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- Get on the Enterprise Service Bus with the Open Source Mule API by Laurence Moroney - [Clicks: 77]
Enterprise service bus is a generic name for any solution that provides communication and translation between applications or between different processes within an application. While Microsoft, IBM, and others have long offered commercial solutions for this integration problem, Mule is one of the first open source APIs. With Mule, data translation is not as hard as you once thought.
http://www.devx.com/enterprise/Article/26680 - Dec, 2004 - Standardized Intergration? - Java Business Integration (JSR–208) by Benoy Jose - [Clicks: 51]
JBI proposes to eliminate vendor specific integration solutions by defining a standards based Integration framework. This week Benoy Jose digs into this new JSR that is now in the early draft review stage.
http://javaboutique.internet.com/articles/bus_int/ - Nov, 2004 - Using the ESB Service Container by Dave Chappell - [Clicks: 64]
Author's note: I am pleased to share with you an excerpt from Chapter 6 of my latest book, Enterprise Service Bus. If you build, integrate, or architect enterprise applications, and are looking for the skills and expertise to become a next-generation enterprise integration architect, this is the book for you! ... This excerpt comes from one of the core chapters discussing a key architectural concept of the ESB -- the service container. The concepts discussed here are the principal enablers of service reuse through the ESB mantra of "configuration rather than coding." The level of technical depth, architectural discussion, and diagramming notation are indicative of what you will find throughout the rest of the book.
[O'Reilly Book Excerpts: Enterprise Service Bus]
http://www.onjava.com/pub/a/onjava/excerpt/esb_ch6/index.html - Aug, 2004 - Understand Enterprise Service Bus scenarios and solutions in Service-Oriented Architecture, Part 3 by Rick Robinson - [Clicks: 40]
In Part 3 of this series on scenarios and solutions for implementing an Enterprise Service Bus, the author examines possible solutions for the various scenarios outlined in Part 2. The ideas on the role of the Bus as explained in Part 1 provide the foundation for the scenarios.
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-esbscen3/ - Jun, 2004 - Understand Enterprise Service Bus scenarios and solutions in service-oriented architecture, Part 2 by Rick Robinson - [Clicks: 36]
In Part 2 of this series on the Enterprise Service Bus (EBS), the author describes and analyzes some commonly observed scenarios in which ESBs and other service-oriented architecture (SOA) solutions are implemented.
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-esbscen2.html - Jun, 2004 - Understand Enterprise Service Bus scenarios and solutions in service-oriented architecture, Part 1 by Rick Robinson - [Clicks: 64]
This article identifies a set of minimum capabilities that fulfill the most basic needs for an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) consistent with the principles of service-oriented architecture (SOA). Identifying these minimum capabilities allows you to identify which existing technologies to use to implement an ESB to support an SOA. By considering how the requirements of a specific situation define the need for additional capabilities, you can then choose the most appropriate implementation technology for that situation.
http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-esbscen/ - Jun, 2004
- Enterprise Service Bus
by Dave Chappell - [Clicks: 40]
Enterprise Service Bus provides an architectural overview of the ESB, showing how it can bring the task of integration of enterprise applications and services built on J2EE, .NET, C/C++, and other legacy environments into the reach of the everyday IT professional, using an event-driven Service-Oriented Architecture. Through the study of real-world use cases drawn from several industries using ESB, the book clearly and coherently outlines the benefits of moving toward this integration strategy.
O'Reilly Media, Inc., Paperback - Jun, 2004