Java SOA Cookbook, 1st Edition
by Eben Hewitt
The Art of Capacity Planning, 1st Edition
by John Allspaw
Grow a Greener Data Center
by Douglas Alger
Enterprise Service Bus
by David A. Chappell
VMware VI3 Implementation and Administration
by Eric Siebert
Many enterprises (large and small) are focused on increasing
their business flexibility while simplifying their IT
infrastructure in order to better meet their business objectives.
The IBM on demand Operating Environment (odOE) defines a set of
integration and infrastructure management capabilities that
enterprises can use to achieve these challenging objectives. The
odOE features of particular relevance to this IBM Redbook are the
use of a service-oriented architecture together with an Enterprise
Service Bus. These are both necessary to achieve the goals of
increased business flexibility and a simplified IT infrastructure.
Many of these enterprises are determined to use proven
architectures, designs and product mappings in order to speed their
implementation and minimize their risk.
Patterns for e-business is a group of proven, reusable assets that
can be used to increase the speed of developing and deploying
e-business applications. This IBM Redbook focuses on how the
service-oriented architecture profile of the Process Integration
patterns can be used to start implementing service-oriented
architecture using an Enterprise Service Bus.
Part 1 presents a description of service-oriented architecture and
how it applies to Web services and e-business on demand. Emerging
service-oriented architecture trends are also discussed.
Part 2 provides a detailed description of the Enterprise Service
Bus (ESB) concept, and how this fits with the Patterns for
e-business. Common usage scenarios, a minimum capability ESB, and
ESB patterns are described. IBM product mappings are then applied
to the ESB patterns.
Part 3 guides you through the process of implementing an Enterprise
Service Bus using current IBM technologies. Router and Broker
interactions within an Enterprise Service Bus are covered, along
with off-the-bus service choreography and the Exposed ESB Gateway
to enable interaction in an inter-enterprise environment.
An updated SOA profile, and a description of how to implement SOA
solutions in WebSphere Application Server V6, is described in the
new redbook "Patterns:
SOA with an Enterprise Service Bus in WebSphere Application Server
V6"
Top Level Categories:
Enterprise Computing
Internet/Online
Sub-Categories:
Enterprise Computing > IT Infrastructure
Internet/Online > .Net
.Net > SOAP
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