Book Image

SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009

By : Richard Seroter
Book Image

SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009

By: Richard Seroter

Overview of this book

SOA is about architecture, not products and SOA enables you to create better business processes faster than ever. While BizTalk Server 2009 is a powerful tool, by itself it cannot deliver long-lasting, agile solutions unless we actively apply tried and tested service-oriented principles. The current BizTalk Server books are all for the 2006 version and none of them specifically looks at how to map service-oriented principles and patterns to the BizTalk product. That's where this book fits in. In this book, we specifically investigate how to design and build service-oriented solutions using BizTalk Server 2009 as the host platform. This book extends your existing BizTalk knowledge to apply service-oriented thinking to classic BizTalk scenarios. We look at how to build the most reusable, flexible, and loosely-coupled solutions possible in the BizTalk environment. Along the way, we dive deeply into BizTalk Server's integration with Windows Communication Foundation, and see how to take advantage of the latest updates to the Microsoft platform. Chock full of dozens of demonstrations, this book walks through design considerations, development options, and strategies for maintaining production solutions.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
SOA Patterns with BizTalk Server 2009
Credits
About the author
About the reviewers
Preface
Index

Available services


ESB Guidance 2.0 contains an impressive series of services that extract BizTalk functionality into a more abstract and reusable tier. These services include:

Service

Description

BizTalk Operations Service

Reveals runtime details about BizTalk hosts and applications. Can query the status of applications and ports and build processes or dashboards based on the information provided.

UDDI Service

Enables querying of UDDI repositories based on a variety of criteria.

Resolver Service

Used to look up ESB endpoints (be they UDDI, Business Rules Engine, and so on) and returns all known details about those endpoints.

Exception Handling Service

Accepts standard fault messages, enriches them, and publishes them to a central Portal for investigation, analysis, and resolution.

Transformation Service

Exposes the ability to execute BizTalk maps without going through the BizTalk messaging infrastructure.

Itinerary Services

Accepts messages and uses provided or resolved metadata...