Book Image

WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA Composite Applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g

Book Image

WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA Composite Applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g

Overview of this book

Business Process Execution Language (BPEL, aka WS-BPEL) has become the de-facto standard for orchestrating services in SOA composite applications. BPEL reduces the gap between business requirements and applications and allows for better alignment between business processes and underlying IT architecture. BPEL is for SOA what SQL is for databases. Therefore learning BPEL is essential for the successful adoption of SOA or the development of composite applications. Although BPEL looks simple at first sight, it hides its large potential and has many interesting and advanced features. If you can get familiar with these features - you can maximize the value of SOA. This book provides a comprehensive and detailed coverage of BPEL, one of the centerpieces of SOA. It covers basic and advanced features of BPEL 2.0 and provides several real-world examples. In addition to BPEL specification the book provides comprehensive coverage of BPEL support in Oracle SOA Suite 11g, including security, transactions, human workflow, process monitoring, automatic generation of BPEL from process models, dynamic processes, and more. This book starts with an introduction to BPEL, its role with regard to SOA and the process-oriented approach to SOA. The authors give short descriptions of the most important SOA platforms and BPEL servers—the run time environments for the execution of business processes specified in BPEL—and compare BPEL to other business process languages. The book will then move on to explain core concepts such as invoking services, synchronous and asynchronous processes, partner links, role of WSDL, variables, flows, and more.Moving ahead you will become familiar with fault handling, transaction management and compensation handling, scopes, events and event handlers, concurrent activities and links. The authors also discuss the business process lifecycle, correlation of messages, dynamic partner links, abstract business processes and mapping from BPMN to BPEL. The book presents in detail, how to use BPEL with Oracle SOA Suite 11g PS2. It explains the development of BPEL and SCA assemblies, and demonstrates different approaches with some practical examples. It addresses security, transaction handling, and human workflow. Then, the book addresses entity variables, notification services, fault management framework, and business events in BPEL. It provides exhaustive coverage of monitoring BPEL processes and developing dashboards with Oracle BAM. It explains how to use BPEL processes with Oracle Service Bus and Oracle Service Registry. Using examples, the book also demonstrates how to transform business process models in BPMN (using Business Modeler) to BPEL, how to achieve round-tripping using BPA Suite and BPM Suite, and how to use Oracle Enterprise Repository to govern BPEL processes. The book also covers the complete BPM lifecycle from modeling through implementation, execution, monitoring, and optimization and presents advanced, real-world examples.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
WS-BPEL 2.0 for SOA Composite Applications with Oracle SOA Suite 11g
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface

Dynamic parallel flow


In Chapter 2 we became familiar with the<flow> activity, which enables us to start several parallel activities. In our TravelApproval process example, we have used<flow> activity to start two parallel sequences that acquired plane ticket offers from American and Delta Airline web services. As the operation invocation for the ticket offer has been asynchronous, we had to use a<receive> activity to wait for the callbacks.

The problem with the<flow> activity is that we need to know in advance how many parallel activities are required. The number of parallel activities is specified by the BPEL code. In several real-world use cases this is limiting because the number of required parallel branches can depend on the information stored in a variable or received from the partner web service. In such cases,<flow> activity is inadequate.

Oracle SOA Suite 11g therefore provides<flowN> activity, which can create multiple parallel activities at...