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Oracle Bpel Process Manager

IT Integration SOA/BPEL Developer – HR Management at Salesforce.com (San Francisco, CA)

April 8, 2011 by BPELresource.com Leave a Comment

Oracle’s Fusion Middleware, such as WebLogic and SOA Suite (BPEL Process Manager, Service Bus). You will also need to … using Oracles SOA Suite and specifically the Oracle BPEL Process Manager. To be successful at this position, you…
Bpel jobs | Simply Hired

Filed Under: BPEL Jobs Tagged With: Developer, Francisco, Fusion, Hr Management, Integration, Jobs, management, Oracle, Oracle Bpel Process Manager, Oracles, Salesforce, Salesforce.com, San Francisco Ca, Service Bus, SOA/BPEL, Weblogic

IT Integration SOA/BPEL Developer – Oracle Financials at Salesforce.com (San Francisco, CA)

April 8, 2011 by BPELresource.com Leave a Comment

Oracle’s Fusion Middleware, such as WebLogic and SOA Suite (BPEL Process Manager, Service Bus). You will also need to … using Oracles SOA Suite and specifically the Oracle BPEL Process Manager. To be successful at this position, you…
Bpel jobs | Simply Hired

Filed Under: BPEL Jobs Tagged With: Developer, Developer Oracle, Financials, Francisco, Fusion, Integration, Jobs, Middleware, Oracle, Oracle Bpel Process Manager, Oracle Financials, Oracles, Salesforce, Salesforce.com, San Francisco Ca, Service Bus, SOA/BPEL, Weblogic

BPEL pour les services web: Deuxième Edition

April 28, 2010 by BPELresource.com Leave a Comment

Product Description

Ce livre est un guide pratique et complet destiné à donner la maîtrise de la conception de processus, de leur développement et du langage. Celui-ci est expliqué en détails. Des extraits de code et exemples complets illustrent la façon de spécifier les processus. Deux serveurs BPEL majeurs, Oracle BPEL Process Manager et Microsoft BizTalk Server, sont traités en détail et d’autres serveurs sont également présentés. Les nouveautés de cette édition

EN DETAILS

Les services web sont la plateforme technique de base requise pour l’interopérabilité des applications. Ils ne permettent pas toutefois de contrôler l’ordre et la manière dont les opérations qu’ils exposent sont invoquées. Ils ne fournissent pas non plus de moyen de décrire la sémantique des interfaces, les workflows ou les processus métier électroniques. BPEL est le chaînon manquant qui permet d’assembler et d’intégrer les services web dans des processus réels.

BPEL standardise l’automatisation des processus entre services web, qu’ils soient déployés au sein de l’entreprise afin d’intégrer des systèmes auparavant isolés, ou entre entreprises pour faciliter l’intégration entre partenaires commerciaux.

En fournissant une structure de description standard, BPEL permet aux entreprises de définir leurs processus durant la phase de conception. Ceci engendre des bénéfices encore plus larges en permettant d’optimiser ces processus, de les ré-agencer et de sélectionner les plus appropriés.

Ce livre couvre de façon exhaustive le langage, sa syntaxe et son usage. Il commence par donner une vue d’ensemble des services web, leurs fondements et justifie le besoin d’un langage tel que BPEL. La couche technologique des services web est décrite, y compris les standards tels que WS-Security, WS-Coordination, WS-Transaction, WS-Addressing et d’autres. Le langage BPEL lui-même est décrit en détail et des extraits de code ainsi que des exemples complets illustrent à la fois sa syntaxe et les constructions de processus typiques. Après avoir traité du langage, le livre aborde la façon de le mettre en aeuvre en donnant une vue d’ensemble des principaux serveurs BPEL. Deux d’entre eux, Oracle BPEL Process Manager et Microsoft BizTalk Server 2004 sont traités en détail et des exemples complets de mise en aeuvre à l’aide de ces serveurs sont fournis.

BPEL pour les services web: Deuxième Edition

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: BPEL, Ces, Coordination, Dans, Deuxième, Edition, Microsoft, Microsoft Biztalk Server, Oracle, Oracle Bpel Process Manager, Phase De Conception, pour, Product Description, services

Business Process Execution Language for Web Services BPEL and BPEL4WS 2nd Edition

April 27, 2010 by BPELresource.com 5 Comments

Product Description

An Architects and Developers Guide to BPEL and BPEL4WS

  • Architecture, syntax, development and composition of Business Processes and Services using BPEL
  • Advanced BPEL features such as compensation, concurrency, links, scopes, events, dynamic partner links, and correlations
  • Oracle BPEL Process Manager and BPEL Designer Microsoft BizTalk Server as a BPEL server

