
SOA Approach to Integration: XML, Web services, ESB, and BPEL in real-world SOA projects
Publisher: Packt Publishing | 2007 | PDF | 384 pages | ISBN: 1904811175 | 5.8Mb
Integration of applications within a business and between different businesses is becoming more and more important. The needs for up-to-date information that is accessible from almost everywhere and developing e-business solutions — particularly business to business — require that developers find solutions for integrating diverse, heterogeneous applications, developed in different architectures and programming languages and on different platforms. They have to do this quickly and cost effectively, but still preserve the architecture and deliver robust solutions that are maintainable over time.
Integration is a difficult task. This book focuses on the SOA approach to integration of existing (legacy) applications and newly developed solutions, using modern technologies, particularly web services, XML, ESB, and BPEL. The book shows how to define SOA for integration, what integration patterns to use, which technologies to use, and how to best integrate existing applications with modern e-business solutions. It also shows how to develop web services and BPEL processes, and how to process and manage XML documents from the JEE and .NET platforms. Finally, it also explains how to integrate both platforms using web services and ESBs.
What you will learn from this book?
- How to design and develop SOA for integration
- Integration architecture patterns, principles, and best practices, with focus on the process-centric SOA approach
- The role of XML, web services, and ESBs in SOA for integration
- The role of service composition and BPEL in integration
- J2EE and .NET integration
- Why and how to use web services and XML for integration
Download Links
http://hotfile.com/dl/57658239/26b1cfd/1904811175.rar.html
http://www.fileserve.com/file/fMRZTth/1904811175.rar
Tags: and BPEL in real-world SOA projects, Architecture, BPEL, business, composition, e business solutions, ESB, ESBs, heterogeneous applications, Integration, integration architecture, ISBN, legacy applications, Programming, Publishing, robust solutions, service composition, SOA Approach to Integration: XML, time, time integration, Web services, xml web services



Leave a reply