Business process driven SOA using BPMN and BPEL [[electronic resource] ] : from business process modeling to orchestration and service oriented architecture / / Matjaz B. Juric and Kapil Pant |
Autore | Juric Matjaz B |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Pub., c2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (328 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.05 |
Altri autori (Persone) | PantKapil |
Soggetto topico |
Business enterprises - Data processing
Business - Data processing - Management Computer network architectures BPEL (Computer program language) Business logistics - Data processing |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-62198-885-6
1-281-78603-9 9786611786038 1-84719-147-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: SOA and Business Processes; Why Care about Business Processes?; Examples of Business Processes; How Business Processes Emerge; How Business Processes and IT Relate; IT Flexibility; Heterogeneous Architecture; Traditional Software Lifecycles; Why Do We Need SOA?; Why Should We Believe This?; SOA Approach to Business Processes; Major Improvements in the SOA Approach; Focus on Content, Not Technology; Management Support; SOA Competency Centre; SOA Inception; SOA Forces; Value of SOA for IT Departments; Changes in the Development Approach
Reduced ComplexityTechnical Introduction to SOA; BPMN; BPEL; Features; Services; Service Interfaces; Messages; Synchronicity; Loose Coupling; Quality of Service; Other Important Parts of SOA; Enterprise Service Bus; Registry and Repository; Rules Engines; Business Activity Monitoring; User Interactions; How SOA, BPMN, and BPEL Fit Together; Agility; Resilience; Alignment Between Business and IT; New Business Models; How the Puzzles Fit Together; SOA Vendors; Summary; Chapter 2: Modeling Business Processes for SOA; Business Process Management; IT and BPM; SOA and BPM Business Process LifecycleBPM and SOA-A Perfect Fit for the Lifecycle; Business Process Modeling; Modeling Method and Notation; ARIS; Modeling Notation; BPMN; Process Design; Results of Process Modeling; Process Map; Roles and Relations Structure; As-is Process Model; Publishing and Communicating Process Models; Process Simulation; Tools for Simulating Processes; Modeling Principles; Common Problems in Process Modeling; Process Implementation; Classic Software Development; Standardized ERP Solutions; Service Oriented Architecture; Process Implementation Phase with BPEL Process Execution and ControlSOA for the Process Execution and Control Phase; Business Activity Monitoring; Process Optimization; The To-be Process Model; Key Performance Indicators; Typical Problems in Process Optimization; Summary; Chapter 3: BPMN for Business Process Modeling; The Need for Standards in Business Process Modeling; Business Process Classification and BPMN; Business Process Diagrams-Core Elements; Business Process Diagrams-A Deeper Analysis of the Key Elements of BPMN; Events; Activities; Task; Gateways; Sequence Flow; Message Flow; Association; Pool; Lanes; Data Object; Group Text AnnotationIntroduction to Oracle Business Process Analysis Suite; Developing an Example Process Using BPMN and the Selected Tool; Summary; Chapter 4: BPMN-Advance Constructs; Business Process Modeling General Guidelines; Rule #1: Process Models Should Provide Aid in Process Understanding; Rule # 2: Match Each Split with a Join; Rule #3: Have a Well-Defined Start and End Event; Rule #4: Look Out for Orphan Tasks; BPMN Attributes and Tools Support; Business Process Diagram; Process; Sub-Process; Events in Detail; Start Events; End Events; Intermediate Events Process Modeling Patterns and BPMN |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910454327703321 |
Juric Matjaz B
![]() |
||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Pub., c2008 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Business process driven SOA using BPMN and BPEL [[electronic resource] ] : from business process modeling to orchestration and service oriented architecture / / Matjaz B. Juric and Kapil Pant |
Autore | Juric Matjaz B |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Pub., c2008 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (328 p.) |
Disciplina | 658.05 |
Altri autori (Persone) | PantKapil |
Soggetto topico |
Business enterprises - Data processing
Business - Data processing - Management Computer network architectures BPEL (Computer program language) Business logistics - Data processing |
ISBN |
1-62198-885-6
