Book Image

Serverless Integration Design Patterns with Azure

By : Abhishek Kumar, Srinivasa Mahendrakar
Book Image

Serverless Integration Design Patterns with Azure

By: Abhishek Kumar, Srinivasa Mahendrakar

Overview of this book

With more enterprises adapting cloud-based and API-based solutions, application integration has become more relevant and significant than ever before. Parallelly, Serverless Integration has gained popularity, as it helps agile organizations to build integration solutions quickly without having to worry about infrastructure costs. With Microsoft Azure’s serverless offerings, such as Logic Apps, Azure Functions, API Management, Azure Event Grid and Service Bus, organizations can build powerful, secure, and scalable integration solutions with ease. The primary objective of this book is to help you to understand various serverless offerings included within Azure Integration Services, taking you through the basics and industry practices and patterns. This book starts by explaining the concepts of services such as Azure Functions, Logic Apps, and Service Bus with hands-on examples and use cases. After getting to grips with the basics, you will be introduced to API Management and building B2B solutions using Logic Apps Enterprise Integration Pack. This book will help readers to understand building hybrid integration solutions and touches upon Microsoft Cognitive Services and leveraging them in modern integration solutions. Industry practices and patterns are brought to light at appropriate opportunities while explaining various concepts.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Creating a SOAP pass through an API

Since the order fulfillment service is already being used by many customers, ShipAnyWhere has decided to keep the message format as XML over SOAP:

They recently upgraded their BizTalk 2016 environment with feature pack 2. Feature pack 2 provides an option to expose a WCF-BasicHTTP receive location as an endpoint with Azure APIM using the BizTalk Administration Console.

In the BizTalk Administration Console, right-click your WCF-BasicHTTP receive location, and select Publish to API Management:

Press the Sign-in... button, which opens up an option to provide Azure credentials:

Once sign-in is successful, you can choose the resource group and the APIM service instance name. WSDL specification will be automatically populated from the wizard. If you want to provide a different WSDL file, you can explore a file location and select one.

You can...