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Kuali Rice Overview April 2008 Aaron Godert

Kuali Rice Overview April 2008 Aaron Godert. What is Kuali Rice?. Kuali: a humble kitchen wok; Malaysian origins Rice: it is what it is Sits on the bottom of a dish Not a very tasty meal by itself Better with some substance on top KFS - Beef KRA - Chicken KS - Seafood

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Kuali Rice Overview April 2008 Aaron Godert

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  1. Kuali Rice Overview April 2008 Aaron Godert

  2. What is Kuali Rice? • Kuali: a humble kitchen wok; Malaysian origins • Rice: it is what it is • Sits on the bottom of a dish • Not a very tasty meal by itself • Better with some substance on top • KFS - Beef • KRA - Chicken • KS - Seafood • Rice is the foundation to a hearty software product

  3. The Goals for Rice • The board vision for Kuali is a plug and play module by module approach to software • Kuali started as financials, but has evolved into a suite of administrative software (KFS, KRA, KS) • A lot of functionality in Kuali systems • Keeping the Kuali code base as small as possible without impacting quality is key • Highly productive development environment • For Kuali projects • For non-Kuali projects

  4. Rice Goals Cont. • A common and consistent architecture • Allow developers to understand other rice enabled projects • Infrastructure would not need to be reinvented on each project - focus on functionality! • Rice team can focus on IT standards, like SOA, that will benefit the entire Kuali software suite • Adoption of other Kuali modules feasible • Generic enough for non-Kuali applications

  5. Rice is Middleware • Made up of several, possibly standalone and swappable, middleware components • Applications become a “Rice Client Application” by easily integrating with this middleware • Interaction with other Rice enabled applications becomes seamless

  6. How We Got Here • Kuali Enterprise Workflow (KEW) existed in production at Indiana University • Kuali Finanical System (KFS) started development and had an architecture team • Morphed into the Kuali Nervous System (KNS) team • Achieve technical consistency across all aspects of KFS • KFS --> KNS --> KEW

  7. Along Came KRA • Kuali Research Administration (KRA) needed to integrate with KFS • Align our core to support sharing services across Kuali apps in a loosely coupled fashion • All Kuali products should be technically consistent under the hood • For end user functionality • For different development methodologies

  8. Thinking Outside of the Wok • Most administrative applications have a common need for middleware services • Workflow • ESB • Notification • Avoid design and code duplication • Consolidate configuration

  9. Rice Was Born!

  10. Rice Modules (Products) • KEW Kuali Enterprise Workflow • KNS Kuali Nervous System • KSB Kuali Service Bus • KEN Kuali Enterprise Notification • KIM Kuali Identity Management • KOM Kuali Organization Management • We should take a look at the history of each of these products before talking in more detail how they apply to Rice

  11. The History of KEW • Kuali Enterprise Workflow existed at Indiana University as a stand alone integration project before Kuali began • Provided common engine to drive business processes electronically • When Kuali came along, the IU workflow engine became Kuali Enterprise Workflow (KEW)

  12. The History of KNS • KFS spent a large amount of development time up front, using the best talent from each of the partner institutions • Came up with a foundation on which to build KFS - the Kuali Nervous System • It focused on a unified approach to development of functionality • A standard way to use workflow, perform CRUD operations, handle business transactions • KNS extracted into Rice as a module

  13. The History of the KSB • Other Kuali projects came along: i.e. KRA • They needed to be able to seamlessly “talk” to other Kuali services/applications in real time • Reducing the need for offline batch • Increasing business process agility • The KSB was born to satisfy simple needs

  14. The History of KEN • Cornell University recognized the need for a more general notification system that could work alongside of a workflow “to-do” list • Started development of the notification system at Cornell • Recognized the synergy in leveraging KEW • Realized that Kuali applications also wanted an advanced model for end user communication • The concept of Kuali Enterprise Notification was born

  15. The (short) History of KIM • KFS has its own user tables that are specific to financial data • Also has groups, roles, permissions • KEW has its own users, groups, roles, permissions • When KEN was built, it piggy-backed on KEW’s users, groups, and roles

  16. The (short) History of KIM Cont. • KRA came along with similar needs as KFS • KS is also gearing up and shows similar needs with additional requirements • Recognized the potential for re-use and the need for context specific IdM data • Most importantly, we recognized the need for consistent service interfaces across projects • The concept of Kuali Identity Management was born

  17. The (short) History of KOM • KOM will address the unit hierarchy/org chart needs of KFS/KRA/KS • Came out of functional integration committee

  18. Why Does a Project Need Rice? • KNS and KEW enhance developer productivity and enforce standards • KSB provides an SOA approach for cross project interoperability • KEN enhances the user experience while fulfilling a general need for notification across all rice enabled applications • KIM provides consistent IdM across your projects • KOM provides consistent Org mgmt across your projects

  19. The Rice Interactive Diagram • Available at http://rice.kuali.org • Click anywhere on the diagram to begin • Click on any component for details

  20. Rice Deployment Architectures • Stand-alone: a central hub and spoke model • Good if you just want to support one Rice server • Centralized services and features • Best for non-Java clients • Embedded: a decentralized, federated approach • Fast for developers because services are local • Distributes load; technically a clustered model • Provides distributed transactions (via JTA) • Hybrid: best of both

  21. Kuali Rice - Current Status • Public release 0.9.1 available at http://rice.kuali.org --> Download • KRA is using 0.9.2 • KFS is using 0.9.2 • Well tested • Rice is being used in KFS; released with KFS 2.0 • Both unit and functionally tested with JUnit/HtmlUnit • Continuous Integration: https://test.kuali.org/bamboo • Let's take a closer look at each of these pieces in more detail

