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jBPM6 Developer Guide

You're reading from   jBPM6 Developer Guide Learn about the components, tooling, and integration points that are part of the JBoss Business Process Management (BPM) framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783286614
Length 310 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Why Do We Need Business Process Management? FREE CHAPTER 2. BPM Systems' Structure 3. Using BPMN 2.0 to Model Business Scenarios 4. Understanding the KIE Workbench 5. Creating a Process Project in the KIE Workbench 6. Human Interactions 7. Defining Your Environment with the Runtime Manager 8. Implementing Persistence and Transactions 9. Integration with Other Knowledge Definitions 10. Integrating KIE Workbench with External Systems A. The UberFire Framework Index

Technical perspective

Once we understand each scenario, we can start thinking about the technical implications that our models will have. We can start analyzing which technical details we need to add in order to automate our business processes. In this section, we will start analyzing the technical assets that will be generated when we model our business process diagram in a BPMN2 tool that allows us to export the model as an XML file.

Let's start modeling the first version of the sprint management scenario.

Sprint management technical overview

As we have the initial description of our business process, we can go ahead and model it inside our business process designer tool. If we do that in jBPM6 web designer (which will be introduced in Chapter 5, Creating a Process Project in the KIE Workbench) or in any other BPMN2 tool, we will get something like the following diagram:

Sprint management technical overview

This process definition only contains the activities and flow objects as we described them previously. We haven&apos...

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