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Applied SOA Patterns on the Oracle Platform

You're reading from   Applied SOA Patterns on the Oracle Platform Fuse together your pragmatic Oracle experience with abstract SOA patterns with this practical guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781782170563
Length 572 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Sergey Popov Sergey Popov
Author Profile Icon Sergey Popov
Sergey Popov
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. SOA Ecosystem – Interconnected Principles, Patterns, and Frameworks FREE CHAPTER 2. An Introduction to Oracle Fusion – a Solid Foundation for Service Inventory 3. Building the Core – Enterprise Business Flows 4. From Traditional Integration to Composition – Enterprise Business Services 5. Maintaining the Core – Service Repository 6. Finding the Compromise – the Adapter Framework 7. Gotcha! Implementing Security Layers 8. Taking Care – Error Handling 9. Additional SOA Patterns – Supporting Composition Controllers Index

The Dynamic Service Collaboration platform


According to the Oracle methodology formalized in the AIA approach, Enterprise Service Bus is the only mandatory pattern in the enterprise SOA infrastructure, which is maintained as an EBS framework. That's what we have learned in the first two chapters. At the same time, in our practical exercise in the previous chapter, we started with Enterprise Business Flows, discussing the orchestration patterns and not ESB. How is it possible to have an optional core? Is it really a core? Yes, it is. First of all, Enterprise Business Flows (EBF), which are offered as task-orchestrated services, are the closest entities that represent our business and how we understand it. No wonder most of the IT initiatives related to SOA are carried out by the BPEL implementations (since Oracle 10g), despite the service's nature, their MEPs (synchronous or asynchronous), and the necessity of orchestration in general. The telecommunication primer is pretty common as seven...

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