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Enterprise Architectures and Integration Using SOA

April 29, 2010 by BPELforum

Product Description
This book covers enterprise architectures and integration using SOA principles. This book is based on corporate experience, consulting assignments, teaching university courses and also research on computer aided consulting. The salient features of this classroom tested book are: a) emphasis on recent and relevant issues; b) mixture of business and technologies, not just buiness or pure technology; c) a systematic approach that defines an enterprise architecture into broad building blocks and then covers each building block in depth; d) several case studies and examples to illustrate the key points; e) a step by step methodology that shows how all the pieces fit together; and f) a computer aided decision support system (PISA) that can be used in classroom exercises.

Enterprise Architectures and Integration Using SOA

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Architectures, Book Covers, Building Blocks, Case Studies, Classroom Exercises, Corporate Experience, Decision Support System, Enterprise, Enterprise Architecture, Enterprise Architectures, Enterprise Integration, Integration, Mixture, Pisa, Product Description, Relevant Issues, Salient Features, Step Methodology, Systematic Approach, Teaching Courses, Teaching University, Technology C, using

Latest SOA Need: Assistance with JBI Application Integration

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

The methodology of Enterprise Integration has advanced to Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) because of its ability to weave disparate applications and services to produce a business structure where data can flow as a business process. Environments have been built over time with diverse layers of applications. The development time and maintenance cost to manage these layers is driven down when integration components are built on standards. The most compelling standard in the integration space is Java Business Integration (JBI) which allows for the creation of a Service Oriented Architecture with interchangeable components that are vendor-independent.


Isn’t all development easier with a standard?


Not really. Don’t confuse the ease of using the standardized run-time components with the creation of those run-times. The creation of JBI run-time components is a whole new technology, with layered naming conventions and rules for each binding and service engine components. As with any new technology, JBI brings with it a sizable learning curve.


Plan time to learn JBI technology


Developers interested in JBI will need to reserve some time to learn. This type of exposure is mostly reviewing code snippets from existing open source JBI applications, like ServiceMix, and supplementing that learn-as-you-explore strategy with the 228 page JBI specification document publicly available from the Java Community Process organization. SOA integration experts, like Scott Ganyo with Moongate Technologies, agree that it can take a long time to learn the rules of the JBI spec nomenclature and nuances to code within the standard. While it is not brain surgery, even an experienced integration developer will need to devote targeted time to get up to speed.


The Holy Grail of Simplified Integration


So here is the hitch. Everybody is focused on SOA, and the push-point of that statement is everybody is everybody, from code crunchers to web designers.


The use of standards, like JBI, simplifies the combining of components but it is the ability to make those high-learning-curve standards accessible to all levels of coders that is the Holy Grail enterprises will be striving to acquire.


Less sophisticated audiences, one proven method


It is an early adopter assumption to think everyone using your product knows what they are doing. The first implementers of any new technology will cater to the most sophisticated users. But the SOA audience is as varied as the many applications they are trying to integrate, so this market will need a splay of products to cover different levels of expertise. A graphical interface, as we have seen successfully implemented in workflow and business process applications, is a proven method to simplify the design and implementation process. Just as BPEL maps out high-level business processes as a workflow, an intuitive graphical interface for the lower level integrations has a definite market for a technical user that wants to keep their distance from the detail specifications and simply drag and drop functionality.


Graphical Interfaces hide mundane details from developers


If vendors create graphical interfaces that generate standards-based code under the covers, a developer can avoid understanding the intimate details of the specification while still enjoying the benefits of developing a standards-based integration. A robust graphical interface allows each SOA developer to visualize the integration path and then simply click to define the properties in a fill-in-the-blank format. This expands the standards-based playing field to include a broader base of developers. The true beauty of the interface is to ultimately create standards based code so that the resulting run-time components integrate easily with other internally and externally developed components.


Graphical Interfaces are not always a priority


It is a certainty that more organizations will eventually go the graphical direction. First vendors develop the functionality and then they make it easier to reuse. While a couple of vendors have already started down a user-centric graphical path, an across-the-board improvement to robust graphical interfaces for integration will take a year or more.