In Detail

Web services provide the basic technical platform required for application interoperability. They do not, however, provide higher level control, such as which web services need to be invoked, which operations should be called and in what sequence. Nor do they provide ways to describe the semantics of interfaces, the workflows, or e-business processes. BPEL is the missing link to assemble and integrate web services into a real business process BPEL4WS standardizes process automation between web services. This applies both within the enterprise, where BPEL4WS is used to integrate previously isolated systems, and between enterprises, where BPEL4WS enables easier and more effective integration with business partners. In providing a standard descriptive structure BPEL4WS enables enterprises to define their business processes during the design phase. Wider business benefits can flow from this through business process optimization, reengineering, and the selection of most appropriate processes . Supported by major vendors — including BEA, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Microsoft, Novell, Oracle, SAP, Sun, and others — BPEL4WS is becoming the accepted standard for business process management.

This book provides detailed coverage of BPEL4WS, its syntax, and where, and how, it is used. It begins with an overview of web services, showing both the foundation of, and need for, BPEL. The web services orchestration stack is explained, including standards such as WS-Security, WS-Coordination, WS-Transaction, WS-Addressing, and others. The BPEL language itself is explained in detail, with Code snippets and complete examples illustrating both its syntax and typical construction. Having covered BPEL itself, the book then goes on to show BPEL is used in context. by providing an overview of major BPEL4WS servers. It covers the Oracle BPEL Process Manager and Microsoft BizTalk Server 2004 in detail, and shows how to write BPEL4WS solutions using these servers.

What you will learn from this book?

Chapter 1 provides a detailed introduction to BPEL and Service Oriented Architecture (SOA). It discusses business processes and their automation, explains the role of BPEL, web services, and Enterprise Service Buses (ESB) in SOA, provides insight into business process composition with BPEL, explains the most important features, compares BPEL to other specifications, provides an overview of BPEL servers, and discusses the future of BPEL.

Chapter 2 provides a detailed introduction to the Web Services Technology Stack. It discusses the important standards and specifications for using BPEL and implementing SOA with web services, such as WS-Security, WS-Addressing, WS-Coordination, WS-AtomicTransaction, WS-BusinessActivity, WS-Reliable Messaging, etc.

Chapter 3 discusses the composition of web services with BPEL. The chapter introduces the core concepts of BPEL and explains how to define synchronous and asynchronous business processes with BPEL. The reader gets familiar with BPEL process structure, partner links, sequential and parallel service invocation, variables, conditions, etc.

Chapter 4 goes deeper into the BPEL specification and covers advanced features for modeling complex business processes. Advanced activities, scopes, serialization, fault handing, compensations, event handling, correlation sets, concurrent activities and links, process lifecycle, and dynamic partner links are covered in detail.

Chapter 5 explains how to use the Oracle BPEL Process Manager for deploying and executing business processes defined in BPEL. It describes the server architecture, tools, features, and common approaches for managing and debugging BPEL processes. The chapter also looks at graphical development of BPEL processes using Oracle BPEL Designer for JDeveloper and for Eclipse.

Chapter 6 takes a detailed look at the advanced features of the Oracle BPEL Process Manager including extension functions, dynamic parallel flows, Web Services Invocation Framework, Java embedding, Notification service, Workflow service, Identity service, and Oracle BPEL Server APIs.

Chapter 7 discusses MS BizTalk Server 2004 and its support for BPEL. It explains how to develop business processes in BizTalk and export them to BPEL. It also explains how to import BPEL processes into BizTalk and how to use the Orchestration Designer tool to define processes graphically, and compares BizTalk and BPEL constructs.

Appendix A provides a syntax reference for BPEL version 1.1. The appendix covers standard BPEL activities and elements, functions, attributes, and faults.

Who this book is written for?

This book is aimed at architects and developers in the design, implementation, and integration phases of advanced information systems and e-business solutions, developing business processes and dealing with the issues of composition, orchestration, transactions, coordination, and security. The book presumes knowledge of XML and web services, web services development (either on J2EE or .NET), and multi-tier architecture

Business Process Execution Language for Web Services BPEL and BPEL4WS 2nd Edition

Filed Under: BPEL Books Tagged With: Application Interoperability, BPEL, BPEL4WS, Business, Business Benefits, Business Process Execution Language, Business Process Management, Business Process Optimization, Business Processes, Business Reengineering, Correlations, Design Phase, Dynamic Partner, Edition, Execution, language, Microsoft Biztalk Server, Missing Link, Oracle Bpel Process Manager, Orchestration, Process, Process Automation, Process Reengineering, Scopes, services, Syntax Development, Technical Platform, Workflows

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