Service

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

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