Book Image

Business Process Execution Language for Web Services 2nd Edition

Book Image

Business Process Execution Language for Web Services 2nd Edition

Overview of this book

Web services provide the basic technical platform required for application interoperability. They do not, however, provide higher level control, such as which web services need to be invoked, which operations should be called and in what sequence. Nor do they provide ways to describe the semantics of interfaces, the workflows, or e-business processes. BPEL is the missing link to assemble and integrate web services into a real business process BPEL4WS standardizes process automation between web services. This applies both within the enterprise, where BPEL4WS is used to integrate previously isolated systems, and between enterprises, where BPEL4WS enables easier and more effective integration with business partners. In providing a standard descriptive structure BPEL4WS enables enterprises to define their business processes during the design phase. Wider business benefits can flow from this through business process optimization, reengineering, and the selection of most appropriate processes . Supported by major vendorsó including BEA, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Microsoft, Novell, Oracle, SAP, Sun, and othersó BPEL4WS is becoming the accepted standard for business process management. This book provides detailed coverage of BPEL4WS, its syntax, and where, and how, it is used. It begins with an overview of web services, showing both the foundation of, and need for, BPEL. The web services orchestration stack is explained, including standards such as WS-Security, WS-Coordination, WS-Transaction, WS-Addressing, and others. The BPEL language itself is explained in detail, with Code snippets and complete examples illustrating both its syntax and typical construction. Having covered BPEL itself, the book then goes on to show BPEL is used in context. by providing an overview of major BPEL4WS servers. It covers the Oracle BPEL Process Manager and Microsoft BizTalk Server 2004 in detail, and shows how to write BPEL4WS solutions using these servers.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Business Process Execution Language for Web Services
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

BizTalk Server 2006 and Beyond


Microsoft is planning on two new releases of BizTalk server. The first one will be called BizTalk Server 2006 (code named Pathfinder).

Some of the new features BizTalk Server 2006 may include are:

  • Integration with Visual Studio 2005 (.NET 2.0)

  • Support for both SQL Server 2000 and SQL Server 2005

  • Support for Virtual Server 2005

  • Simplified Installation, Migration, and Deployment

  • Improved Business Activity Monitoring (BAM)

  • Windows 64-bit support

  • New Management Console (Visual Studio no longer required for management)

  • Wizard for creating Flat File Schema

  • New Adapters such as POP3, Sharepoint, MQSeries, and MSMQ

  • Enhancement to existing adapters (SMTP, FILE, and HTTP)

  • Processing of Larger Messages

  • Better Message Handling: Endpoints (Orchestration & Send Ports) can now subscribe to failed messages as well

  • New Functoids (IsNil, Nil, and Assert) for Mapping

  • XSLT Debugging

The second release, known as BizTalk vNext, is due sometime in 2007 or maybe later and is expected to take...