Book Image

Oracle Service Bus 11g Development Cookbook

Book Image

Oracle Service Bus 11g Development Cookbook

Overview of this book

Oracle Service Bus 11g is a scalable SOA integration platform that delivers an efficient, standards-based infrastructure for high-volume, mission critical SOA environments. It is designed to connect, mediate, and manage interactions between heterogeneous services, legacy applications, packaged solutions and multiple Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) instances across an enterprise-wide service network. Oracle Service Bus is a core component in the Oracle SOA Suite as a backbone for SOA messaging. This practical cookbook shows you how to develop service and message-oriented (integration) solutions on the Oracle Service Bus 11g. Packed with over 80 task-based and immediately reusable recipes, this book starts by showing you how to create a basic OSB service and work efficiently and effectively with OSB. The book then dives into topics such as messaging with JMS transport, using EJB and JEJB transport, HTTP transport and Poller transports, communicating with the database, communicating with SOA Suite and Reliable Message Processing amongst others. The last two chapters discuss how to achieve message and transport-level security on the OSB.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Oracle Service Bus 11g Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Implementing a WebSockets transport for server-side push


In this recipe, we will install and use a custom transport. We do not actually write a custom transport because it would take way too many pages to describe the implementation from scratch. But we have implemented a fully functional WebSocket transport and provide it with this book.

Our WebSocket transport implementation is derived from the socket transport example that comes with the OSB installation. It is located in MW_HOME\Oracle_OSB1\samples\servicebus.

If you are keen on implementing your own custom transport, you may want to look at the source code as a starting place and adapt it according to your own requirements.

How does our custom WebSockets transport basically work? The transport communicates with a local WebSocket servlet, which in turn is accessed by a WebSocket-capable browser. Since the WebLogic server does not support WebSocket servlets yet, the transport starts an embedded Jetty server which runs the WebSocket servlet...