  22. KSB Overview - The Goals • Enable applications and services deployed on the bus to interact with other applications and services • Provide (a)synchronous communication • Provide flexible security • Provide Quality of Service (QoS) • Keep it simple (light weight)

  23. KSB Overview Cont. • A common registry of services • Lists all services on the bus and how they can be connected • Through simple Spring configuration, Java based services can be “exported” from a rice enabled application as SOAP or HttpRemoted services • Common resource loading - access services remotely or locally • Other “Rice Clients” can connect to any of the services on the KSB

  24. KSB Communication Models • Synchronous = P2P : waits for a response • Asynchronous = messaging : fire and forget : possible callback • Queues = single service retrieved from redundant set of services; only one invoked • Topics = all services retrieved from redundant set of services; all invoked

  25. KSB Security • Bus level : option to digitally sign, encrypt • Service level security through Acegi • Service level, method level • User proxying through standard security models (i.e. CAS, Kerberos) • Security context passed along (user, authn token, roles) • Services can call authn/authz authority to validate context

  26. KSB is Simple and Light Weight • Evaluated ServiceMix, ActiveMQ, Mule a year and a half ago • Reliability issues then, better now though • For simple needs (SOAP and Spring HttpRemoting), the messaging components of KEW sufficed in combination with XFire and Spring • Kuali Student has greater needs from an ESB (WSDL first, process orchestration, etc) • Are looking to KS ESB team for the direction to go

  27. KNS Overview • Provides reusable code, shared services, integration layer, and a development strategy • Provides a common look and feel through screen drawing framework • A document (business process) centric model with workflow as a core concept

  28. Understanding the KNS Paradigm CHART_T Chart(POJO) Data Dictionary ORMMapping Lookups and Inquiries MaintenanceDocuments TransactionalDocuments Workflow(KEW)

  29. Transactional Documents • These are data-entry centric documents or “transactions” that model the business processes • Examples include: Proposal Development, Journal Entry, Payment Reimbursement • Built on a case by case basis using the Kuali Rice tag libraries (encompass snippets of UI behavior): • Notes and attachments • Workflow route log (audit log) • Integrated with workflow

  30. Maintenance Documents • They do not need to be built case by case - just one JSP that draws them all • These are the CRUD documents - an easy way to maintain support tables in a Kuali database • C: Create new table records • R: Read or query table records • U: Update existing table records • D: Delete existing table records • Examples include: • Budget rates • Project codes

  31. Inquiries • A way to drill down and get more read-only information about a table record

  32. Inquiry Screenshot

  33. Inquiry Example Configuration <inquiry> <title>Travel Account Inquiry</title> <inquirySections> <inquirySection title="Travel Account"> <inquiryFields> <field attributeName="number" forceInquiry="true" /> <field attributeName="name" /> <field attributeName="accountType" /> <field attributeName="foId" forceInquiry="true" /> </inquiryFields> </inquirySection> </inquirySections> </inquiry>

  34. Lookups • A way to search for data by a set of criteria • Results of lookups can be returned to other lookups or documents

  35. Lookup Screenshot

  36. Lookup Example <lookup> <title>Travel Account Lookup</title> <instructions>Look up Inst.</instructions> <defaultSort sortAscending="true"> <sortAttributes> <sortAttribute attributeName="number" /> </sortAttributes> </defaultSort>

  37. Lookup Example Cont. <lookupFields> <lookupField attributeName="number" required="false" /> <lookupField attributeName="name" required="false" /> <lookupField attributeName="accountType" required="false" /> <lookupField attributeName="foId" required="false" forceLookup="true" /> </lookupFields> <resultFields> <field attributeName="number" forceInquiry="true" /> <field attributeName="name" forceInquiry="true" /> <field attributeName="accountType" forceInquiry="true" /> <field attributeName="foId" forceInquiry="true" /> </resultFields> </lookup>

  38. Other KNS Features • Data Dictionary • Question component • Notes and attachments • Pluggable business rules • Pluggable authorizations • System parameters • Extended/custom attributes

  39. KEW Overview • Facilitates routing and approval of business processes throughout an organization • Provides re-usable routing rule creation which defines how business processes should be routed • Bind business data to users/groups that must approve • Provides hooks for client applications to handle workflow lifecycle events of business processes • End users interact with central workflow GUIs for all client applications

  40. Document Search Screen Shot

  41. Action List Screen Shot

  42. Route Log Screen Shot

  43. KEN Overview • Works with the action list to provide a single place for all university related communications • Workflow items come from KEW • Non-workflow items from KEN • Non-workflow example items • Overdue library book • A concert on campus • Graduation checklists for seniors

  44. KEN Overview Cont. • Provides a secure and controlled environment for notifying the masses • Eliminate sifting through email • Communication broker which provides any combination of action list, text messages, email, etc. • Controlled by user preferences • Audit trail for all messages just as in KEW

  45. KEN: Sending Notifications • S2S: A developer can send notifications by: • Calling the sendNotification() service on the KSB • Invoking the service via a SOAP WS (exposed by the KSB) • Manual: A user can send notifications using a provided workflow enabled form

  46. KEN Screenshot: My Notifications

  47. KEN Screenshot: Notification Details

  48. KIM Overview • Just gearing up • Keep it simple to start • Goals: • Clean and consistent service interfaces used by all Kuali apps; generic enough for non-Kuali apps • Leverage KNS to provide a reference implementation for services; workflow enabled management application • Flexibility for dynamic attributes associated with IdM entities (persons, groups, roles, etc) • Pluggable support for Internet2 products (Grouper, etc)

  49. KIM Overview Cont. • Basic concepts • Namespace (i.e. Application, any generic context) • Person - different default “sponsored” attributes for each namespace context; core shared attributes as well • Group - simply groups users; arbitrary data associated with them

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