Kristen Puckett writes on Java Business Integration (JBI) and e-commerce integration for Bostech Corporation (http://www.bostechcorp.com). Kristen invites developers to download Bostech’s ChainBuilder ESB, a JBI-compliant solution with a graphical editor, at http://download.chainforge.net.

Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Application, Assistance, Business Integration, Business Structure, Code Snippets, Disparate Applications, Engine Components, Enterprise Integration, Holy Grail, Integration, Integration Components, Integration Experts, Interchangeable Components, Java Business, Java Community, Latest, Learning Curve, Maintenance Cost, Moongate, Naming Conventions, Need, Plan Time, Service Oriented Architecture, Specification Document, Time Components

SOA-Based Enterprise Integration: A Step-by-Step Guide to Services-based Application

April 28, 2010 by BPELforum

  • ISBN13: 9780071605526
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Product Description

Foreword by Ray Harishankar, IBM Fellow

“There are many books on the market on the topic of SOA and SOA’s business and technology value. This book focuses on one of the key technical values of SOA and does an excellent job of describing SOA-based application integration by clarifying the relationship and patterns of SOA with other integration technologies in a distributed computing environment.” Sandra Carter, IBM Vice President for SOA, BPM, and WebSphere Marketing

“Services Oriented Architectures present many challenges today in the integration of existing systems and new systems, along with many times, old legacy mainframe applications. This book successfully addresses many of the complexities we see in the integration of SOA and mainframe legacy applications, presenting options and approaches to integrate the applications with the rest of the enterprise. The author takes a clearly defined pattern-based approach discussing the advantages, tools and methods. Readers will benefit from the insights in this book whether they play the architect role or a developer role on a SOA project.” Sue Miller-Sylvia, IBM Fellow and Application Development Service Area Leader

SOA-Based Enterprise Integration: A Step-by-Step Guide to Services-based Application

Filed Under: SOA Books Tagged With: Application, Application Integration, Architectures, Bpm, Complexities, Computing Environment, Developer Role, Enterprise, Enterprise Integration, Existing Systems, Guide, Ibm Fellow, Integration, Integration Technologies, Legacy Applications, Legacy Mainframe Applications, Mainframe Legacy, Marketing Services, Remainder Mark, Sandra Carter, Servicesbased, SOAbased, StepbyStep, Sue Miller, Technical Values, Technology Value, WebSphere

New Book on Service Oriented Architecture and Its Approach to Integration Published by Packt

April 27, 2010 by BPELforum

Packt is pleased to announce a new book, SOA Approach to Integration which shows how to define SOA integration architecture, what technologies to use, and how to best integrate existing applications with modern e-business solutions.

This book focuses on the SOA approach to integration of existing (legacy) applications and newly developed solutions, using modern technologies, particularly web services, XML, ESB, and BPEL. The book shows how to define SOA for integration, what integration patterns to use, which technologies to use, and how to best integrate existing applications with modern e-business solutions.

This book also shows how to develop web services, how to process and manage XML documents from JEE and .NET platforms, and how to use ESBs and BPEL executable business processes within SOA architecture. This book explains SOA, web services, and the Enterprise Services Bus before covering processing XML and web services on the .Net and JEE platforms in more detail.

Architects and senior developers who are responsible for setting up SOA for integration for applications within the enterprise (intra-enterprise integration) and applications across enterprises (inter-enterprise integration or B2B) will find this book extremely useful.

For more information about this book, please visit www.PacktPub.com

Filed Under: BPEL News Tagged With: Approach, Architects, Architecture, B2b, Book, Business Processes, Developers, E Business Solutions, Enterprise Applications, Enterprise Integration, Enterprise Services, Integration, Integration Architecture, Inter, Legacy Applications, Oriented, Packt, Platforms, Published, Service, Service Oriented Architecture, Soa Web Services, Xml Documents

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