Book Image

Application Development for IBM WebSphere Process Server 7 and Enterprise Service Bus 7

Book Image

Application Development for IBM WebSphere Process Server 7 and Enterprise Service Bus 7

Overview of this book

By adopting an SOA approach in Business Process Management (BPM), you can make your application flexible, reusable, and adaptable to new developments. The SOA approach also gives you the potential to lower costs (from reuse), and increase revenue (from adaptability and flexibility). However, integrating basic SOA constructs (such as Process, Business Services, and Components) and core building blocks of BPM (such as Process Modeling and Enterprise Service Bus) in a real-world application can be challenging.This book introduces basic concepts of Business Integration, SOA Fundamentals, and SOA Programming Model and implements them in numerous examples. It guides you to building an Order Management application from scratch using the principles of Business Process Management and Service Oriented Architecture and using WebSphere Process Server (WPS) and WebSphere Enterprise Service Bus (WESB). The various detailed aspects, features, and capabilities of the product are conveyed through examplesWe begin with essential concepts on Business Integration, SOA Fundamentals and SOA Programming Model. Then we set up the development environment to build your first Hello Process and Hello Mediation applications.Gradually, we build an SOA-based Order Management Application. We cover important aspects and functions of WPS and WESB with numerous practical examples. We show how to analyze your application's business requirements and check if an SOA approach is appropriate for your project. Then you do a top-down decomposition of your application and identify its use cases, business processes, and services. Having built the SOA Application, we introduce you to various non-functional topics, including: Administration, Governance, Management, Monitoring, and Security. We also discuss deployment topologies for WPS and WESB, performance tuning, and recommended practices.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
Application Development for IBM WebSphere Process Server 7 and Enterprise Service Bus 7
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
Preface
WID, WPS, and WESB Tips, Tricks, and Pointers
Index

Building ProcessServices-OrderHandling


Now by following the same detailed steps, let us also build the other core and yet very important order handling business process. As explained in the previous chapter, the purpose of this component is to accept the configured customers orders for products and deal with activities related to the fulfillment of the order including product availability, credit verification, order issuance, shipment management, processing the payments, and finally through its lifecycle, provide order status and tracking details. This will be implemented as a long-running business process (BPEL) since the process will have several human tasks along its path and will have to wait for responses for certain activities for an extended period of time.

Note

Since we have explained in the earlier chapter and also in this chapter how to work with the WID business process editor, we will not delve into step-by-step details of how we would build this process like we did with the earlier...