Book Image

Microsoft BizTalk 2010: Line of Business Systems Integration

Book Image

Microsoft BizTalk 2010: Line of Business Systems Integration

Overview of this book

Microsoft BizTalk is an integration and connectivity server solution that allows businesses to connect disparate systems easily. In today’s business climate of mergers and acquisitions, more and more enterprises are forced to exchange data across disparate Line of Business systems using integration brokers like BizTalk Server 2010. What is often overlooked when integrating these systems is the pre-requisite knowledge that ERP and CRM systems demand in order to effectively integrate them. No longer is this knowledge locked up in the heads of expensive consultants. Gain an edge within your organization by developing valuable skills in the area of Line of Business integration from this book.This book will show you how to integrate BizTalk with Line of Business systems using practical scenarios. Each chapter will take a Line of Business system, introduce some pre-requisite knowledge and demonstrate how you can integrate BizTalk with that Line of Business system, and then provide guidance based upon real world experience, taking your BizTalk knowledge further.This book will enable you to master how to integrate BizTalk with Line of Business systems effectively. The book starts by highlighting the technical foundation of WCF-LOB adapters and the common steps and important properties pertaining to popular WCF-LOB adapters. You will then move on to an overview of how to integrate with Microsoft SQL Server using the WCF based SQL Server adapter. The book then dives into topics such as integrating BizTalk Server with Microsoft Dynamics CRM, building BizTalk/SAP integrated solutions using IDocs, the differences between IDocs and RFCs/BAPIs, and integrating BizTalk with Windows Azure AppFabric Service Bus amongst others.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Microsoft BizTalk 2010: Line of Business Systems Integration
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Summary


In our first example, we saw how to consume the strongly-typed Salesforce.com WSDL within a BizTalk solution. In our second set of examples, we looked at strategies for sending requests from Salesforce.com to on-premises services. Both demonstrations leveraged Windows Azure AppFabric to relay messages from the cloud back to an internal service. The first example, which used Salesforce.com Outbound Messaging, used a message-embedded token to authenticate the caller. In the second example, we used Salesforce.com APEX code to acquire an AppFabric Access Control token and authenticate our client to the Service Bus. The request message was then relayed to a proxy service that then sent a message into BizTalk Server.

To be sure, we could have communicated between Salesforce.com and our on-premises systems through publicly exposed services or proxies. If your organization has a mature extranet strategy with reverse-proxy communication to internal services, then you do not need to leverage...