Разгребал завалы электронных книг. Нашел нечто под названием “Enterprise Service Bus”. Не понял. Почитал оглавление. Всё равно не понял. Попробовал выборочно почитать – всё равно не понял. Почитать что ли целиком…
Preface
About This Book
Notational Conventions for ESB Integration Patterns
Conventions Used in This Book
We’d Like to Hear from You
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction to the Enterprise Service Bus
Section 1.1. SOA in an Event-Driven Enterprise
Section 1.2. A New Approach to Pervasive Integration
Section 1.3. SOA for Web Services, Available Today
Section 1.4. Conventional Integration Approaches
Section 1.5. Requirements Driven by IT Needs
Section 1.6. Industry Traction
Section 1.7. Characteristics of an ESB
Section 1.8. Adoption of ESB by Industry
Section 1.9. Summary
Chapter 2. The State of Integration
Section 2.1. Business Drivers Motivating Integration
Section 2.2. The Current State of Enterprise Integration
Section 2.3. Leveraging Best Practices from EAI and SOA
Section 2.4. Refactoring to an ESB
Section 2.5. Summary
Chapter 3. Necessity Is the Mother of Invention
Section 3.1. The Evolution of the ESB
Section 3.2. The ESB in Global Manufacturing
Section 3.3. Finding the Edge of the Extended Enterprise
Section 3.4. Standards-Based Integration
Section 3.5. Case Study: Manufacturing
Section 3.6. Summary
Chapter 4. XML: The Foundation for Business Data Integration
Section 4.1. The Language of Integration
Section 4.2. Applications Bend, but Don’t Break
Section 4.3. Content-Based Routing and Transformation
Section 4.4. A Generic Data Exchange Architecture
Section 4.5. Summary
Chapter 5. Message Oriented Middleware (MOM)
Section 5.1. Tightly Coupled Versus Loosely Coupled Interfaces
Section 5.2. MOM Concepts
Section 5.3. Asynchronous Reliability
Section 5.4. Reliable Messaging Models
Section 5.5. Transacted Messages
Section 5.6. The Request/Reply Messaging Pattern
Section 5.7. Messaging Standards
Section 5.8. Summary
Chapter 6. Service Containers and Abstract Endpoints
Section 6.1. SOA Through Abstract Endpoints
Section 6.2. Messaging and Connectivity at the Core
Section 6.3. Diverse Connection Choices
Section 6.4. Diagramming Notations
Section 6.5. Independently Deployable Integration Services
Section 6.6. The ESB Service Container
Section 6.7. Service Containers, Application Servers, and Integration Brokers
Section 6.8. Summary
Chapter 7. ESB Service Invocations, Routing, and SOA
Section 7.1. Find, Bind, and Invoke
Section 7.2. ESB Service Invocation
Section 7.3. Itinerary-Based Routing: Highly Distributed SOA
Section 7.4. Content-Based Routing (CBR)
Section 7.5. Service Reusability
Section 7.6. Specialized Services of the ESB
Section 7.7. Summary
Chapter 8. Protocols, Messaging, Custom Adapters, and Services
Section 8.1. The ESB MOM Core
Section 8.2. A Generic Message Invocation Framework
Section 8.3. Case Study: Partner Integration
Section 8.4. Summary
Chapter 9. Batch Transfer Latency
Section 9.1. Drawbacks of ETL
Section 9.2. The Typical Solution: Overbloat the Inventory
Section 9.3. Case Study: Migrating Toward Real-Time Integration
Section 9.4. Summary
Chapter 10. Java Components in an ESB
Section 10.1. Java Business Integration (JBI)
Section 10.2. The J2EE Connector Architecture (JCA)
Section 10.3. Java Management eXtensions (JMX)
Section 10.4. Summary
Chapter 11. ESB Integration Patterns and Recurring Design Solutions
Section 11.1. The VETO Pattern
Section 11.2. The Two-Step XRef Pattern
Section 11.3. Portal Server Integration Patterns
Section 11.4. The Forward Cache Integration Pattern
Section 11.5. Federated Query Patterns
Section 11.6. Summary
Chapter 12. ESB and the Evolution of Web Services
Section 12.1. Composability Among Specifications
Section 12.2. Summary of WS-* Specifications
Section 12.3. Adopting the WS-* Specifications in an ESB
Section 12.4. Conclusion
Appendix A. Appendix: List of ESB Vendors
Оригинал этой записи. Комментировать можно тут или там.
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Бабла в этом бизнесе крутится море. И большая часть его уходит в IBM :)
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