Book Image

Becoming a Salesforce Certified Technical Architect

By : Tameem Bahri
5 (1)
Book Image

Becoming a Salesforce Certified Technical Architect

5 (1)
By: Tameem Bahri

Overview of this book

Salesforce Certified Technical Architect (CTA) is the ultimate certification to validate your knowledge and skills when it comes to designing and building high-performance technical solutions on the Salesforce platform. The CTA certificate is granted after successfully passing the CTA review board exam, which tests your platform expertise and soft skills for communicating your solutions and vision. You’ll start with the core concepts that every architect should master, including data lifecycle, integration, and security, and build your aptitude for creating high-level technical solutions. Using real-world examples, you’ll explore essential topics such as selecting systems or components for your solutions, designing scalable and secure Salesforce architecture, and planning the development lifecycle and deployments. Finally, you'll work on two full mock scenarios that simulate the review board exam, helping you learn how to identify requirements, create a draft solution, and combine all the elements together to create an engaging story to present in front of the board or to a client in real life. By the end of this Salesforce book, you’ll have gained the knowledge and skills required to pass the review board exam and implement architectural best practices and strategies in your day-to-day work.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Section 1: Your Journey to Becoming a CTA
6
Section 2: Knowledge Domains Deep Dive
14
Section 3: Putting It All Together

Introducing the common integration styles

When designing an integration architecture between two or more systems, the key challenge is how to actually achieve that. There are some common integration styles that architects should be familiar with. You need to become familiar with them and understand how and when to use each of them. In today's world, some of these integration styles have evolved and are used as part of modern enterprise integration platforms. Let's take a closer look at each of them.

File transfer

In this integration style, applications produce a file containing the data that other applications would consume. This file is normally in a format that can be read by all the target systems and shared to a repository that can be accessed by all concerned systems. These systems are responsible for transforming the file into any other format they are expecting, while the file's producer is responsible for generating the data files on regular intervals based...