1-281-78603-9 9786611786038 1-84719-147-9 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: SOA and Business Processes; Why Care about Business Processes?; Examples of Business Processes; How Business Processes Emerge; How Business Processes and IT Relate; IT Flexibility; Heterogeneous Architecture; Traditional Software Lifecycles; Why Do We Need SOA?; Why Should We Believe This?; SOA Approach to Business Processes; Major Improvements in the SOA Approach; Focus on Content, Not Technology; Management Support; SOA Competency Centre; SOA Inception; SOA Forces; Value of SOA for IT Departments; Changes in the Development Approach
Reduced ComplexityTechnical Introduction to SOA; BPMN; BPEL; Features; Services; Service Interfaces; Messages; Synchronicity; Loose Coupling; Quality of Service; Other Important Parts of SOA; Enterprise Service Bus; Registry and Repository; Rules Engines; Business Activity Monitoring; User Interactions; How SOA, BPMN, and BPEL Fit Together; Agility; Resilience; Alignment Between Business and IT; New Business Models; How the Puzzles Fit Together; SOA Vendors; Summary; Chapter 2: Modeling Business Processes for SOA; Business Process Management; IT and BPM; SOA and BPM Business Process LifecycleBPM and SOA-A Perfect Fit for the Lifecycle; Business Process Modeling; Modeling Method and Notation; ARIS; Modeling Notation; BPMN; Process Design; Results of Process Modeling; Process Map; Roles and Relations Structure; As-is Process Model; Publishing and Communicating Process Models; Process Simulation; Tools for Simulating Processes; Modeling Principles; Common Problems in Process Modeling; Process Implementation; Classic Software Development; Standardized ERP Solutions; Service Oriented Architecture; Process Implementation Phase with BPEL Process Execution and ControlSOA for the Process Execution and Control Phase; Business Activity Monitoring; Process Optimization; The To-be Process Model; Key Performance Indicators; Typical Problems in Process Optimization; Summary; Chapter 3: BPMN for Business Process Modeling; The Need for Standards in Business Process Modeling; Business Process Classification and BPMN; Business Process Diagrams-Core Elements; Business Process Diagrams-A Deeper Analysis of the Key Elements of BPMN; Events; Activities; Task; Gateways; Sequence Flow; Message Flow; Association; Pool; Lanes; Data Object; Group Text AnnotationIntroduction to Oracle Business Process Analysis Suite; Developing an Example Process Using BPMN and the Selected Tool; Summary; Chapter 4: BPMN-Advance Constructs; Business Process Modeling General Guidelines; Rule #1: Process Models Should Provide Aid in Process Understanding; Rule # 2: Match Each Split with a Join; Rule #3: Have a Well-Defined Start and End Event; Rule #4: Look Out for Orphan Tasks; BPMN Attributes and Tools Support; Business Process Diagram; Process; Sub-Process; Events in Detail; Start Events; End Events; Intermediate Events Process Modeling Patterns and BPMN |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910777909303321 |
Juric Matjaz B
![]() |
||
Birmingham, U.K., : Packt Pub., c2008 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA composite applications with IBM WebSphere 7 [[electronic resource] ] : define, model, implement, and monitor real-world BPEL 2.0 business processes with SOA-powered BPM / / Matjaz B. Juric ... [et al.] |
Autore | Juric Matjaz B |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [U.K.], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (644 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.376 |
Soggetto topico |
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science)
Web services Web site development |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-88219-8
9786612882197 1-84968-047-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; Foreword; About the Authors; About the Reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction to BPEL and SOA; Why business processes matter; Business and IT alignment; Service-Oriented Architecture; BPEL; Services; How to develop services; SOA concepts; Services; Interfaces; Messages; Synchronicity; Loose coupling; Reusability; Registries and repositories; Quality of Service; Composition of services into business processes; SOA building blocks; BPEL for process automation; Web Services; How web services differ from their predecessors
