Today's enterprise applications are distributed by design. For applications
to interact with one another over networks optimally, they require Service
Oriented and Event Driven Architectures made up of loosely federated business
resources, that interact by exchanging requests (for data delivery and
integration, as well as for services) and that can handle streams of diverse
business processes in real-time. To support large-scale, enterprise
integration, organizations need to adopt strategies that rationalize the
infrastructure for integration based on the requirements of business/IT
organization itself. The only successful integration efforts are those that
provide agile, pervasive and low cost solutions in order to cater to today's
diverse deployment environments, while fully leveraging available standards.
Enterprise Service Bus (ESB), which can be defined as middl... (more)
Over the last several years, integration technology has been growing by leaps
and bounds. The XML/REST/Web Services/SOA revolution has driven engineers and
software firms to create an abundance of protocols, adaptors, transports,
containers, standards, best practices...you name it.
The bits and bytes that are now available are undeniably sophisticated,
diverse, and capable of almost anything, but many of the packages are built
from the technology up and leave the job of how to use the capabilities
effectively as an exercise for the reader.
Today, many readers have completed many ... (more)
The latest hype technology has numerous software vendors scrambling to become
buzzword compliant. Analyst groups from Gartner to IDC hail the enterprise
service bus (ESB) as the revolutionary technology that will transform
middleware due to the vast benefits of adopting vendor-independent
standards-based architectures. According to Gartner, ESBs will replace
traditional middleware by 2007. So far, however, this "revolution" has seen
only a few sparks.
Though just a handful of users have begun deploying ESBs, reports from early
adopters imply that the advantages of putting ESBs i... (more)
Over the last several years, integration technology has been growing by leaps
and bounds. The XML/REST/Web Services/SOA revolution has driven engineers and
software firms to create an abundance of protocols, adaptors, transports,
containers, standards, best practices...you name it. The bits and bytes that
are now available are undeniably sophisticated, diverse, and capable of
almost anything, but many of the packages are built from the technology up
and leave the job of how to use the capabilities effectively as an exercise
for the reader.
Today, many readers have completed many... (more)
Called to larger tasks, messaging technology is now in a phase of evolution.
A mixed message model is needed to combine the best of Web services and
traditional asynchronous message delivery to provide the flexibility required
for today's real-time enterprise.
Traditional message-queuing middleware will soon be replaced by enterprise
service bus (ESB) technology - taking messaging to the next level. The new
ESB backbone, which will enable the next generation of integration and
application platform products, will bring radical improvements to the
software infrastructure of most e... (more)