1 / 27

Enterprise Solutions

Enterprise Solutions. BITEC: Business Integration Platform. Por Bernardo Díaz Arias berdiaz@yahoo.com. Enterprise Solutions. Introduction Key Concepts Level 1: EAI Level 2: Enterprise Service Bus Level 3: B2B JBI Integration. 1. Introduction.

khalil
Download Presentation

Enterprise Solutions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Enterprise Solutions BITEC: Business Integration Platform Por Bernardo Díaz Arias berdiaz@yahoo.com

  2. Enterprise Solutions • Introduction • Key Concepts • Level 1: EAI • Level 2: Enterprise Service Bus • Level 3: B2B • JBI Integration

  3. 1. Introduction • This material is not intended to show standard business integration concepts or terminology but the result of our expertise achieved through the years.

  4. 2. Key Concepts Solution… a. Why to Integrate? Invoice Mgmt Human Resources Financial Services Strategic Mgmt Human Resources Physical Resources Integration Server = ESB Accounting IT Marketing Invoice Mgmt Financial Services Marketing Strategic Mgmt Production Physical Resources

  5. a. Why to Integrate? 2. Key Concepts Solution… Integrate all the resources inside of the organization Integrate with related organizations Automate process definitions and external interactions with other companies To consolidate data into strategic information To increase the ROI of Legacy Systems To adapt the business processes of the company to the dynamic market demands To offer strategic services to customers, partners and providers To achieve process automation To improve decision making

  6. 2. Key Concepts b. Basic Integration Elements • Business Entities • Connectors & Adapters • Services • Messages • Common Language (Messaging protocol) • Dynamic Business Rules • Integration Server • Synchronous / Asynchronous Invocation Business Entity 1 Business Entity 2 Business Entity 3 Request Mssg S S S S S S S S S Integration Server Common Language XML S S S S S S S S S Response Mssg Business Entity 4 Business Entity 5 Business Entity 6

  7. 2. Key Concepts c. Integration Types ESB = Enterprise Service Bus

  8. 2. Key Concepts c. Integration Types

  9. 2. Key Concepts d. Integration Levels

  10. 2. Key Concepts d. Integration Levels • Level 1. Enterprise Application Integration. Integration of legacy systems inside the organization (Backend Integration). EAI = Basic ESB • Level 2. Public level Integration (front-end integration), Integration among organizations (B2B). At this level the ESB must be WS enabled. • Level 3. Automated Integration. Implies the use of meta-services based on management policies to define security, versioning, dynamic routing and conversational support. By adding a Business Process Management Engine and repository, full governance can be accomplished.

  11. 2. Key Concepts e. Service Types Level 1: EAI Level 2: Web Services Bus Level 3: Automated SOA Atomic Services Data Services Business Services Workflow Services Automated Services

  12. Could be implemented at any level (1, 3), inside the organization or among organizations. It is suited exclusively for long running transactions that span asynchronous services. Complex decision making rules determine the routing between activities (services). Unfortunately there is lack of consensus and standardization among proposals (XPDL, BPEL, BPML). The use of WS technologies enables to encapsulate any Workflow engine implementation as another Web Service. 2. Key Concepts f. Business Process Management

  13. 3. Level 1: EAI a. BUSINESS CASE: A typical telecommunications company (ETB) integration. Involved Subsystems: • RMCA. (SAP, BAPIS). • RevChain. (Web Logic 8i, Daleen Technologies, J2EE). • EnlaC. ETB’s front end/CRM 2.0 (Oracle IAS 9i, J2EE). • SGS / SAAC. ETB’s front end 1.0 (Oracle PL/SQL). • Financiador. (JBoss, J2EE). • IDEA 1.0. (SUN ONE Integration Server, IONIDEA). The architecture was proven with a workflow Of 880 business services and an average load 20.000 – 60.000 composite transactions per day.

  14. 3. Level 1: EAI b. ARCHITECTURE.

  15. 3. Level 1: EAI c. FEATURES. • Integrates heterogeneous Business Entities through a common data bus • It is based on the concept of services published by legacy systems • Uses custom adapters as message or communication channels • Enables either synchronous / asynchronous invocation of any published service • Uses predefined connectors: • J2EE – HTTP Servlets / Struts • J2EE – EJB session, stateless • J2EE – MDB • SAP – BAPIS • Daleen Technologies • SQL – Custom Queries • SQL – Stored Procedures

  16. 3. Level 1: EAI c. FEATURES. • Dynamic Business Rules can be applied during pre or post processing of the transaction. • Supports multiple data or message formats (transformations, mappings) • Common Language. Has an internal xml based metadata language to define Invocations, transactions, services and workflow. • Service Compositions: • 1 Invocation : n-transactions • 1 transaction : n-services • 1 business service : n-atomic services • All the features have declarative support through xml configuration files

  17. 3. Level 1: EAI c. FEATURES. • Supports distributed transactions (XA-2PC) • Embedded compensation logic • Includes timeout and retries features • Audit • Workflow Levels: • Declarative, static • Dynamic, through metadata-policies inside the message header • Automated, through a BPM Engine

  18. 3. Level 1: EAI c. FEATURES. Based on standard Java technologies (spec J2EE 1.3 or greater). Can be installed in any J2EE 1.3 compliant application server and java compliant operating system. Life cycle enabled components Pluggable Components Parallel Processing. Components can be pooled declaratively according to work loads.

  19. 4. Level 2: Web Services Bus a. BUSINESS CASE: A network of government agencies that share information through public services.

  20. 4. Level 2: Web Services Bus b. ARCHITECTURE. Generic WS Facades Interoperability. WS-I / WSDL compliant services. Security Service Registry + Smart Routing = Service Broker

  21. 4. Level 2: Web Services Bus c. FEATURES. An EAI Bus can be transformed into a Web Service Bus: By adding a WS-I compliant channel without modifying existing services. Every organization should publish a subset of previously integrated services of interest At this level, security must be implemented to guarantee authentication, authorization and data protection. Lack of standardization forces to implement custom solutions based on header metadata, encryption and digital signatures.

  22. 4. Level 2: Web Services Bus c. FEATURES. A Service Directory can be added (published itself as a web service node) to centralize the location of each service. By using the capabilities of WSDL and the Apache/Jakarta framework WSIF, the service directory can be evolved into a Service Broker, by adding smart routing capabilities. Finally inside each org there must be an EAI Bus and in the WS Network there must be a WS Bus performing the role of service broker.

  23. 5. Level 3: Automated SOA a. FEATURES. The first step toward automated governance is to define metadata in form of attributes and action commands. Several management nodes could be implemented but interaction begins with distributed security policies. Interaction could be implemented in a dynamic fashion among nodes, based on conversational support. MetaServices: A Web Service Integration Network seems as a federated topology due to the fact that management is encapsulated as Metadata Web Services. Full automation can be achieved by including a BPEL Engine.

  24. 5. Level 3: Automated SOA b. ARCHITECTURE.

  25. 5. Nivel3: SOA Y B2B d. UNESTABLISHED TRENDS. Lack of consensus and standardization Parallel specification efforts toward the same objectives Different specification approaches (Super protocol vs. Stack of granular sub protocols) There is no a single solution to every problem, new customer needs arise frequently WSIF WS - Security BPEL4WS / WS-BPEL WS-C / WS-T WS-Policy CS – WS WS-… ETC.

  26. 6. JBI – JSR 208 • Existing SOA solutions should be JBI compliant • The JBI Container could be extended by adding the new WS-X protocols. • Interoperability reaches a new meaning: “Integrating the integration”.

  27. And Finally… Thank you for your time !!!

More Related