Web services technology stackEnterprise Service Bus; ESB features; Registry and repository; Human task support and identity management; Process monitoring or business activity monitoring; Business Rules Management Systems (BRMS) or Rule Engine; Adapters; Service Component Architecture; SOA governance; Understanding BPEL; BPEL features; Orchestration and choreography; Executable and abstract processes; Relation of BPEL to other languages; XLANG; WSFL; BPML; ebXML BPSS; YAWL; WSCL; WSCI; WS-CDL; BPMN; BPEL servers overview; The future of BPEL; Summary; Chapter 2: Service Composition with BPEL Developing business processes with BPELCore concepts; Invoking services; Invoking asynchronous services; Synchronous/asynchronous business processes; Understanding links to partners; Partner link types; Defining partner links; BPEL process tag; Variables; Providing the interface to BPEL processes- , , and ; ; ; ; Assignments; Validating variables; Accessing variables in expressions; XSLT transformations; Conditions; Activity names; Documentation; BPEL business process example; Involved services; Employee Travel Status service; Airline service WSDL for the BPEL processPartner link types; Business process definition; BPEL process outline; Partner links; Variables; BPEL process main body; Asynchronous BPEL example; Modify the BPEL process WSDL; Modify partner link types; Modify the BPEL process definition; Summary; Chapter 3: Advanced BPEL; Advanced activities; Loops; While; Repeat Until; For Each; Delays; Deadline and duration expressions; Empty activities; Ending a process; Fault handling and signaling; WSDL faults; Signaling faults; Signaling faults to clients in synchronous replies Signaling faults to clients in asynchronous scenariosHandling faults; Selection of a fault handler; Synchronous example; Asynchronous example; Propagating faults; Default fault handler; Inline fault handling; Scopes; Example; First scope; Second scope; Third scope; Isolated scopes; Compensation; Compensation handlers; Example; Default compensation handler; Invoking compensation handlers; Termination handler; Default termination handler; Managing events; Pick activity; Message events; Alarm events; Example; Event handlers; ; ; Business process lifecycle Correlation and message properties |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910459482703321 |
Juric Matjaz B
![]() |
||
Birmingham [U.K.], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA composite applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g [[electronic resource] ] : define, model, implement, and monitor real-world BPEL business processes with SOA-powered BPM / / Matjaz B. Juric with Marcel Krizevnik |
Autore | Juric Matjaz B |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (616 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.7575 |
Altri autori (Persone) | KrizevnikMarcel |
Collana | Enterprise : professional expertise distilled |
Soggetto topico |
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science)
BPEL (Computer program language) |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-282-76686-4
9786612766862 1-84719-795-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; Foreword; About the Authors; About the Reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction to BPEL and SOA; Why business processes matters; Business and IT alignment; Service-Oriented Architecture; BPEL; Services; How to develop services; SOA concepts; Services; Interfaces; Messages; Loose Coupling; Reusability; Registries and repositories; Quality of Service; Composition of services into business processes; SOA building blocks; BPEL for process automation; Web Services; How Web Services differ from their predecessors; Web Services technology stack
Enterprise Service BusESB features; Registry and repository; Human task support and identity management; Process Monitoring or Business Activity Monitoring; Business Rules Management Systems (BRMS) or Rule Engine; Adapters; Service Component Architecture; SOA governance; Understanding BPEL; BPEL features; Orchestration and choreography; Executable and abstract processes; Relation of BPEL to other languages; XLANG; WSFL; BPML; ebXML BPSS; YAWL; WSCL; WSCI; WS-CDL; BPMN; BPEL servers overview; The future of BPEL; Summary; Chapter 2: Service Composition with BPEL Developing Business Processes with BPELCore concepts; Invoking services; Invoking asynchronous services; Synchronous/Asynchronous business processes; Understanding links to partners; Partner link types; Defining partner links; BPEL process tag; Variables; Providing the interface to BPEL processes: , , and ; ; ; ; Assignments; Validating variables; Accessing variables in expressions; XSLT transformations; Conditions; Activity names; Documentation; BPEL business process example; Involved services; Employee Travel Status service; Airline Service WSDL for the BPEL processPartner link types; Business process definition; BPEL process outline; Partner links; Variables for the Travel Process; BPEL process main body; Asynchronous BPEL example; Modify the BPEL Process WSDL; Modify partner link types; Modify the BPEL process definition; Summary; Chapter 3: Advanced BPEL; Advanced