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Mastering jBPM 5

You're reading from   Mastering jBPM 5 Design, build, and deploy business process-centric applications using the cutting-edge jBPM technology stack

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783289578
Length 326 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Simone Fiorini Simone Fiorini
Author Profile Icon Simone Fiorini
Simone Fiorini
Arun V Gopalakrishnan Arun V Gopalakrishnan
Author Profile Icon Arun V Gopalakrishnan
Arun V Gopalakrishnan
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Business Process Modeling – Bridging Business and Technology FREE CHAPTER 2. Building Your First BPM Application 3. Working with the Process Designer 4. Operation Management 5. BPMN Constructs 6. Core Architecture 7. Customizing and Extending jBPM 8. Integrating jBPM with Enterprise Architecture 9. jBPM in Production A. The Future B. jBPM BPMN Constructs Reference Index

Gateways


Gateways are elements that allow you to create branches in your process. These branches can be, conceptually, diverging or converging. You can model the behavior of the different types of business process sequence flows: conditional branching (inclusive and exclusive), forking, merging, and joining.

Let us first review the key gateway concepts and the practical examples in the upcoming sections:

  • Fork (split) indicates a flow dividing into two or more paths that should execute in a logically parallel (concurrent) way: jBPM, for implementation reasons, never executes parallel flows concurrently (at the thread level) but always sequentially, one step at a time

  • Join (or synchronization) refers to the combining of two or more parallel paths into one path

  • Branch (or decision) is a point where the control flow can take one or more alternative paths

  • Merge refers to a process point where two or more alternative sequence flow paths are combined into a single sequence flow path

Hence, the gateway...

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