public marks

PUBLIC MARKS from nhoizey with tags esb & "web services"

2007

Station-service: Services Web BizTalk Server 2006 -- MSDN Magazine, March 2007

Ce mois-ci, je vais vous présenter l'univers passionnant de BizTalk Server 2006 et sa prise en charge pour les technologies de services Web d'aujourd'hui. Vous apprendrez à utiliser les adaptateurs SOAP et WSE (Web Services Enhancements) déjà disponibles et je vous parlerai du nouvel adaptateur Windows® Communication Foundation (WCF) inclus dans BizTalk® Server 2006 R2.

2005

ServiceMix - Home

by 1 other
ServiceMix is an open source distributed Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) and SOA toolkit built from the ground up on the semantics and APIs of the Java Business Integration (JBI) specification JSR 208 and released under the Apache license

Synapse to spark web services connections

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Called Synapse, the Apache-sponsored project aims to define code for a distributed web services intermediary, to handle connectivity, transformation and routing of messages as they flow between service providers and consumers.

Web Service Orchestration Software from OpenStorm

The Service Orchestrator is our full-featured web service orchestration platform. It includes development time tooling (Orchestrator Studio) as well as a runtime environment (Orchestrator Server)

Service Oriented Enterprise

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It appears as though the Apache ESB project, Synapse, is moving forward. According to InternetNews, Blue Titan, Infravio, WSO2, Sonic and Iona are all supporting it.

SynapseProposal - Incubator Wiki

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Synapse will be a robust, lightweight implementation of a highly scalable and distributed service broker / ESB based on Web services specifications.

Les bus de services d'entreprise envahissent l'univers Open Source

Coup sur coup, Iona et Sun ont dévoilé des initiatives d'ESB Open Source. Des projets qui pourraient venir concurrencer les grandes solutions d’intégration propriétaires.

ESB Myth Busters: 10 Enterprise Service Bus Myths Debunked

Myth #1. ESB is just a new name for EAI. Myth #2: Microsoft is building an ESB with their "Indigo" project. Myth #3: The adoption of WS-* specifications, such as WS-Reliability and WS-Reliable Messaging, obviate the need for an ESB. Myth #4: Pattern or Product: The term "Enterprise Service Bus" (ESB) is not really a product category; it is simply an abstract concept that can be applied toward a coupling of an existing application server and integration middleware. Myth #5: ESBs compete with the J2EE app server products. Myth #6: Portals can be connected to back-end systems by simply using a Web service call. Myth #7: ESBs will be obsolete once BPEL is widely available. Myth #8: The ESB technology category, like so many others, seems to have come out of nowhere and is now barreling its way up the hype curve and rapidly approaching the "trough of disillusionment." Myth #9: ESBs are simply plumbing and do not provide sophisticated tooling, such as a graphical editor for designing business process flows. Myth #10: An ESB container can be implemented using an EJB container.