activities; Loops; While; Repeat Until; For Each; Delays; Deadline and duration expressions; Empty activities; Ending a process; Fault handling and signaling; WSDL faults; Signaling faults; Signaling faults to clients in synchronous replies Signaling faults to clients in asynchronous scenariosHandling faults; Selection of a fault handler; Synchronous example; Asynchronous example; Propagating faults; Default fault handler; Inline fault handling; Scopes; Example; First scope; Second scope; Third scope; Isolated scopes; Compensation; Compensation handlers; Example; Default compensation handler; Invoking compensation handlers; Termination handler; Default termination handler; Managing events; Pick activity; Message events; Alarm events; Example; Event handlers; ; ; Business process lifecycle Correlation and message properties |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910459072203321 |
Juric Matjaz B
![]() |
||
Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA composite applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g [[electronic resource] ] : define, model, implement, and monitor real-world BPEL business processes with SOA-powered BPM / / Matjaz B. Juric with Marcel Krizevnik |
Autore | Juric Matjaz B |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (616 p.) |
Disciplina | 005.7575 |
Altri autori (Persone) | KrizevnikMarcel |
Collana | Enterprise : professional expertise distilled |
Soggetto topico |
Service-oriented architecture (Computer science)
BPEL (Computer program language) |
ISBN |
1-282-76686-4
9786612766862 1-84719-795-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Cover; Copyright; Credits; Foreword; About the Authors; About the Reviewers; Table of Contents; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction to BPEL and SOA; Why business processes matters; Business and IT alignment; Service-Oriented Architecture; BPEL; Services; How to develop services; SOA concepts; Services; Interfaces; Messages; Loose Coupling; Reusability; Registries and repositories; Quality of Service; Composition of services into business processes; SOA building blocks; BPEL for process automation; Web Services; How Web Services differ from their predecessors; Web Services technology stack
Enterprise Service BusESB features; Registry and repository; Human task support and identity management; Process Monitoring or Business Activity Monitoring; Business Rules Management Systems (BRMS) or Rule Engine; Adapters; Service Component Architecture; SOA governance; Understanding BPEL; BPEL features; Orchestration and choreography; Executable and abstract processes; Relation of BPEL to other languages; XLANG; WSFL; BPML; ebXML BPSS; YAWL; WSCL; WSCI; WS-CDL; BPMN; BPEL servers overview; The future of BPEL; Summary; Chapter 2: Service Composition with BPEL Developing Business Processes with BPELCore concepts; Invoking services; Invoking asynchronous services; Synchronous/Asynchronous business processes; Understanding links to partners; Partner link types; Defining partner links; BPEL process tag; Variables; Providing the interface to BPEL processes: , , and ; ; ; ; Assignments; Validating variables; Accessing variables in expressions; XSLT transformations; Conditions; Activity names; Documentation; BPEL business process example; Involved services; Employee Travel Status service; Airline Service WSDL for the BPEL processPartner link types; Business process definition; BPEL process outline; Partner links; Variables for the Travel Process; BPEL process main body; Asynchronous BPEL example; Modify the BPEL Process WSDL; Modify partner link types; Modify the BPEL process definition; Summary; Chapter 3: Advanced BPEL; Advanced activities; Loops; While; Repeat Until; For Each; Delays; Deadline and duration expressions; Empty activities; Ending a process; Fault handling and signaling; WSDL faults; Signaling faults; Signaling faults to clients in synchronous replies Signaling faults to clients in asynchronous scenariosHandling faults; Selection of a fault handler; Synchronous example; Asynchronous example; Propagating faults; Default fault handler; Inline fault handling; Scopes; Example; First scope; Second scope; Third scope; Isolated scopes; Compensation; Compensation handlers; Example; Default compensation handler; Invoking compensation handlers; Termination handler; Default termination handler; Managing events; Pick activity; Message events; Alarm events; Example; Event handlers; ; ; Business process lifecycle Correlation and message properties |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910785344503321 |
Juric Matjaz B
![]() |
||
Birmingham [England], : Packt Pub., 2010 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|