Book Image

Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 - A Hands-on Tutorial

Book Image

Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 - A Hands-on Tutorial

Overview of this book

BPEL, Business Process Execution Language is the definitive standard in writing and defining actions within business processes. Oracle BPEL Process Manager R1 is Oracle's latest offering, providing you with a complete end-to-end platform for the creation, implementation, and management of your BPEL business processes that are so important to your service-oriented architecture."Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 – A Hands-on Tutorial" is your guide to BPEL design and development, SOA Suite platform troubleshooting, and engineering in a detailed step-by-step guide working real-world examples and case studies. Using industry-leading practices you will start by creating your first BPEL process and move onto configuring your processes, then invoking, orchestrating, and testing them. You will then learn how to use architect and design services using BPEL, performance tuning, integration, and security, as well as high availability, troubleshooting, and modeling for the future. "Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 – A Hands-on Tutorial" is your complete hands-on guide to Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11g.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Oracle SOA BPEL Process Manager 11gR1 – A Hands-on Tutorial
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Chapter 4. Orchestrating BPEL Services

Interoperability between discrete systems and disparate systems is one of the major challenges for the IT industry and is mission critical for most organizations. Disparate systems provide distinct complementary business functions. Disparate systems are usually designed and deployed using distinct technology stacks. The IT industry has created web services to facilitate the interoperability among discrete and disparate systems.

The underlying foundations of modern web services are XML and HTTP(S). One may find some legacy implementations using simple text messages, or special characters such as comma- or pipe-delimited text messages. In general, web services are XML-based programs that interact over HTTP(S) with interfaces that adhere to the industry standards set forth in the Web Services Description Language (WSDL) from the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).

The W3C's WSDL standard provides the guidelines to define message types, port types, ports, and...